Posted on 12/30/2002 8:30:41 PM PST by chance33_98
Media Cleans Up Strom Thurmond's Racist Quote by Hazel Trice Edney NNPA Washington Correspondent Originally posted 12/16/2002
WASHINGTON (NNPA)In the wake of the controversy surrounding racist language recently used by former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, news outlets and web sites have focused on the words spoken in 1948 by retiring Senator Strom Thurmond.
Publications such as The New York Times and the Washington Post and all national news networks have purported to quote Thurmonds views at the time regarding the Negro race. There is only one problemthats not exactly what Thurmond said.
According to an excerpt of the speech, which was posted on NPR.org, Thurmond says:
And I want to tell you, ladies and gentlemen, that theres not enough troops in the Army to force the Southern people to break down segregation and admit the nigger race into our theatres, into our swimming pools, into our homes and into our churches.
That speech was made July 17, 1948, as Thurmond championed his platform of racial segregation. At the time, he was accepting the presidential nomination of the States Rights Party, more accurately called Dixiecrats.
Lott is far from being the only Republican under scrutiny for racist statements.
Rep. Cass Ballenger (R-N.C.) reportedly told ''The Charlotte Observer'' that some of his constituents might empathize with Lotts original sentiment about segregation. He also said Rep. Cynthia McKinney (D-Ga.) once made him so angry that, I must admit I had segregationist feelings.
McKinney, known for her outspokenness, lost her bid for re-election.
If I had to listen to her, I probably would have developed a little bit of a segregationist feeling, Ballenger was quoted Friday in the Observer. But, I think everybody can look at my life and what Ive done and say thats not true I mean, she was such a bitch.
McKinney could not be reached for immediate response.
Thurmond's speech was resurrected after Mississippi Sen. Trent Lott wished him a happy 100th birthday by saying America would have been better off had Thurmond been elected president.
It shows exactly what Strom Thurmond represented and what Trent Lott endorsed, says Julian Bond, chairman of the NAACPs board of directors. The raw language, while properly not used in every day conversation, ought to be used in this context.
Bond is not the only one who feels that way.
A. Peter Bailey, who teaches a journalism class at the University of District of Columbia in Washington, says he first heard the recording last week on The Joe Madison Show on WOL-AM in Washington, D.C., hosted by civil rights activist Joe Black Eagle Madison.
The thing that the newspapers do that absolutely violates Journalism 101 is putting it in quotes, Bailey says, referring to the word Negro. They might say, you know, We didnt want to use the n-word or whatever. But there are times when you have to tell the truth.
For better insights into his actual feelings, one should look at his actions in office. I believe you will find that he either presided over a great improvement of educational opportunities for South Carolina's Negro people, or the plans for same were adopted during his administration.
Finally, the mainstream press were already very liberal on the "Civil Rights" issues, at this time, and would have pounced all over such a slur. I just do not believe it happened. This is just a cheap shot at a very old man, who is no longer able to defend himself effectively.
As an aside, I believe the slang term "n!gg@r" is actually a bastardization of "negro," evolved over time. I don't think it was even necessarily a derogatory epthet until American blacks began to object to it, after which some people would use it spitefully, just because blacks didn't like it.
Before that, it was just a lower class southern dialectic mispronunciation of the noun "negro," which in itself carried no more hostile meaning than calling someone a "black person."
But I could be wrong.
"And I want to tell you, ladies and gentlemen, that theres not enough troops in the Army to force the Southern people to break down segregation and admit the nigger race into our theatres, into our swimming pools, into our homes and into our churches."
That speech was made July 17, 1948, as Thurmond championed his platform of racial segregation. At the time, he was accepting the presidential nomination of the States Rights Party, more accurately called Dixiecrats.
Hey "T"! Still saying that Thurmond didn't run as a segregationist?
The author is right in criticizing...but he should also point out that for some...it carried the same meaning as "African American" does today...
To draw parrallels across generations is trepidatious at best...
Question for the Author: What was the politically correct term to describe Americans of African ancestory in 1948?
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