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McPherson's Left Wing Politics
7/4/02 | myself

Posted on 07/04/2002 1:37:53 AM PDT by GOPcapitalist

Any freeper who has visited a thread discussing Abraham Lincoln, the great war in which he participated, or practically anything pertaining to American history between 1850 and 1870 has likely encountered the posting of commentary by Princeton University historian James McPherson, author of The Battle Cry of Freedom. On any of these threads McPherson himself is a controversial figure. To supporters of Lincoln and the North, McPherson is adored and his book is, as one of his supporters recently put it, a "highly-balanced, factual account." To supporters of the South and critics of Lincoln, McPherson's book is a heavily pro-northern account tainted with political bias and historical revisionism. Though conflicting appraisals of McPherson have been going on between the two sides for years, I only recently became curious about McPherson himself. Having an opportunity to weigh in, I decided to do a little research on the guy's background simply to find out who he was and what his issues were. Almost immediately and with but a single internet search I discovered not only was McPherson a liberal regular in the world of academia, but he also has ties to the left's radical and socialist elements.

Having seen McPherson characterized as balanced, objective, and even implied to be conservative, or at the least moderate or politically neutral, it became obvious somebody wasn't telling the whole story. Accordingly, I decided to compile the information found on Professor McPherson's radical left wing ties and introduce them as a whole into the record.

James McPherson: Defender of Bill Clinton

During the second term of his presidency, scandal plagued Democrat President was impeached by the United States House of Representatives for his extensive criminal activity in office including his obstruction of justice and repeatedly perjuring himself under oath. During the debate over impeachment and the judiciary hearings regarding what to do with Clinton in light of his crimes, liberal academia rushed to the defense of their embattled president. Not the least among them to line up on Clinton's side was James McPherson of Princeton University. McPherson's activities on behalf of Clinton are many:

On December 8, 1998 professor Sean Wilentz of Princeton, who had co-authored with Arthur Schlessinger the petition of 400 so-called constitutional scholars defending Clinton and purporting his actions to have not merited impeachment, testified on Clinton's behalf before the House Judiciary Committee. The Daily Princetonian in the article linked here reported on Wilentz's testimony. The article also mentioned that James McPherson had been invited by the Clinton White House to testify on Clinton's behalf along with Wilentz. McPherson could not testify because the time conflicted with his classroom committments. McPherson nevertheless weighed in stating that the Constitution's requirements for impeachment "mean public offenses" along with the implication that Clinton's offense had not been a public offense.

James McPherson himself signed the petition of 400 so-called constitutional scholars defending Clinton and opposing his impeachment as is documented here. The petition asserted that impeachment of Clinton would "undermine" the United States Constitution and "leave the presidency permanently disfigured." Regarding the charges agaisnt Clinton, it stated "the current charges against him depart from what the (Constitution's) Framers saw as grounds for impeachment." The petition ran in newspaper advertisements across the nation paid for by the liberal group People for the American Way.  It was also frequently cited by Clinton's defense in support of his acquittal. When asked about his signature in the article here, McPherson stated that Clinton's impeachment "might come back to haunt the country" and that he had signed it once and would sign it again. The list of signatures on the document reads like a whose who of liberal academia including Arthur Schlessinger and Julian Bond.

When the Senate considered whether or not to remove Clinton during January and February of the following year, McPherson continued to speak out on Clinton's side. Before the vote was taken, McPherson stated, as can be found here, that a senate vote to remove Clinton "would cripple the executive branch . . . weakening the presidency for years to come." During Clinton's senate trial, McPherson argued the same line while giving a lecture at Kent State University. To make his case he pointed to Andrew Johnson complaining that Johnson's impeachment had weakened the presidency so much that it didn't regain the strength it had under Lincoln for another 35 years. During the same lecture reported on here McPherson continued to make his case on Clinton's side by praising Clinton's rhetorical abilities and comparing them to Abraham Lincoln. According to McPherson, Clinton had the same "gift" of connecting to the people that Lincoln did, and that is why Clinton remained popular in polls at the time.

McPherson continued his defense of Clinton as an historian by accusing those who sought to impeach Clinton of a "personal vendetta." Showing a pro-northern bias, McPherson, in the same interview, contrasted what he called the personal vendetta against Clinton with Andrew Johnson's impeachment, which he claimed was not personal (Johnson's impeachment is almost universally considered a fraudulent show trial over purely political differences between Johnson and an unconstitutional act the radical northern Congress had passed). The quote appeared in McPherson's interview on the World Socialist Web Site, which he appears on frequently and has published several articles. The quote in its entirity states "There was enormous substance to the issues involved in the impeachment of 1868 in a way that I think was totally absent from the Clinton impeachment. That was a personal vendetta, and in Johnson's case, I don't think it was personal." McPherson continues, asserting "The major difference is that the impeachment of the 1860s concerned really serious matters of substance, and the 1990s' impeachment was a more personal vendetta" and making sure to point out that Andrew Johnson was never impeached over what he calls "personal behavior."  Elsewhere in the same three part interview, McPherson took jabs at conservatives classifying "groups, like the anti-abortion people" as "extremes on the Right."

