Monthly Archives: August 2020

Replace Confederate Statue with Black Panther Actor?

(August 31, 2020) Some Anderson, South Carolina residents are petitioning to have a 1902 statue of a Confederate soldier removed from the courthouse square and replaced by a statue of Chadwick Boseman who was an Anderson-born black movie star. Boseman died last week at age 43. His most popular role was as the Black Panther in the movie by the same name. He also portrayed baseball great Jackie Robinson, Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall and pop music icon James Brown in other movies.

Anderson, S. C.: Confederate Statue

Rather than replace the Confederate statue with one of Boseman it could be more racially unifying to have them share the Courthouse Square space, for two reasons.

First, unilaterally removing Confederate statues does not seem to satisfy anyone. If Richmond is a good example it only results in more demands from so-called progressives, which causes rioting, arson, vandalism, looting undocumented shopping and other criminal activity. It alienates Confederate Heritage supporters because it reveals their opponents to be against compromise. Second, only 30% of families in the 11-state Confederacy owned slaves. Moreover, the percentage was slightly lower in Anderson County because it was located in South Carolina’s hill country, as opposed to the low country where the large plantations were concentrated. Thus, the typical Anderson Rebel soldier was fighting to defend his homeland, and gave little thought to slavery.

If Boseman statue advocates are willing to share the Courtyard space, I am hopeful that the Anderson area Confederate Heritage supporters would not object. They may, however, think it proper that the Boseman statue be financed by collections from area residents as opposed to taxpayer dollars. That was how Confederate statues were customarily financed.

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Was President Grant really a Civil Rights leader? He supported black suffrage because it gave him the votes his Party temporarily needed. Despite being a war hero, Grant only won a minority of America’s white vote when he was first elected President in 1868. He abandon Southern black voters in 1875. Learn more in Ulysses Grant’s Failed Presidency,

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Learn more about my books at  My Amazon Author Page.

The Confederacy at Flood Tide by Philip Leigh
Trading With the Enemy by Philip Leigh
Lee’s Lost Dispatch & Other Civil War Controversies by Philip Leigh
Southern Reconstruction by Philip Leigh
U. S. Grant’s Failed Presidency by Philip Leigh

 

Winning Converts to Our Side

(August 30,2020) As explained in a post earlier this month, one of the best ways to win converts to the Southern side of Confederate Heritage is via thought provoking fiction. Novelist and political commentator Lionel Shriver claims that few readers are persuaded to her viewpoint after reading her opinion columns. Instead, they are much more likely to change, or modify, their opinions after reading one of her novels. Although my earlier post listed a number of novels that readers may consider, this update narrows it down to my first choice, The Secret Trial of Robert E. Lee by Thomas Fleming.

Fleming uses his 2006 fictional courtroom drama to formulate arguments for his 2013 Disease in the Public Mind non-fiction book identifying the causes of the Civil War. The story is set in early June 1865 when Robert E. Lee is secretly tried for treason by a military commission prompted by Assistant War Secretary and former editor of the New York Tribune, Charles Dana. Lincoln is dead. Andrew Johnson is in the early stages of shaping his presidency while Radical Republicans use the trial as one way to work behind the scenes to gain control of the federal government.

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As a leading Radical, Dana insists upon a military tribunal for two reasons. First, if Lee is tried in a civilian court it would have to be in Virginia where a jury would likely acquit him. Second, a military commission provides the prosecution important advantages. For example, the Judge Advocate (prosecutor) is empowered to rule upon the admissibility of evidence, instead of an independent Judge.

Although Ulysses Grant objects to the trial for violating his Appomattox surrender terms, Dana silences him. Specifically, Dana threatens to recant his earlier field reports protecting the general when Dana had falsely denied Grant’s episodic drunkenness during the war. The five-officer tribunal is composed of one fictional character and Generals O. O. Howard, Ambrose Burnside, George Meade and William “Baldy” Smith. The Judge Advocate General is Joseph Holt who is assisted by General Ben “Beast” Butler. Holt had earlier prosecuted Lincoln’s assassins. The specifications against Lee are: betraying his allegiance oath, prolonging an un-winnable war after Gettysburg, causing the Andersonville deaths, conspiring to assassinate Lincoln, unlawful execution of prisoners, and his immoral defense of slavery. Lee is defended by Maryland Senator Reverdy Johnson who was counsel for the white defendant in the 1857 Dred Scott case.

