The ÒRebelÓ Flag and the
ÒCivil WarÓ Debated
To comment on this
article go to BÕManÕs Revolt.
Overdoing Learning
Could it be IÕve learned too much?
If charged, I must confess.
My views would be more popular
If I knew much less.
I might vote for Democrats
Or for the GOP
And not have old acquaintances
Almost run from me.
EducationÕs big with them
And ignorance the foe,
Except for those disturbing things
That they donÕt want to
know.
You will find the poem above if you click on the
Òpost-doctoralÓ in my message, ÒWelcome to the world of post-doctoral politicsÓ
on my home page. I
have the distinct impression that one such Òold acquaintanceÓ has been running
from me for quite some time.
Actually, heÕs a bit more than an acquaintance. I really thought of him as my closest friend
at the small college in North Carolina where I taught economics for six years
when we were both fresh out of graduate school. HeÕs the one person there whose email
address I have retained and with whom I have remained in touch over a period of
some 37 years. I grew up not far
from the college and on occasion when I was in the area I would call him or
drop in on him and he would bring me up to date on what had transpired since I
left. Teaching history there, as it
turned out, was not only his first job out of graduate school, but it was his
last job as well. He spent his
entire career there, retiring a few years ago.
Reflecting now on the relationship, I think that
the friendship was a bit one-sided.
We got along splendidly as colleagues, but I think a major reason for it
at the time was that our political views were so similar. I have summed mine up with a 2002 poem
entitled ÒA Chomsky Dissenter.Ó
When I trusted Noam Chomsky
I had a cozy home.
With my academic friends
I did not feel alone.
I liked his doughty dissidence;
At least I thought him bold.
And he helped me see beyond
The daily lies weÕre told.
Then I saw he stayed away
From major mysteries
Like a student of the woods
Who wonÕt go near the trees.
Now the trees are falling down
And crushing all we see,
And all the Chomskyites
can do
Is run away from me.
Another indicator of the one-sidedness of the
friendship is that through the years, now that I think of it, all the emails
between us, I believe, have been from me to him, except in the cases where I
might have asked a question and a response was required. None, from my recollection, came at his
initiative. Most tellingly, since
he was on my mailing list and I write about political matters that I think
should at least interest him, I have regularly sent him articles that I have
written, and I never heard the first peep from him about any of them until this
past week.
What
did it was a very short email that I sent a couple of weeks ago. I went on two major trips in June and
had little time to do any writing of my own, so I sent out a highly topical
article by my frequent collaborator on videos who uses the screen name of Buelahman, or BÕMan for
short. It read simply:
Round 1
That
finally produced a response from the old friend. It came five days later and here it is:
I
do enjoy reading this person, "B-Man", making a fool of himself. But I get the impression that you endorse
this nonsense. Sad.
Ahem! I responded immediately this way:
Indeed,
I have found practically nothing that this gentleman has written that I
disagree with. I was particularly pleased to see him reference my essay, "Mencken
and More on Lincoln's Speech.Ó I would be very interested to know why you
think what he has written is nonsense and why you think my endorsement of it is
sad. As Thomas Sowell says he used to write with red pencil on his
students' papers, "Specify, don't characterize."
You
see that he gives readers an opportunity to comment. I am placing this
exchange on the comment page so all involved can defend what they have written.
I
did as I promised and promptly put the exchange up, identifying my interlocutor
only as an old academic colleague.
Round 2
The
next day the former colleague did, in fact, ÒspecifyÓ with this response:
Thanks for
replying.
I must admit
that I did not read all of B-ManÕs essay. It
goes on and on, and I didnÕt have the endurance. Here is my response to
its central question.
LetÕs leave
aside some important issues, such as the overwhelming consensus among
professional historians about the role of slavery in causing the Civil War,
what slavery meant, what ÒheritageÓ means, what our white ancestors thought
they were fighting for, etc.
LetÕs simply
address how we should treat fellow citizens. A large segment of them,
mostly black, say they are insulted, humiliated, and in other ways hurt by the
sight of the common version of the Confederate flag. Even if we donÕt
feel them ourselves, it is not the place of B-Man, or you, or me to deny those
emotions in others. We should assume them to be genuine and acknowledge that
there are aspects of the symbolism of the flag that might cause them.