James McPherson and the Socialist Pacifica Radio Network

On Nov. 3rd, 1999, Professor James McPherson, author of Battle Cry of Freedom, appeared for a lengthy political discussion about the candidacy of George W. Bush on the "Democracy Now" program of the socialist Pacifica Radio Network. The topic of that particular show was a discussion devoted to accusations of white supremacy alleged against Bush by the show's two socialist hosts.

Pacifica radio is a multi-city socialist affiliated radio network headed up by Mary Frances Berry , the socialist Democrat chairwoman of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Berry is perhaps best known as instigator of the 2000 florida election "voter disinfranchisement" show trial hearings and ensuing "reports" from the commission accusing Jeb Bush and Katherine Harris of denying the right to vote to minorities. Berry's report was drafted on statistical models by a former paid consultant to Al Gore. Berry is also known more recently for waging a political battle against George W. Bush's appointees to the commission by refusing to seat them.

"Democracy Now," one of Pacifica's most popular programs, is a left wing political talk show that was, at the time McPherson appeared on the show, hosted by Juan Gonzalez and Amy Goodman. The program is one of the top political discussion outlets for the radical left in America. It has in the past featured among its guests MIT Professor and leftist guru Noam Chomsky, Socialist presidential candidate David McReynolds, socialist and black panther activist Angela Davis, and radical Democrat congressman and reparations activist John Conyers. Pacifica itself is practically the exclusive domain of the radical left. With almost no exceptions, it's guests range from left to far left and its shows are hosted by open marxists and other radicals.

The first host McPherson appeared with, Juan Gonzalez, is an vietnam era activist and organizer who helped found the 1970's era "Young Lords" political movement, a Latino affiliate modelled after the Black Panther Party and formed under the guidance of imprisoned Black Panther leader Fred Hampton. Gonzalez' "Young Lords" organization was a socialist latino liberation movement that dedicated itself to the abolition of capitalism, dissolution of the United States military, implementation of worldwide socialism, and assisting "Brothers and Sisters around the world" who are under assault by forces opposed to communism. The "Young Lords" movement staged "liberation" events in the early 1970's to preach socialism to crowds carrying banners reading "Viva Che!." It is also considered one of the organizational precursers of the Puerto Rican FALN movement of Clinton pardon fame.

The second host McPherson appeared with, Amy Goodman, is a socialist activist and was featured as a guest speaker at the 1997 Socialist Scholars Conference of American held in New York. She appeared at this socialist convention along side several noted socialists including Vermont congressman Bernie Sanders and other affiliates of the Progressive Caucus, the congressional wing of Democratic Socialists of America.

Also appearing on the program as a guest with McPherson was Ed Sebesta, a leftist anti-confederate activist and ally of the leftist attorney Morris Dees of the SPLC. Sebesta has devoted much of his recent energy attempting to brand republicans with the accusation of racism and was on the show with McPherson exclusively to make allegations of white supremacy against George W. Bush. Among the Republicans Sebesta has attempted to smear are then Texas governor and now president George W. Bush, current Texas governor Rick Perry, and attorney general John Ashcroft. Sebesta was a major promoter of disinformation about Ashcroft and the Southern Partisan interview during the Senate confirmation hearings.

McPherson appeared along side the two socialist wackos Goodman and Gonzales as well as Sebesta. During the course of the show from which transcripts are available online, he took an anti-south position. Among McPherson's positions were the assertion of his support for the removal of confederate symbols from the Georgia and Mississippi flags, criticism of Republicans who opposed their removal, and direct accusations of white supremacy against two national confederate veterans ancestry groups. Perhaps most amazing was McPherson's seeming abstention from rebutting the absurd charge of white supremacy being waged against Bush by the other three clowns. Among McPherson's statements from the Pacifica broadcast are the following two excerpts:

"I do know that the issue of the Confederate flag in South Carolina and also in Georgia where the Confederate battle flag was incorporated into the state flag back in 1956, that those, that...of those flags has a contemporary political agenda, and to the extent that any politician endorses that, I think Trent Lott did as well a couple of years ago, far more vigorously, I can't support them in doing that."

"I think, I agree a 100% with Ed Sebesta about the motives or the hidden agenda, not too, not too deeply hidden I think of such groups as the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Sons of Confederate Veterans. They are dedicated to celebrating the Confederacy and rather thinly veiled support for white supremacy. And I think that also is the again not very deeply hidden agenda of the Confederate flag issue in several southern states."

