USA Today Reporter Gratuitously Slams Tea Party in Story on Civil War Sesquicentennial
"The Civil War still divides Americans, especially at a time when some in the Tea Party movement talk of states' rights and secession; when many states are rebelling against federal initiatives such as the health care overhaul; and when America's changing demographics make some nostalgic for a society in which white Christians were more dominant."
That's how USA Today's Rick Hampson went out of his way to smear conservatives in his February 17 story -- "Across the South, the Civil War is an enduring conflict" -- devoted to examining how commemoration and/or celebration of the Confederacy during the 150th anniversary of the Civil War in the South is a divisive political issue.
Of course, aside from Texas Gov. Rick Perry's veiled reference to secession nearly two years ago, leaving the Union hasn't exactly been high on the Tea Party agenda. Winning elections and shaping policy through the democratic process have.
What's more, while the media like to pretend that only conservatives have tossed about wild-eyed dreams of secession or nullification, shortly after President George W. Bush won reelection there were liberals blowing off steam by fantasizing about such options.
Take, for example, MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell.
Noted Michelle Goldberg of the liberal website Salon.com in November 2004:
Speaking on "The McLaughlin Group" the weekend after George W. Bush's victory, panelist Lawrence O'Donnell, a former Democratic Senate staffer, noted that blue states subsidize the red ones with their tax dollars, and said, "The big problem the country now has, which is going to produce a serious discussion of secession over the next 20 years, is that the segment of the country that pays for the federal government is now being governed by the people who don't pay for the federal government."
A shocked Tony Blankley asked him, "Are you calling for civil war?" To which O'Donnell replied, "You can secede without firing a shot."
For now, of course, secession remains an escapist fantasy. But its resonance with liberals points to some modest potential for constructive political action. After all, as the South knows well, there are interim measures between splitting the nation and submitting to a culture pushed by a hostile federal government. Having lost any say in how the nation is run, liberals may be about to discover states' rights -- for better or worse.
Goldberg continued:
Liberals have long opposed the growth of state power, and for good reason. The century's most significant clashes over federalism have been over civil rights, with the national government forcing the South to submit to desegregation. Since then, fights over everything from abortion to school prayer have pitted Northern liberals, who want to use the federal government to enforce individual rights, often in the face of hostile majorities, against Southern conservatives, who believe that communities should be free to set their own norms.
Now, though, it's liberal enclaves that feel threatened by the federal government, and who will likely need to muster states' rights arguments to protect themselves from Bush's domestic policies.
The struggle against ObamaCare is a struggle over the proper limits of federal power. What's more, Tea Party activists and sympathetic state attorneys general are challenging the law through the appropriate constitutional channels: the federal courts, not discredited notions like nullification and secession.
Reporters like Hampson should know better than to tar the Tea Party with a veiled charge of racism by suggesting the movement is a seditious enterprise aimed at destroying the Union when in fact it's a patriotic one aimed at preserving it under its appropriate constitutional bounds.
- Ken Shepherd's blog
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Comments
→ Enduring conflict
Submitted by Cool Arrow on Thu, 02/17/2011 - 5:14pm.
Not nearly so enduring as the War On Poverty perpetrated against the poor back in 1965 by the Democrats in a successful effort to keep them in a state of perpetual squalor.
Is there any end to the idocy in the MSM?
Submitted by Ashrak on Thu, 02/17/2011 - 5:16pm.
States have powers, not rights.
The racists are many among those smearing the Liberty Movement. It is they who are always pointing at race, not the other way around.
Here is something "media elites" do not understand. We were gifted a system of checks and balances. Among the many, one of them is the two way street check providing balance that is the relationship between the federal government and state governments. Each is supposed to function as a check upon the other.
It's an equality thing.
It is a non-sequitur to present the idea that our founders gave all they did, that they pledged all they did, only to hand over unchecked authority to an all-powerful federal government. So too is it nonsensical to think they did so regarding state governments.
We must bring about an end to this ongoing nonsense coming out of the so called mainstream media.
I would offer that a number of states, a clear majority, acting in concert - especially through the courts - is a justification of nullification. That is exactly what is taking place and that is exactly what should take place in a situation like this "obamacare". We are not a nation of people owned by 9 unelected robed a;; powerful kings and we should never cast such an affront upon those who came before us as if we are.
Obamacare is, in effect, going to be nullified by states acting together. Nullification it is, just not done by one state stand alone in the face of all the others and the federal government.
Gosh, Professor Ashrak...
Submitted by Jer on Fri, 02/18/2011 - 3:29am.
It's a shame you weren't around to properly instruct all of the states rights segregationists I grew up with in the South on the matter of their ignorance concerning rights vs. powers. Strom Thurmond and the Dixiecrats aka the "States Rights Democratic Party" could have used your help, too.
Jer
Every day the media-Obama complex shows us their true faces
Submitted by lsudolemite on Thu, 02/17/2011 - 7:01pm.
and shows us how petty, small-minded, bigoted, racist, and intellectually/morally bankrupt they really are.
The South Will Rise Again
Submitted by kilrod on Thu, 02/17/2011 - 9:59pm.
The South will rise again, maybe someday the USA will too.
(grins) kilrod "the Birther"
If an unborn child cannot trust you, why should I,??
more babbling BS
Submitted by wizardjr on Fri, 02/18/2011 - 7:17am.
What else can you expect from a journalism major...?? Zero historical accuracy. Zero economic knowledge. Zero actual history knowledge. Etc.