Fleming expertly presents the prosecution and defense cases of Butler and Johnson, respectively. After questioning a parade of witnesses that include Ulysses Grant, Horace Greeley, Charles Dana, Pete Longstreet, John Mosby, Jefferson Davis, Lewis Powell, Robert E. Lee, Henry Wirz, Edmund Ruffian, Charles Taylor, Wingfield Scott, Julia Tyler, and Mary Anna Custis Lee, among others, it seems likely that Lee will be acquitted of all charges except defending slavery. After four years of the worst casualties in America history, Ben Butler’s argument that slavery was a crime against humanity that merits conviction gains purchase with the judges.

After Mary Lee testifies that Southern women were genuinely fearful of slave rebellions, however, the judges begin to see merit in her argument that growing Northern fanaticism made such uprisings more likely. Reverdy Johnson explains that blacks outnumbered whites five-to-one in parts of the South. If America’s black population was not permitted to naturally diffuse to other parts of the country—even as free men—they will become increasingly concentrated in the South thereby intensifying the region’s worries over a race war.

In a private conversation, Dana explains to a fictional character that even though Northerners want to end slavery, they don’t want ex-slaves to leave the South and migrate into their own states. In actual history, Adjutant General Lorenzo Thomas conceded the point when he was sent South by Lincoln during the war to recruit black soldiers. Even though the families of ex-slaves desperately needed subsistence he informed Lincoln that the Northern states would not accept them as refugees.

Only a couple of months before the war started, former President John Tyler explained that John Brown’s 1859 attempted slave insurrection amplified Southern worries. He had urged that Northerners ease such concerns by investigating the six abolitionist leaders who secretly backed Brown. According to Fleming, during the secession crisis Tyler requested that The New York Tribune print an editorial asking for such an investigation, but Charles Dana turned him down. Additionally, Dana failed to tell Greeley of the request, even though the latter would have complied. Greeley’s newspaper was America’s most influential media in 1861. Dana manipulated the news to advance his agenda even at the risk of a race war in the South.

As a harbinger of his analysis seven years later in A Disease in the Public Mind, several of Fleming’s characters engage in an insightful conversation near the end of his Lee-trial novel:

“We’ve killed six hundred thousand men to free four million slaves—and no one has a clue what to do with them! Or for them!” Stapleton said.​
“Except Dana and his fanatical friends,” Baldy said.​
“Old Buchanan was right,” Stapleton said, “it was a disease of the public mind.”​
“You think the war was a mistake? A sham?” I asked.​
“I’ll never call it that publicly,” Stapleton said. “The people couldn’t bear it. . . It will take a hundred years before the people can face the truth.”​
“Try two hundred,” Baldy Smith said.​

Fleming’s novel pretends that the trial actually happened and, for reasons explained in the story, was never entered into recorded history. It’s much like the approach Michael Crichton used in his Andromeda Strain.

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Was President Grant personally corrupt? Careful study of Jay Gould’s Gold Market Corner attempt and the later Whisky Tax Evasion Scandal raise questions. Learn more in Ulysses Grant’s Failed Presidency,

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Learn more about my books at  My Amazon Author Page.

The Confederacy at Flood Tide by Philip Leigh
Trading With the Enemy by Philip Leigh
Lee’s Lost Dispatch & Other Civil War Controversies by Philip Leigh
Southern Reconstruction by Philip Leigh
U. S. Grant’s Failed Presidency by Philip Leigh

Incompetent Fact Checkers

(August 28, 2020) When five year old Cannon Hinnant was murdered execution style by a black male adult who put a pistol to the white boy’s head and pulled the trigger on August 9th, many Internet users were dismayed that the mainstream media ignored the story. Five days later a FaceBook Fact Checking organization, Lead Storiesreleased a “Hoax Alert” claiming that the story was really widely covered. If you click on the “Hoax Alert” here you will see that Lead Stories provides links to the following organizations that reported the Cannon Hinnant murder:

