Posted on 12/13/2002 8:10:28 AM PST by Wallace T.
May 11, 1949
370 Central Park West
New York 25, N.Y.
Headquarters,
States Rights Democrats
Jackson, Miss.
Gentlemen:
The New York Times this morning carried a report which, if true, is just about the best political news of the year. Indeed, it may be the most significant development since the advent of the New Deal.
Although a New Yorker born and bred, I was a staunch supporter of the Thurmond movement; a good friend of mine headed the Columbia Students for Thurmond, which I believe was the only such collegiate movement north of the Mason-Dixon line.
My support, however, was not extremely enthusiastic, because, although I agreed wholeheartedly with the platform and Thurmonds campaign speeches, I felt that it was keyed too much to purely Southern interests. Sure, the Civil Tyranny program must be combatted, but what about the myriad invasions of states rights in other fields by the power-hungry Washington bureaucracy? In other words, while you always claimed that yours was a national movement, by talking only of the Civil Tyranny program you threw away any attraction to Northern and Western voters.
I have always felt that it is imperative for the States Rights movement to establish itself on a nation-wide scale. Obviously, we are now living in a one-party system, a party of Socialists in fact if not in name, and only courageous Southern Democrats in Congress have so far blocked their program. But as far as Presidential elections go, the Republicans are through the Socialist Administration has too much power to bribe voters with wild promises. If things go on as they are, it is only a question of a few years for the socialist program to go through and destroy this land of liberty.
Therefore it is essential to form a new party, of States Righters, consisting of Southern Democrats and real Republicans (omitting the me-too Republicans) to launch a dynamic offensive against National Socialism in this country before it is too late. I am greatly elated over your new platform because I believe it points in that direction.
Would you please send me a copy of your new platform and constitution? Do you plan to start a newspaper of nation-wide circulation? This would be of great help in establishing a national States Rights movement.
I would like to add that, as an economist, I enthusiastically support your proposals on national debt and taxes in fact, taken all and all, from the news reports I would say that your new platform is one of the best in American history. Indeed, it is one of the finest political statements in America since Calhouns Exposition.
It could grow into a mighty movement if you have the will and vision. There are millions of Americans throughout the country, Republicans and Democrats, who would flock to your banner. They are weary of being led by the nose by New Deal politicians of both parties they are tired of being deprived of their votes because there is no anti-socialist and pro-liberty party to which they can turn.
You, gentlemen, can be a means of succor for these millions - and not only these, but America itself. National Socialism has always meant poverty, tyranny, and war. America is slipping down the road and has already gone far; it must be restored to the right path if the great dream of our forefathers of a nation dedicated to liberty is not to vanish from the earth. Yours can be that mission.
Sincerely yours,
Murray N. Rothbard
Murray N. Rothbard (19261995), the founder of modern libertarianism and the dean of the Austrian School of economics, was the author of The Ethics of Liberty and For a New Liberty and many other books and articles. He was also academic vice president of the Ludwig von Mises Institute and the Center for Libertarian Studies, and the editor with Lew Rockwell of The Rothbard-Rockwell Report.
Copyright © 2002 by the Ludwig von Mises Institute
According to the 1790 census, New York and New Jersey had a combined slave population of about 32,500. Virginia had almost 300,000. North and South Carolina had over 100,000 each, as did Maryland. Georgia had 29,000, over 10 times as many as all the New England states combined. Over three quarters of all slaves lived in one quarter of the states. There was no universal opposition to slavery, but opposition in the Northern states was starting to spread.
Hah! That's rich. "Personal attacks and insults" are your first and last names and inflicting pain is your game. Abuse reports from people with unclean hands are not taken seriously. If you want to be taken seriously on this forum you might think about cleaning up your act.
257 posted on 7/28/02 4:10 PM Pacific by Jim Robinson
If you look at where the slaves were located in the states from Maryland to Georgia, you will notice that they resided mostly in the tidewater areas, where tobacco, cotton, rice, sugar cane, and indigo were the major crops. Above the fall line and especially in the Scotch-Irish and German settled areas, like the Shenandoah Valley, slavery, though legal, was uncommon.
The problem is, you cannot maintain a federalist republic where the member states are allowed to use their own respective powers to deny federally-mandated rights to some of their citizens. That, simply, is untenable and intolerable. So the Dixiecrats brought this upon themselves, and eventually upon the rest of us as well. Had they decided to do the right thing on their own, the feds would have been unable to muster the sympathies of the larger populace to justify large-scale federal action.
Hah! That's rich. "Personal attacks and insults" are your first and last names and inflicting pain is your game. Abuse reports from people with unclean hands are not taken seriously. If you want to be taken seriously on this forum you might think about cleaning up your act.
257 posted on 7/28/02 4:10 PM Pacific by Jim Robinson
Yet you regard the ACLU as more honorable than the Ku Klux Klan? The former may be more respectable in polite society, but are just as despicable as the latter, albeit in a different way.
Conservatives will win nothing if we live in fear of being ostracized by liberals. We should not strive to be PC-lite, but offer a true alternative to the Left.
Yes, I do see the ACLU as being more honorable (although that can reasonably construed as damning with faint praise). The ACLU has never lynched anyone, firebombed homes or whipped men. It's ludicrous to try and equate the two, either politically or in any other fashion.
I think we can both agree that matters today would have been much better if the states in question had, on their own, resolved forced segration and brought their laws into line with the Constitution, rather than resisting that reform until the feds rammed it down their throats, along with other changes that exceeded the mandate to enforce equal protection.
Hah! That's rich. "Personal attacks and insults" are your first and last names and inflicting pain is your game. Abuse reports from people with unclean hands are not taken seriously. If you want to be taken seriously on this forum you might think about cleaning up your act.
257 posted on 7/28/02 4:10 PM Pacific by Jim Robinson
Remember that as early as 1938, conservative Southern Democrats were expressing their dissatisfaction at Franklin Roosevelt by opposing his "court packing" schemes. Increasingly during the 1940s, the conservative Southerners were beginning to find common cause with Republicans.
The Dixiecrat movement was, like George Wallace's American Party 20 years later, a halfway house between the white South out of its century long alliance with the Democrats and into the GOP. That there is now a two party South is in part due to the migration of conservative Democrats away from the party of Jefferson and Jackson to that of Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt.
Hah! That's rich. "Personal attacks and insults" are your first and last names and inflicting pain is your game. Abuse reports from people with unclean hands are not taken seriously. If you want to be taken seriously on this forum you might think about cleaning up your act. 257 posted on 7/28/02 4:10 PM Pacific by Jim Robinson
OK, it was 99 and 44/100ths about racial matters. Doesn't change the nature of the debate.
We can largely thank the ACLU for this situation. Their members wear nice suits and live in gated suburban areas, rather the Klan in their hoods and sheets and trailer parks. But if we look at the effects of the actions of the ACLU, we see far more loss of human life and far more overall damage to the minority community than was wreaked by the KKK in its heyday.
Odd how you define honor!
Sorry, but it's asinine to equate a lawful group like the ACLU with the thugs of the KKK. You may wish to continue this game. I'll go elsewhere. Adios.
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