It is a
matter of common courtesy and decency to stop doing things that cause our
fellow citizens pain.
On the
related issue, the right of anyone to fly the flag: Governor
Haley, and most other public officials IÕve heard address the issue, have
explicitly affirmed the right of individuals to display the flag on their
property. The problem is its display at official public buildings,
supported by taxpayers, including black ones and others offended by the flag.
(I supposed ultimately it could become an issue decided by courts and/or
voters in some jurisdictions.)
Just because
a right exists, however, is no reason why it should be exercised.
The email
came in around the dinner hour, so I didnÕt respond in detail until the next
day, offering only a short acknowledgment of having received it at the
time. Here is my detailed answer:
May
I congratulate you for the somewhat improved tone of your follow-up email. I say "somewhat" because it is still a
bit lofty and dismissive concerning Buelahman's
essay, beginning as it does with what I can only take as a confession of
intellectual laziness, "I must admit that I did not read all of B-ManÕs
essay. It goes on and on, and I didnÕt have the endurance."
That
is to say, you admit that you fired off your 23-word insult to your old
academic colleague and his frequent collaborator without having bothered to
read all of what he (and I?) have written on the matter. In
your short email, I might remind you, you manage to say that he is making
"a fool of himself" and that he is writing "nonsense"
and that it is "sad" that I should seem to go along with it.
Your
opening sally in this follow-up raises an important question. Have you
still not read it? You're retired and certainly have the time, but are
you still just going, as it appears to me, on emotions and impressions?
And how far did you get with your initial reading? Did you pitch it
aside just as he set the stage?
The
MSM is not our friend. They are not truthful. They are pawns used to brainwash
you. Period. But I want to focus on one particular subject today: the Stars and
BarsÉ The people who are embracing the media lies about this flag are the
same people who kowtow to the media clowns doing the EmpireÕs bidding. The same
people who are ignorant about WWII. The same people who fall for every
conceivable lie meant to divide the races and every other erroneous and fake cause.
Where
is the nonsense here? This looks like horse sense to me. Are you
among those people who believe that Timothy McVeigh masterminded the Oklahoma
City bombing, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed did likewise for 9/11, Lee Harvey Oswald
was the lone culprit in the death of JFK, and the Tsarnaev
brothers killed the people the MSM say they did in Boston, to mention just four
examples of the sort of thing he is talking about? If so, I can see why
your mind might close up tight at that point and you would do no further
reading.
Is
it also your considered opinion that I have made a fool of myself with
"Mencken and More on Lincoln's Speech," upon which B'Man draws heavily? How so?
Now,
with not the slightest sense of irony, on the heels of your short, insulting
blast, you lecture us in the best New Englander tradition that it all comes
down to a matter of civility. Civility! Many black people, you--and our
wonderful news media--tell us, take the Stars and Bars as a symbol of racial
superiority and a celebration of slavery and therefore, all of us, but
Southerners in particular, should simply have the common courtesy never to
display the damned thing.
The
worst thing about that argument is its timing. If we were still in the
60s and Southern hardliners were waving the flag in the face of people at
lunch-counter sit-ins, I might say you have a point. Considering the
original motivation behind the flying of the Confederate Battle Flag on the
Capitol Building in South Carolina and the fact that it is supported by public
funds, I agree with you that the case is strong to take it down there.
But let's take the sort of cold, clear-eyed look that Buelahman takes in his essay at this obviously
orchestrated campaign to mothball the Stars and Bars forever in the wake of the
event in Charleston.
For
one so putatively concerned about people's feelings, you should see how this
hullabaloo looks to many native Southerners. At a time when racial
harmony in the South has never been greater, the national press is dragging
their culture, their history, and the flag that to many is representative of
their Southernness into the mud, all because of this
truly bizarre and anomalous happening in Charleston. In a nutshell, it
certainly looks like we Southerners are all being blamed for killing a group or
righteous black people on account of our endemic and ineradicable racial
hatred. I don't like that. It's easily as insulting as your first
email.
