Confederacy and Secession: Treason in Defense of Slavery
As Molly Ivins wrote, every white Southern liberal comes to liberal from the same place: race. Our childhoods are defined by lies about race.
And the biggest lie of all is the one that erases race from the Civil War. The lie that turns treason into a family squabble, slavery into a footnote and post-war appeasement into heroism.
Ta-Nehisi Coates in The Atlantic:
For the portion of the country that still honors, or traces its ancestry to, the men who fired on Fort Sumter, and thus brought war, the truthful story of the Civil War tells of a defeat richly deserved, garnered in a pursuit now condemned. For the blameless North, it throws up the failed legacy of appeasement of slaveholders, the craven willingness to bargain on the backs of black people, and the unwillingness, in the Reconstruction years, to finish what the war started.
For realists, the true story of the Civil War illuminates the problem of ostensibly sober-minded compromise with powerful, and intractable, evil. For radicals, the wave of white terrorism that followed the war offers lessons on the price of revolutionary change. White Americans finding easy comfort in nonviolence and the radical love of the civil-rights movement must reckon with the unsettling fact that black people in this country achieved the rudiments of their freedom through the killing of whites.
And for black people, there is this—the burden of taking ownership of the Civil War as Our War. During my trips to battlefields, the near-total absence of African American visitors has been striking. Confronted with the realization that the Civil War is the genesis of modern America, in general, and of modern black America, in particular, we cannot just implore the Park Service and the custodians of history to do more outreach—we have to become custodians ourselves.
Read the whole terrific thing.
h/t Erik Loomis at Lawyers, Guns and Money.
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