A long
procrastinated reading of W. E. B. Du Bois’s The Souls of Black Folk has been enlightening; some unsorted tiles
in my mental historical mosaic fell into a kind of shape. Emancipation and the
Union victory mobilized white supremacists somewhat, but when the Freedmen’s
Bureau fell apart, despite good work in the face of profound resistance and some
corruption, and the need for Negro suffrage became even clearer, the Fifteenth
Amendment was the real energizing event for white supremacists in the years
between the Civil War and Du Bois’s book in 1903. Vote suppression. Du Bois
confidently announced that “The problem of the twentieth century is the color
line” and had no reason to back away from that statement in all the many
subsequent editions of his book during the first half of the century. I wasn’t
around for developments in the 20s, 30s and 40s, but I was a witness to the two
events of mid-century, Brown v. Board of Education and the Civil Rights Act,
which prompted reactions that are still very much with us. But it wasn’t until
this century (“The problem of the twenty-first century is the color line”) that
a black man was elected President, and the reaction among many whites has been
that, illogically, he caused the ruin
of the country that then allowed him to be elected. What’s the answer, Night
Riders being out of fashion and all? Well, how about vote suppression, but more
subtle this time, and in the name of patriotism (which Dr. Johnson called the
last refuge of scoundrels)?
Thursday, June 18, 2015
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