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Title: The GOP’s Ties to Extremism Go Beyond the Confederate Flag
Source: The New Yorker
URL Source: http://www.newyorker.com/news/john- ... es-beyond-the-confederate-flag
Published: Jun 24, 2015
Author: John Cassidy
Post Date: 2015-06-24 18:32:18 by Willie Green
Keywords: None
Views: 990
Comments: 9

If Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, and the other serious contenders for the Republican nomination haven’t yet contacted Nikki Haley, the governor of South Carolina, to thank her for what she did on Monday, it’s time for them to get on the horn. In calling for the Confederate flag to be taken down from the state capitol in Columbia, Haley didn’t just do the right thing by the victims of last week’s mass shooting at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston; she also helped to lance a boil that was threatening to infect her party.

Having been twice voted into office with the support of many people who venerate the Stars and Bars, Haley was careful to balance their interests with her own position. She acknowledged that many South Carolinians view the flag as “a symbol of respect, integrity, and duty” and as a memorial to their ancestors, adding, “that is not hate, nor is it racist.” But to other South Carolinians, Haley went on, “the flag is a deeply offensive symbol of a brutally oppressive past.” She concluded, “It is time to move the flag from the Capitol grounds.”

That isn’t the end of this story, however. For one thing, the flag still hasn’t been taken down. On Tuesday, South Carolina lawmakers voted to debate hauling down the flag, and State Senator Paul Thurmond, son of the segregationist Strom Thurmond, indicated he favored such a course. But it wasn’t immediately clear when this vote will take place. On Wednesday, when the body of the Reverend Clementa Pinckney, a widely respected state senator who was also the pastor of Emanuel A.M.E. Church, is brought to the Capitol to lie in state, the flag may well still be flying nearby.

Even if common decency prevails, however, and it is taken down before Pinckney’s coffin arrives, Republicans will still have some explaining to do. The furor over the flag has distracted attention from another disturbing element of the story in Charleston: apparently, Dylann Roof, the accused shooter, picked up some of his racist ideology from a right-wing hate group that has had extensive ties with the Republican Party, and whose leader has donated more than thirteen thousand dollars to four G.O.P. Presidential candidates.

In an online essay, which Mother Jones and other Web sites excerpted or reposted, Roof recalled that he didn’t grow up in a racist home. “Growing up, in school, the White and black kids would make racial jokes toward each other, but all they were were jokes,” he wrote. In Roof’s telling, it was the Trayvon Martin case that radicalized him, prompting him to type “black on White crime” into Google. Roof went on:

The first website I came to was the Council of Conservative Citizens. There were pages upon pages of these brutal black on White murders. I was in disbelief. At this moment I realized that something was very wrong. How could the news be blowing up the Trayvon Martin case while hundreds of these black on White murders got ignored?

The Council of Conservative Citizens, which is based in Missouri, is not well known nationally, but it is a familiar presence in right-wing circles. Over the weekend, the Guardians Jon Swaine reported that its leader, Earl Holt III, has donated more than ten thousand dollars to the Presidential campaigns of Ted Cruz, Rand Paul, and Rick Santorum. And in a follow-up story, Swaine revealed that another twenty Republican politicians also received money from Holt. They include Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, one of the front-runners in the 2016 race; U.S. senators Joni Ernst, of Iowa; Thom Tillis, of North Carolina; Bill Cassidy, of Louisiana; and Tom Cotton, of Arkansas; and Congressman Paul Ryan, of Wisconsin. All told, according to Swaine, Holt has in recent years donated seventy-four thousand dollars to G.O.P. candidates.

Founded in 1985, the C.C.C.’s Web site says that it is dedicated to preserving “liberty, justice, and national safety.” According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks right-wing groups, the C.C.C. “has evolved into a crudely white supremacist group whose website has run pictures comparing the late pop singer Michael Jackson to an ape and referred to black people as ‘a retrograde species of humanity.’ ” Holt apparently became the C.C.C.’s president earlier this year, following the death of its longtime leader, Gordon Baum. Less is known about Holt than about Baum, but Holt appears to have posted semi-regular comments on articles published by The Blaze, a conservative news site, including one comment claiming that blacks have “murdered about 200,000 whites in America since the mid-1960s.”

On being contacted by the Guardian about Holt’s donations, the Cruz, Paul, and Santorum campaigns all distanced themselves from him and said that they would return his money or donate it to charity. “Senator Cruz believes that there is no place for racism in society,” a spokesman for Cruz, who has received eighty-five hundred dollars from Holt since 2012, said in a statement. “Upon learning about Mr. Holt’s background and his contributions to the campaign, he immediately instructed that all of those donations be returned.” Subsequently, many of the other Republicans who have received money from Holt also promised to give it back or donate it to charity. “I do not agree with his hateful beliefs and language and believe they are hurtful to our country,” Cotton said in a statement.