James McPherson: The 'World Socialist Web Site'

A Google web search reveals 27 "hits" for James McPherson on the World Socialist Web Site, www.wsws.org. The World Socialist Web Site is the official internet home of the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI). The site lists its purpose as providing documents of analysis and study "from the heritage of the socialist movement" (apparently McPherson's many articles on this site are among those documents). The site itself proclaims to be involved in a movement to solve economic and social equality struggles, which it claims are "inseparable from the growth in the influence of a socialist political movement guided by a Marxist world outlook."

The organization that runs the website, the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI), is the direct descendant of an international socialist organization founded by Leon Trotsky in 1938. It has affiliate third party political organizations in the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia, and Germany, among others.

The World Socialist Web Site has a profile devoted to McPherson under their history section. McPherson's profile is linked their history index along side their other history pages. It is identified as "James McPherson: Historian of the American Civil War" and is one of many sections of mostly socialist themes. Among the others are "Marxism and the fundamental problems of the 20th century," "Leon Trotsky" and "The Struggle for Social Equality." Among the items under McPherson's profile are several of his publications including a three part exclusive interview with the organization that runs the site.

In addition, a mini-biography of a profile of McPherson is given on the World Socialist Web Site located here. This biography is by David Walsh, a socialist activist and arts editor for the World Socialist Web Site. In it, Walsh clearly identifies McPherson as a friend to socialists, stating "Nearly 40 years ago Professor McPherson arrived at a conception of the American Civil War, based on the work of the best of his predecessors and his own researches, as a revolutionary struggle for equality and democracy and he has not, I think, ever deviated from that view. This is noteworthy in light of the fact that the last several decades have not been favorable for progressive social thought" (my emphasis added). The rest of Walsh's mini-biography lavishes McPherson with praises for viewing the war as a "social movement" of "liberation" and proceeds to quote one of the north's strongest advocates during the war itself, Karl Marx, to show that the granddaddy of communism's view is consistent with McPherson's. The article does concede that McPherson is generally a political in his writings, but nevertheless maintains the title "progressive" - the famous euphemism used by leftists to refer to themselves and their allies in terminology with less inflamatory connotations than "leftist," "communist," or "liberal."


TOPICS: Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: dixielist
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Now, all that being introduced into the record, excuse me for just a moment while I express my doubts in the objectivity of ANY individual who willingly appears on an openly socialist radio talk show during a discussion devoted to smearing George W. Bush. Allow me to express my doubts in the fairness of ANY individual who actively defended Bill Clinton during his impeachment while accusing those who favored it of having but a mere "personal vendetta." Allow me to express my doubts in the claims of political balance for ANY individual who openly associates with and publishes material on the official website of an international trotskyite marxist political party. Allow me to also express concerns over the left wing political bias of persons who willfully associate themselves with such an entity as Pacifica or with the socialist activists on Pacifica, or with a socialist political party, or with the Clinton Administration in its defense against the greatest presidential scandal in American history.

Any comments?

1 posted on 07/04/2002 1:37:53 AM PDT by GOPcapitalist
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To: shuckmaster; Twodees; billbears; 4ConservativeJustices; wardaddy; stainlessbanner; ...
Dixie bump for more on leftist James McPherson.

Click for new material including McPherson's extensive pro-Clinton activism during impeachment.

2 posted on 07/04/2002 1:41:06 AM PDT by GOPcapitalist
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To: WhiskeyPapa; Non-Sequitur; Ditto; Illbay
Calling all Lincoln Defenders! Come see what kind of left wing activism your hero and "Battle Cry of Freedom" author James McPherson has been up to when he's not writing books for you to use for cut n' paste McPherson quotation festivals.
3 posted on 07/04/2002 1:43:27 AM PDT by GOPcapitalist
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To: GOPcapitalist
And in the spirit of McPherson quotes, here's another small sample of his anti-confederate and anti-republican statements:

"One's stance on the [confederate] flag, I think, does reflect some degree of commitment for civil rights ? or lack of commitment" - James McPherson, quoted by the Associated Press, February 28, 2000

In his review of Tony Horwitz's "Confederates in the Attic," McPherson issued a blanket description of modern pro-south advocates as "people who reshape Civil War history to suit the way they wish it had come out." So much for no bias toward either side!

"There is a real irony here because the Republicans went out of their way to avoid real conflict or the appearance of conflict. The public is aware of that, so what is the point of watching the convention or caring about it?" - James McPherson commenting on the Republican National Convention, New Hampshire Telegraph, August 4, 2000

4 posted on 07/04/2002 2:20:13 AM PDT by GOPcapitalist
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To: GOPcapitalist; Constitution Day; TomServo; billbears; aomagrat; stainlessbanner; archy; Ligeia; ...
Great stuff but, I've observed that it's FR's policy to excuse and completely ignore extreme liberalism and socialism when used in context of bashing Southern conservatives.
5 posted on 07/04/2002 3:27:28 AM PDT by shuckmaster
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To: GOPcapitalist
There has been no doubt that America has been and will be at "war" with the likes of the ilk mentioned in this article.