I
also do not accept the assertion that within the grassroots black community
there is any strong revulsion to the Stars and Bars as it has been used for the
last thirty years or so. This current hysteria certainly looks ginned up
to me by agents of the Empire, people like Al Sharpton. The knucklehead successors
to Ronnie Van Zant in Lynyrd
Skynyrd might have capitulated, but I don't think the
writers and performers of "The Ballad of Curtis Loew"
need worry about how their display of the flag is taken by the black community.
In my view they should continue to show their pride in their roots with the
most recognizable symbol available, and I'm pretty confident that Buelahman would agree with me on that.
Now,
briefly, let's talk about your first point. You appear not to know to
whom you are writing when you invoke "the overwhelming consensus among
professional historians about the role of slavery in causing the Civil
War." Just this April I began my essay, "Letter to a Court Historian
about Forrestal's Death" with these lines: "H.L. Mencken
aptly called
them 'the
timorous eunuchs who posture as American historians.'Ó In 2009 I penned
"The Case for Free Inquiry":
You
say they gassed six million Jews.
I
ask you how you know.
You
say it's from historians;
They
agree that it is so.
But what about the Forrestal death?
They
agree on that one, too.
And
until I checked it for myself,
I only thought I knew.
I
don't need "professional historians" to do the most elementary
thinking for me. The war in question was, somewhat like our two ongoing
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, a war of choice. Then it was the choice of
Abraham Lincoln and his cohorts to wage a war of aggression against the states
that had proclaimed their secession from the Union. Even Lincoln's
biggest defenders will admit that the Fort Sumter episode was designed by
Lincoln to get the South to fire the first shot so that he could claim the
moral high ground.
No
one could deny that the slavery was an important factor in the secession.
I think that it is debatable as to whether it was the most important
factor, though. The war, itself, is all on Lincoln. The professional
historians that you like to invoke consistently rate this butcher of so many of
his fellow Americans as perhaps our greatest president, which is another good
reason not to trust them.
I
can say with some confidence that my great grandfather, John Henry Martin, who
came from a piedmont county in North Carolina that had virtually no slaves, did
not fight under Robert E. Lee and spend the last months of the war in the hell
hole of the Point Lookout P.O.W. camp to defend the institution of slavery.
He and his fellow Southerners were attacked by the
minions of Lincoln's federal government and they felt that they had no
choice but to resist. What's going on now has made me want to trek back
down to Southern Maryland and plant another Confederate Battle Flag by the
monument to John Henry and his fellow victims. See http://www.plpow.com and http://www.cem.va.gov/cems/lots/point_lookout.asp.
Round 3
That
one got his juices flowing, and his pen. The manifestly unwarranted tone of
condescension is still there as best exemplified by the concluding short
paragraph with its otherwise puzzling repetition of his supposed sadness, but
now one can detect a rather strong admixture of dudgeon:
Thanks for
your congratulations. Now I see what you mean about being Òlofty.Ó
I do enjoy being taken to the woodshed.
I wish you
had not posted my first message to you on B-ManÕs site without my permission; I
hope you didnÕt do likewise with my second.
In your
latest you either stated or implied that IÕve been brainwashed, Òkowtow to
media clowns,Ó and am lazy. I emphatically reject the first two charges.
On the third, I read enough of B-ManÕs rant (much more than you evidently
think), with its belaboring of the obvious, sweeping generalizations about his
opponents, odd digressions, etc., to get enough of his point. But lifeÕs
too short, and B-ManÕs piece is too long; IÕll accept the charge of
intellectual laziness in this case.
You apparently
accept without qualification MenckenÕs belief that professional historians are
Òtimorous eunuchs.Ó You certainly make clear your own contempt for them,
as does B-Man.
In the cases
that seem to bother you most, regarding the very existence of the Holocaust and
Lincoln/Civil War causes, it is true that specialists in those topics are
almost entirely against you (though many portrayals of Lincoln are
complicated). Apparently you see this as the result of nefarious
conspiracies, not research and reflection. Are there any other topics
that cause you to condemn the entire profession?