That’s all good to know, though a skeptic might wonder if anybody in the Republican Party thought to inquire earlier about the identity of this generous donor and the organization he leads. “Despite the group’s obvious racism, its mainstream political connections run deep,” Richard Cohen, the president of the Southern Poverty Law Center, wrote in a post published Tuesday about the C.C.C. “And they’re not entirely a thing of the past.” Links between the C.C.C. and G.O.P. politicians emerged in 1998, when it was reported that Congressman Robert Barr, of Georgia, had delivered the keynote address at the C.C.C.’s national convention. After that revelation prompted some negative publicity, the then chairman of the Republican National Committee, Jim Nicholson, called on his fellow party members to resign from the C.C.C., saying, ‘‘A member of the party of Lincoln should not belong to such an organization.’’

According to Cohen, the ties persisted. In 2004, his organization revealed that thirty-eight politicians—“the vast majority of them Republicans,” including Haley Barbour, a former chairman of the Republican National Committee—had attended C.C.C. events during the previous four years. In South Carolina, members of the C.C.C. participated in the political campaign to keep the Confederate flag flying from the dome of the State Capitol. (In 2000, it was moved to a flagpole nearby.) More recently, in 2013, it emerged that a prominent South Carolina Republican, Roan Garcia-Quintana, was a longtime member of the C.C.C. and a member of its national board. (According to the Southern Poverty Law Center’s profile of Garcia-Quintana, he acknowledged his ties to the C.C.C. but said that he had never read the organization’s statement of principles.)

The point of this isn’t that senior Republicans are racist, or that they were in any way responsible for the actions of Roof, a hate-filled individual. But Republican candidates and operatives, who rely heavily on the votes of white southerners, and particularly southern white men, have sometimes been driven to cultivate support among gun groups, anti-immigrant groups, “patriot” groups, and other inflammatory organizations that cluster around the right fringes of their party and beyond. And even when they aren’t actively courting these entities, many prominent Republicans have been reluctant to say anything that could incur their wrath.

We saw that approach on display over the weekend, when Mike Huckabee, who is battling Scott Walker and Ted Cruz to be the conservative standard-bearer in the G.O.P. primaries, refused to comment on the flag controversy in South Carolina. “It’s not an issue for someone running for President,” Huckabee said. Rick Santorum, who is competing on the same ground as Huckabee, commented, “I’m not a South Carolinian. This is a decision that needs to be made here in South Carolina.”

Governor Haley, to her credit, didn’t try to weasel out. She said that displaying a racially charged symbol in a public area was no longer acceptable. It’s surely time for other Republicans to follow her example in other areas, and for the G.O.P. to jettison, once and for all, the politics of white reaction. Apart from anything else, given the way the country is changing, in the long run it could help them to win more elections.

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#1. To: Willie Green (#0)

There is no end to your decication to BS is there?

потому что Бог хочет это тот путь

SOSO  posted on  2015-06-24   18:35:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: SOSO (#1)

It's Bush's fault.

Willie Green  posted on  2015-06-24   18:51:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: SOSO (#1)

Some people just love the smell, aromatherapy I guess.

“Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rapidly promoted by mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end.”

CZ82  posted on  2015-06-24   18:59:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Willie Green (#0) (Edited)

… apparently, Dylann Roof, the accused shooter, picked up some of his racist ideology from a right-wing hate group that has had extensive ties with the Republican Party

“Apparently” is a word used by speakers or writers to avoid committing themselves to the truth of what they are saying. The word “apparently” is used to preference an exclamatory and condemning sentence here in an attempt to escalate conflict through the use of an unsubstantiated inflammatory statement.

If you know something to be true, John Cassidy….then post it as the truth and do not try to seed bias using randomly suggestive comments. IOW….stop pulling some unjustifiable factless random thought out of your ass and trying to sell it like you would snake oil.

There are more points to be parsed, but the result of all would be the same….the bias in a yellow journalism article is once again exposed.

Gawd, I hate yellow journalism…

The whole article is purely leftist political propaganda….revolting and disgusting, every word of it.

Gatlin  posted on  2015-06-24   19:32:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: CZ82 (#3)

...aromatherapy...

Wow!

I had to look that up.

You have impressed me....finally.

Please don't stop after finding out at least one attempt was eventually successful.

Gatlin  posted on  2015-06-24   19:37:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Willie Green (#0)

Hondo68  posted on  2015-06-24   20:55:40 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Willie Green (#0)

In calling for the Confederate flag to be taken down from the state capitol in Columbia, Haley didn’t just do the right thing by the victims of last week’s mass shooting at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston;

Ok,Willie,please enlighten us all on what taking down the Confederate flag at a Confederate memorial will do for the 9 people murdered last week?

Will it bring them back to life?

If there is a heaven and they are looking down,will it make them happy they have been murdered?

You need to get a grip on your emotions.

Why is democracy held in such high esteem when it’s the enemy of the minority and makes all rights relative to the dictates of the majority? (Ron Paul,2012)

sneakypete  posted on  2015-06-24   21:51:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: hondo68 (#6)

OK, what is this? Where? When? Who?

потому что Бог хочет это тот путь

SOSO  posted on  2015-06-25   0:31:26 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Gatlin (#5)

I would have thought telling you there is more than one side of the story would have impressed you more, but I guess you have a reason for ignoring that?

“Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rapidly promoted by mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end.”

CZ82  posted on  2015-06-25   7:03:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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