CNN
Washington Post
USA Today
New York Times
ABC

Lead Stories fails to mention that all of the above did not report the incident until August 14th, five days after Cannon was murdered. Of all the leading news organizations, only the Associated Press (AP) reported it promptly on August 10th. The New York Times did not even print the AP story until four days later. Everybody knows that the Associated Press does not carry the gravitas of any of the news sources listed above. Moreover, note that CBS and NBC are missing from the Lead Stories list because they did not even report it until August 15th or later. Compare that to the same day coverage of the Jacob Blake shooting in Kenosha, Wisconsin that provoked rioting and looting.

Lying about the poor mainstream coverage of Cannon Hinnant’s murder is bad enough, but true fact checking would be much more valuable in preventing Black Live Matters looters using FaceBook to spread false rumors about false police-on-black killings thereby provoking arson, theft, bullying and looting.

Most recently, BLM looters ran amok in Minneapolis after a black man committed suicide. They used social media to falsely claim the suicide was a police killing. Earlier this month, Chicago BLM looters raided the stores on the Magnificent Mile by spreading false reports that police shot and killed an unarmed black youth in another part of the city.

The bias of FaceBook Fact checkers extends to Civil War history. They automatically equate the causes of secession with the causes of the war. They are not, in fact, the same. The North could have let the seven cotton states depart in peace. There would have been no war if Northerners had evacuated Fort Sumter and let the cotton states secede peaceably. FaceBook’s so-called fact checkers never even considered that point.

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Was President Grant personally corrupt? Careful study of Jay Gould’s Gold Market Corner attempt and the later Whisky Tax Evasion Scandal raise questions. Learn more in Ulysses Grant’s Failed Presidency,

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Learn more about my books at  My Amazon Author Page.

The Confederacy at Flood Tide by Philip Leigh
Trading With the Enemy by Philip Leigh
Lee’s Lost Dispatch & Other Civil War Controversies by Philip Leigh
Southern Reconstruction by Philip Leigh
U. S. Grant’s Failed Presidency by Philip Leigh

Republicans and Confederate Memorials

(August 25, 2020) The only hope of saving Confederate memorials lies with the Republicans but too many are indifferent. That’s because they care more about stock and real estate prices than tradition. They give lip-service to opposing the rioting they see on TV, but they’re attention is really on CNBC because the stock market is presently near an all-time high after dropping 33% at the start of the quarantine. Consequently Republicans talk more about their Apple stock than the Kenosha riot where a criminal with an outstanding arrest warrant ignored police orders to surrender and got shot for disobeying.

It is madness that a quarantined economy should have stock and real estate markets that are setting records.  That a Central Government would print money out of thin air to fund a record bailout and perpetually hold interest rates at zero is lunacy. The two-trillion-dollar Federal shot-in-the-arm that drove the Dow Jones Averages from 19,000 to 29,000 is as dangerous as heroin. It invites politicians to repeat the insanity until the World’s economy ultimately considers the dollar worthless.  Few of us can survive in a country without a functioning currency.

Until then Republicans will reason, “Each day at my gym workout, CNBC confirms everything is okay in my corner.” Should the stock and real estate markets fall, however, everyone will realize that tearing down Confederate statues was a waste of time.  When the market value of Corporate America’s common shares drop, their executives will realize that so-called diversity hiring was a poor way to select the most effective employees. They’ll return to mostly merit-based hiring regardless of immutable characteristics such as skin color or gender.

Many politicians have been willing to tear down Confederate memorials in order to keep real estate values rising. It’s the overwhelming motivation in Florida. Since the real estate interests want to keep people moving into the state, they’ll abandon Confederate memorials in a heartbeat if Corporate America say’s the statues have to go. It’s nearly as dominant across all of the South. That’s why Mississippi’s Republican governor broke his promise to keep the Confederate emblem in the state flag.

Perhaps a downturn in the stock and real estate prices will also put Nikki Haley into the dust-bin of history. More than any single person she is responsible for the outrages against Confederate memorials.