Articles such as this are one of our best weapons in this struggle.

Thanks and Happy 4th of July to all Americans!

6 posted on 07/04/2002 3:42:39 AM PDT by G.Mason
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To: GOPcapitalist
But still not a commie, huh? I swear GOP you have grown soft in your old age. TwoDees ought to disown you.
7 posted on 07/04/2002 4:30:19 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: GOPcapitalist
Any comments?

Would you prefer that defenders of Lincoln cite a Southerner like Shelby Foote? If so, that's fine, because he is a great admirer of Lincoln as well.

8 posted on 07/04/2002 5:08:18 AM PDT by ravinson
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To: GOPcapitalist
Excellent footwork as usual sir. Didn't realize he was as far to the left as this though. Bump for later. Wonder if he knows Asa?
9 posted on 07/04/2002 5:51:09 AM PDT by billbears
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To: GOPcapitalist
I read the introduction in the socialist rag to McPhersons's interview. The socialist writer advised his readers not to be put off by McPherson's REFUSAL to make any left-wing political pronouncements. Yeah, that McPherson, he sure is a real dyed-in-the-wool commie. I've read "The Battle Cry Of Freedom" (as well as a ton of other Civil War books), and I urge all Freepers to do the same. It's outstanding whether McPherson is a leftist or not. By the way, Steven Ambrose signed that declaration also. Is he a commie?
10 posted on 07/04/2002 6:45:39 AM PDT by driftless
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To: ravinson
Oh, Shelby Foote once voted fr a Democrat for alderman in 1967. Anything he says on any topic is wrong because he must be a fudge packing, pedophile, communist, atheist and a subscriber to Rosie. Pay no attention to anything he says.
11 posted on 07/04/2002 6:50:04 AM PDT by nofriendofbills
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To: GOPcapitalist
Good work, and thanks for the ping. This illustrates pretty well why I have been calling the boy "Red Jamie" for years. The South bashers here are a protected bunch, given a free pass by their fellow republicans even as they cite communist source mateiral and post propaganda from avowedly marxist sites.

I enjoy seeing these phony "conservative" republicans line up to kiss the ring of their master cut&paster, Walt. It was hilarious to see a couple of them who had never heard that Walt is a democommie come groveling in to kiss his feet over one particularly pink post of his a few months ago.

This line of discussion helps us to reveal the socialist basis of neoconservative thought, which is central to the GOP's political agenda and always has been. I would like to thank all the socialist neocon republicans and their leader, Clintonite Walt, for revealing exactly how "conservative" the GOP neocons are.
12 posted on 07/04/2002 6:52:46 AM PDT by Twodees
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To: GOPcapitalist
Great research, GOP! Excellent work in exposing Red McPherson - from the socialist talk show to supporting Klinton. James is running with the wrong crowd, for sure.

Thanks for an great post, GOP - keep up the good work.

13 posted on 07/04/2002 8:50:21 AM PDT by stainlessbanner
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Comment #14 Removed by Moderator

To: stainlessbanner
So...does this mean that his book is wrong? The south didn't fire on Sumter? Lee didn't lose at Gettysburg? Slavery didn't end? It's all been a left-wing lie?
15 posted on 07/04/2002 11:17:12 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: GOPcapitalist
Many thanks for the post. I am still waiting for those who exalt McPherson as "fair and balanced" to provide examples of his noting Northern tyranny and Southern legitimacy. It looks like I will be waiting a long time.

Thanks again.

16 posted on 07/04/2002 11:19:54 AM PDT by muleboy
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To: muleboy
I'm just a little confused. Is the point of all this that McPherson and his books are suspect because of the company he keeps?
17 posted on 07/04/2002 11:22:07 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: GOPcapitalist
This tract seems to primarily use guilt by association to try to support its charge that McPherson is a "leftist." It really isn't very effective. The only views that are posted of McPherson are that he opposed impeachment and Confederate symbols on state flags and is dubious about some Confederate organizations. One may disagree with those views, but those do not a leftist make.
18 posted on 07/04/2002 11:25:44 AM PDT by Torie
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To: Non-Sequitur
Wow. I have no dog in this race, but you blew the doors off logical reasoning with that post. Unfortunately it weakens your side , not the other side, as you can't seem to argue the real point at all.
19 posted on 07/04/2002 11:41:53 AM PDT by stands2reason
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To: stands2reason
What is tehe real point?
20 posted on 07/04/2002 11:44:59 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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