(I
have not examined your Holocaust stuff; I studied and taught the topic and am
familiar with the evidence and controversies, at least until 2007. I have
not looked at yours in part because my anguish about the topic itself is
profound, and yes, I think deniersÕ arguments that I have read are
nonsense. Damn! Intellectual laziness again.)
On the other
supposed controversies that you mention, I prefer not to touch those tar-babies. If you think IÕm hopelessly na•ve, so be
it.
In paragraph
4 above, I should have said Òcontempt for us.Ó I have been a professional
historian, by which I mean someone who has gotten paid for teaching and
publishing, for many years. So was my father, far more distinguished than
I. I know many professional historians. Some are of course
charlatans and some incompetent. But I personally know or knew several
who contributed significantly to debates about Southern history and the causes
of the Civil War, and they are all (or were, some now being dead)
diligent, honest, honorable people, trying hard to get it right, and Pa was one
of them.
You and
B-man rightly reject sweeping generalizations about Southerners. Heal
thyself. Blanket rejection of the work of an entire class is silly.
HereÕs an
anecdote: In the 1950s my father taught early 20th century US history.
When a colleague died suddenly (Charles Sydnor; maybe
you remember the name), he added the South as a field and had to get up to
speed quickly. I distinctly remember asking him, when I was trying to do
a report in the 7th grade (I think), what caused the Civil War, he said
Òsectionalism.Ó I had no idea what that meant, and he tried to explain
it, probably without success. I was 12.
Some years
later he had changed his mind, believing slavery to be the root cause.
I donÕt know what caused him to take the new view. Perhaps he
had become more conversant with the primary sources; perhaps he had read new
stuff. Perhaps the profession itself was shifting. There is a
theory that historians, influenced by the tensions of the Cold War in the
1950s, had an unacknowledged tendency to promote national unity, and
highlighting the role of slavery in Southern culture might not do that. Things
changed as Cold War tensions decreased. Perhaps. All good
professional historians acknowledge the role of bias in their work, and that
the national ÒmoodÓ helps create it. The mood is different now. You
and B-Man might agree.
The point is, Truth about the past is elusive, never rigid. What
is accepted now will certainly be modified in the future. ItÕs not useful
to be stuck in the past about the past.
Having said
that, it is still legitimate, I believe, to say that slavery was the root
cause of the war, not merely an Òimportant factor.Ó More emphatically, it
was the Òprimary causeÓ, despite B-ManÕs belief to the contrary.
Sectional pride, the Southern way of life, and anger at self-righteous
Yankee bullies and tariff mongers, etc., become pale imitations of what they
actually were if you remove slavery from the mix.
But you
neednÕt do a thought experiment. Read the Declarations of Secession of
the rebel states. Of course, defending state sovereignty in general is
right there, but what specifically are they defending? Slavery.
ItÕs discussed at length at the beginning of the SC, GA, TX, and
MS declarations and is virtually the only specific issue mentioned. As I
understand it, only four states produced Declarations wherein they detailed
causes of their action, rather than legalistic Ordinances of Secession (which
all did).
I had
suggested that we lay this thorny problem aside. We did not.
Fine. Nevertheless, given all the above, I donÕt see how any rational
person can deny that black people, particularly those who are descendants of
slaves, are entitled to believe that the Civil War, and the flag widely
considered to be the symbol of the Southern side, are linked to slavery and
therefore racism, even if some say thatÕs not what they mean when they
display it. An insult can still be an insult despite the intent of the
issuer. ÒIÕm sorry you misunderstood meÓ is a lame response to criticism.
And others, youÕll acknowledge, do have racist intent by flying
the flag.
Now, I must
respond to the issue of my New England background, from which I am
allegedly lecturing you. It is true that my father was born in MA.
My mother was born in KA. I am 70. I went to school 7 years in MA
but have lived 63 years in the South. I was born in Alexandria VA, but my
parents came to NC when I was 13 months. I decided to come with
them. I went 10 years to segregated NC public schools, and, IÕm sorry to
say, absorbed and lived a lot of racism, despite my parentsÕ efforts to resist
it. I agree, however, that my Southernness is
tainted; I canÕt help it.
