Posted on 08/05/2014 7:17:08 AM PDT by lowbridge
It was Nixon who devised and pursued what came to be called the Southern strategy. This was, in the admirably concise wording of Wikipedia, an appeal to racism against African-Americans. Nixon was hardly the first Republican to notice that Lyndon Johnsons civil rights legislation had alienated whites both in the South and elsewhere Johnson himself had forecast that Southern whites would desert the Democratic Party.
But Nixon was the GOPs leader and, in January 1969, the President of the United States. The White House, it seemed, would not do a damned thing for African-Americans.
-snip
Even-steven, you might say, except the Democrats were expanding rights while the Republicans wanted to narrow them or keep them restrictive.
-snip
Excuse me for extrapolating, but segregationists are not merit scholarship winners. Racism is dumb, and so are racists. The Democratic Party showed racists the door.
The GOP welcomed them and, of course, their fellow travelers creationists, gun nuts, anti-abortion zealots, immigrant haters of all sorts and homophobe
(Excerpt) Read more at nydailynews.com ...
The HBO documentary Schmata, Rags to Riches to Rags tells the story very well.
Bottom line on this: by winning voters away from segregationism, Nixon's Southern strategy helped produce a more integrated nation.
That’s a pretty website; but the name Calico is being used as a brandname for their business, unlike traditional calico, which was an affordable (currently $3 to $12 per yard) broadcloth with traditional American patterns. Theirs are $29.99 and up per yard, and have “exotic” names and patterns depicting Asian scenes or Asian typical design. Some of their fabrics are $79.99 per yard. Thanks for the link, though.
We've become used to buying relatively inexpensive clothing, towels, etc. that are now mostly produced outside the US. The inflation-adjusted prices of such items have fallen considerably over the past 50 years, precisely because they are made with low-cost labor in unregulated factories overseas. It is still possible to buy a Made in the USA, all-cotton Sero shirt like I wore in the 1960s, but it would cost me about $90.00. I now prefer to buy a Columbia shirt of similar quality, made in Honduras, for about $50.00 and spend the difference on other things.
Wow, you have deep knowledge of the textile industry. Thanks for the informative post.
I still find a few fabric treasures at thrift stores and remodel them, such as making felt out of old all-wool items; but they are getting few and far between.
Another U.S.-based apparel maker... discussion of the business model:
American Giant: Successful American Manufacturing
The Internets Most Famous Hoodie Is Back But What Took So Long?
Meanwhile the Democrats’ Southern strategy which lasted some eighty years or more is forgotten or forgiven.
Bears repeating.
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