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Was President Grant personally corrupt? Careful study of Jay Gould’s Gold Market Corner attempt and the later Whisky Tax Evasion Scandal raise questions. Learn more in Ulysses Grant’s Failed Presidency,

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Learn more about my books at  My Amazon Author Page.

The Confederacy at Flood Tide by Philip Leigh
Trading With the Enemy by Philip Leigh
Lee’s Lost Dispatch & Other Civil War Controversies by Philip Leigh
Southern Reconstruction by Philip Leigh
U. S. Grant’s Failed Presidency by Philip Leigh

Harrison and Biden

(August 22, 2020) The 1840 presidential election was between Whig candidate William Henry Harrison and Democrat President Martin Van Buren who was running for a second term. Harrison was 68 years-old. He had served one term as a U.S. Senator from Ohio twelve years earlier and one term as an Ohio congressman twenty-one years earlier. In 1840 he was the oldest candidate to ever seek the presidency. The Whigs selected Virginia’s John Tyler as Harrison’s running mate.  New York’s Martin Van Buren was nine years younger and elected President in 1836. His Administration was challenged by a depression caused by the Panic of 1837, which resulted from the bursting of a land speculation bubble following years of easy credit.  Van Buren may have been the illegitimate son of Aaron Burr.

During Van Buren’s presidency, needy voters implored that he adopt policies to rescue those who had suffered in the wake of the 1837 Panic. He responded by explaining: “Those who look to the action of this Government for specific aid to the citizen to relieve embarrassments arising from losses in the revulsions of commerce and credit lose sight of the ends for which it was created and the powers with which it was clothed. It was established to give security to us all in our lawful and honorable pursuits. . . It was not intended to confer special favors . . .”

Van Buren was the first American President to learn that voters dislike constitutional lectures when they want to be relieved of their mistakes. Concerning the 1840 election Historian Herbert Agar wrote that it “Exaggerated every weakness of the American Party system: the tendency to choose a feeble candidate; the tendency to substitute songs and loud noises for issue discussions; the tendency to promise . . . all things to all people, while avoiding in public any language, which could be construed to mean anything . . . the joyful feeling that the election matters more than anything else in the World . . . The Harrison campaign was the first to combine all these features.”

Agar continues, “Nobody knew anything about Harrison and nobody ever would if the Whigs had their way. A committee was set up to answer all of his letters and to make sure that the answers were meaningless. When he appeared in public, which was seldom, he put on” a distinctive silk hat. The campaign managers portrayed him as a man born into poverty who still lived in a log cabin, even though he descended from a wealthy Virginia family and lived in a farmhouse near Cincinnati. In an earlier Indian war he led 1,000 settlers into a battle, which drove the enemy away from their home for a total of only three weeks. The campaign portrayed the Battle of Tippecanoe as a decisive victory.

Harrison won the election with 53% of the popular vote. He served only a single month as President before dying of pneumonia contracted during his inauguration ceremonies. Vice President John Tyler ascended to the office. Dismayed and frustrated Whig leaders drummed him out of the Party for opposing high protective tariffs and urging the annexation of Texas.*

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* Harrison’s grandson, Benjamin Harrison, was elected President for a single term in 1888 on the strength of the Union veteran vote that had been bribed with generous pensions by the Republican Party. Like his granddad, Benjamin was a strong proponent of deterrence tariffs, which were beneficial to the North but injurious to the South. During his Administration the 1890 McKinley Tariff raised rates from 38% to 49.5%. It insured that Americans would be dependent upon goods manufactured by monopolistic companies North of the Ohio River and Mason-Dixon line even though competitive imports would otherwise have been cheaper.

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Was President Grant personally corrupt? Careful study of Jay Gould’s Gold Market Corner attempt and the later Whisky Tax Evasion Scandal raise questions. Learn more in Ulysses Grant’s Failed Presidency,

*     *     *

Learn more about my books at  My Amazon Author Page.

The Confederacy at Flood Tide by Philip Leigh
Trading With the Enemy by Philip Leigh
Lee’s Lost Dispatch & Other Civil War Controversies by Philip Leigh
Southern Reconstruction by Philip Leigh
U. S. Grant’s Failed Presidency by Philip Leigh