However much
it comes from a Yankee background, which is actually irrelevant, and however
much my concern for othersÕ feelings is Òputative,Ó the only way you addressed
the substance of my call for decency and courtesy to our fellow citizens is to
assert that you Òdo not acceptÓ that there is revulsion for the flag in the
ÒgrassrootsÓ black community. You give no evidence for this.
This is
anecdotal, but I know and frequently meet with a number of ÒgrassrootsÓ black
people, assuming by grassroots you mean wage earners, schoolteachers,
preachers, healthcare workers, etc. They are all offended
by the flag, in varying ways. At least one dismisses it as white
folks being white folks; at least two are brought nearly to tears as they
discuss it; and another seethes quietly, to take four examples. Poll
after poll says that blacks see the flag as a symbol of racism. For
example, CNN: 72% of blacks nationwide, 75% in the South. I know: this is
MSM. But do you have evidence of your own that removes us from the realm
of anecdote?
Do you get
out much? The only way I can keep a straight face about your belief that
race relations in the South over the past several decades Òhave never been
betterÓ is to note how low the bar was set. From that standpoint, yes,
things have improved, and white and black Southerners deserve credit.
Thus far, it looks to me as though the flag controversy is improving things,
not worsening them.
And I still
see no reason for rejecting the plea to flag displayers to consider the
feelings of their fellow citizens, however much you impeach me, the
messenger. Generosity is a noble trait, well within the best Southern
tradition.
Finally re
MSM, which is a blanket whose size I donÕt know. You and B-Man reject them
totally, as near as I can tell. Another sweeping
generalization. WouldnÕt it make more sense to evaluate them newspaper by newspaper, network by network, pundit by
pundit, etc.? When, for example, in the aftermath of the Charleston
murders, a report launches a sweeping, stereotyped condemnation of Southern
racists, chalk it up to the fact that the reporter is a simpleton (as many are)
or an idiot (fewer, perhaps, but plenty nonetheless). Then also
note that that many of the same MSM widely publicized moving, humane statements
by Paul Thurmond, Mayor Riley, and many other white folks, some ordinary, some
not. They were an eloquent contradiction of the crude, false stereotypes
sometimes perpetrated.
Anyone in
his or her right mind knows that there were and are
many honorable Southerners like your great-grandfather (and your father, from
what I remember about him). If MSM or anybody else state or imply
otherwise, shame on them. But there is often a baby in the bathwater.
So ends the
lecture. I apologize for its length. I remain sad to participate in
this.
I must say
that that response got my juices
flowing, and I responded immediately, which was just yesterday:
Thanks
for responding. Concerning some of your main points:
"I
wish you had not posted my first message to you on B-ManÕs site without my
permission; I hope you didnÕt do likewise with my second."
I
see what you mean with your confession of intellectual laziness. How hard
would it have been to check the
site to
see that I did? What's the problem? Are you ashamed of what you
have written? I didn't identify you after all? As Buelahman suggests with his comment, it really does look
like you have a free speech problem. You know as well as I do that I
would be wasting my time discussing these important topics in private with you.
I think they should be aired.
"In
the cases that seem to bother you most, regarding the very existence of the
Holocaust and Lincoln/Civil War causes, it is true that specialists in those
topics are almost entirely against you (though many portrayals of Lincoln are
complicated)."
More
intellectual laziness on display, I'm sorry to say. On the record, it is
you, not me, that they seem to bother the most.
I have written relatively very little on either topic, which is not to
say that they do not bother me.
"Are
there any other topics that cause you to condemn the entire profession?"
I
must say that this pretty much takes the cake in the intellectual laziness
department. I name the article in which I invoke H.L. Mencken favorably
in his denunciation of American historians and I give its date of April 2015.
Do you know I have a web site? I have sent you articles from it
over and over. Did you just trash them all? I guess I have to give
you a link: "Letter to a Court Historian
about Forrestal's Death." Were you to have only bothered to read the
article to which I referred, you would have discovered that I have written
quite a bit about Forrestal's death and you would have discovered that YOU
professional historians have richly earned every bit of the contempt that
Mencken and I pour upon y'all, and then some.
A
critical reader can also see that the poem in my rejoinder to you, "The Case for Free Inquiry," is a great deal
more about Forrestal and about professional historians--and about the poem's
title, for Pete's sake--than it is about the gassed six million story.
Your
chosen profession also comes in for its share of contempt from me for what it
has said or not said about the death of Deputy White House Counsel Vincent W.
Foster. See http://ariwatch.com/Links/DCDave.htm#VinceFoster. See also my
poem "Ignoble
Historians."
You will notice that in that third-person web site listing the categories in
which I have weighed in there is no mention of the Holocaust or anything having
to do with Lincoln or the Civil War.
"You
and B-man rightly reject sweeping generalizations about
Southerners. Heal thyself. Blanket rejection of the work
of an entire class is silly."
Point me to
one professional historian who has written anything truthful and worth
reading about James Forrestal's death that takes into account the latest
evidence, available to the public since 2004, and I might begin to reconsider
my blanket rejection of their work. (Would you like to join me in a joint
article for publication?) Show me one American news organ
that reported on the full contents of the Starr Report on Foster's death,
including the part that the 3-judge panel that appointed Kenneth Starr forced
him to include, and I might begin to have second thoughts about that entire
class, as well. More recently and closer to home, show me the American
news organs that are reporting on the federal case against the nation's
biggest alien smuggler, headquartered in North Carolina.
No,
on the record, I would say that accepting as truthful almost anything that
these groups tell us about anything that is really serious is not warranted.
"But
you neednÕt do a thought experiment. Read the Declarations of
Secession of the rebel states. Of course, defending state
sovereignty in general is right there, but what specifically are they
defending? Slavery."
I
do believe you mean the "seceding" states. Your bias is
showing. You also are talking about those states' stated reasons for
seceding. Yet, in your first response to me you strongly imply that
slavery, which you say your evidence shows was the reason for the secession,
caused the Civil War according to a consensus of historians. Just look at
Lincoln's first
inaugural address.
He could hardly make it clearer that he is going to war against the
seceding states and that he is doing so for one reason alone, and that is for
their act of secession. It's almost enough to make one ask not what all
those historians have been reading, but what they have been smoking.
"On
the other supposed controversies that you mention, I prefer not to touch those
tar-babies. If you think IÕm hopelessly na•ve, so be it."
Supposed
controversies? The JFK assassination, 9/11, etc.?
What about the RFK and MLK, Jr. assassinations? Surely you must see why I
have a problem with your profession. You want the public to trust your
judgment and your opinions and here in debate (which you would clearly prefer
not be open) you virtually confess to hopeless naivetŽ on the
most important subjects of our day. How can you
compartmentalize your thinking like that? Who's being silly and who's
being serious?
I have
repeated the exchange just as it transpired with links as I had them. Perhaps I should have put them in more
freely, because my debating opponent seems to be somewhat
cyber-challenged. Buelahman linked to my ÒMencken and More on LincolnÕs Speech,Ó so I didnÕt really
see the need to do it again, and perhaps that leaves him with an excuse to
continue to ignore it, like he ignored my letter to the Òcourt historian.Ó What strikes me about the Gettysburg
Address and LincolnÕs first inaugural is the great similarity of their arguments. The war is all about the mortal danger
to the noble experiment of democracy that the secession represents. DonÕt take my word for it. Take LincolnÕs.
I also
failed to put in a link to the tribute to all little-known black blues
performers everywhere by the quintessentially Southern rock band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, either, so here
it is: ÒThe Ballad of Curtis Loew.Ó
Call me
unfair for putting this exchange up at the point where I have the last word,
but stay tuned. Should another
response, lachrymose or otherwise, be forthcoming, I shall publish it. In the meantime I have plans afoot to
take to task publicly one of the surviving cohorts of my debating opponentÕs
father for some public utterances of his about the Vince Foster case.
David
Martin
July
9, 2015
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