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Kathleen Parker is one of America's most popular opinion columnists, addressing the country's mental health through her views on current national ...
Read more about Kathleen Parker.
Kathleen Parker is one of America's most popular opinion columnists, addressing the country's mental health through her views on current national ...
Read more about Kathleen Parker.
Them Dang Southerners
Kathleen Parker
WASHINGTON -- Southern writer Walker Percy liked to poke fun at
Ohioans in his novels, just to even things out a bit.
"Usually Mississippians and Georgians are getting it from everybody, and Alabamians," he once explained to an interviewer. "So, what's wrong with making smart-aleck remarks about Ohio? Nobody puts Ohio down. Why shouldn't I put Ohio down?"
Percy, the genial genius, laughed at his own remark.
Now, apparently, it's the Buckeye State's turn to poke back. In a fusillade of pique, Ohio Sen. George Voinovich charged that Southerners are what's wrong with the Republican Party.
"We got too many Jim DeMints (South Carolina) and Tom Coburns (Oklahoma)," he told an interviewer with The Columbus Dispatch. "It's the Southerners. They get on TV and go 'errrr, errrrr.' People hear them and say, 'These people, they're Southerners. The party's being taken over by Southerners. What the hell they got to do with Ohio?"
Down South, people are trying to figure out what "errrr, errrrr" means. Jack Bass, author of eight books about social and political change in the South, speculated in an e-mail that Voinovich really meant grrrr, grrrrr, as in "growling canines whose bark scares more than do Obama's purrs, especially with the Dow at a nine-month high."
Whatever Voinovich's sound effects were intended to convey, his meaning was clear enough: Those ignorant, right-wing, Bible-thumping rednecks are ruining the party.
Alas, Voinovich was not entirely wrong.
Not all Southern Republicans are wing nuts. Nor does the GOP have a monopoly on ignorance or racism. And, the South, for all its sins, is also lush with beauty, grace and mystery. Nevertheless, it is true that the GOP is fast becoming regionalized below the Mason-Dixon, and becoming increasingly associated with some of the South's worst ideas.
It is not helpful (or surprising) that "birthers" -- conspiracy theorists who have convinced themselves that Barack Obama is not a native son -- have assumed kudzu qualities among Republicans in the South. In a poll commissioned by the liberal blog, Daily Kos, participants were asked: "Do you believe that Barack Obama was born in the United States of America or not?"
Hefty majorities in the Northeast, Midwest and West believe Obama was born in the U.S. But in the land of cotton, where old times are not by God forgotten, only 47 percent believe Obama was born in America and 30 percent aren't sure.
Southern Republicans, it seems, have seceded from sanity.
Though Voinoich's views may be shared by others in the party, it's a tad late -- not to mention ungrateful -- to indict the South. Republicans have been harvesting Southern votes for decades from seeds strategically planted during the Civil Rights era. When Lyndon B. Johnson predicted in 1965 that the Voting Rights Act meant the South would go Republican for the next 50 years, he wasn't just whistling Dixie.
A telling anecdote recounted by Pat Buchanan to New Yorker writer George Packer last year captures the dark spirit that still hovers around the GOP. In 1966 Buchanan and Richard Nixon were at the Wade Hampton Hotel in Columbia, S.C., where Nixon worked a crowd into a frenzy: "Buchanan recalls that the room was full of sweat, cigar smoke, and rage; the rhetoric, which was about patriotism and law and order, 'burned the paint off the walls.' As they left the hotel, Nixon said, 'This is the future of this Party, right here in the South.'"
That same rage was on display again in the fall of 2008, but this time the frenzy was stimulated by a pretty gal with a mocking little wink. Sarah Palin may not have realized what she was doing, but Southerners weaned on Harper Lee heard the dog whistle.
The curious Republican campaign of 2008 may have galvanized a conservative Southern base -- including many who were mostly concerned with the direction Democrats would take the country -- but it also repelled others who simply bolted and ran the other way. Whatever legitimate concerns the GOP may historically have represented were suddenly overshadowed by a sense of a resurgent Old South and all the attendant pathologies of festering hate and fear.
What the GOP is experiencing now, one hopes, are the death throes of that 50-year spell that Johnson foretold. But before the party of the Great Emancipator can rise again, Republicans will have to face their inner Voinovich and drive a stake through the heart of old Dixie.
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Kathleen Parker's e-mail address is kathleenparker(at)washpost.com
(c) 2009, Washington Post Writers Group
This news arrived on: 08/05/2009
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Posted Comments:
08-11-2009 03:11
wrote:
why did the redneck cross the road who knows who cares at least hes gone
08-06-2009 22:14
JCE wrote:
OWM
Depends on where I cross the street. Probably not in your neighborhood.
Catharyne While I think you are correct about everyone looking at their positions, I also think to fully do the whole thing justice, we must try to see ourselves thru the eyes and hearts of others. If we fail to do that, I doubt that we can ever truly see or understand ourselves. We also have to try to see someone thru their own eyes, and experiences, and leave behind this notion that we are normal, natural, and best, and they are different and therefore abnormal, unnatural, and worst. Those blinders keep us from reality.
Catharyne While I think you are correct about everyone looking at their positions, I also think to fully do the whole thing justice, we must try to see ourselves thru the eyes and hearts of others. If we fail to do that, I doubt that we can ever truly see or understand ourselves. We also have to try to see someone thru their own eyes, and experiences, and leave behind this notion that we are normal, natural, and best, and they are different and therefore abnormal, unnatural, and worst. Those blinders keep us from reality.
08-06-2009 15:15
Catharyne Stauffer wrote:
Kathleen just to give you a different prospective on this topic , I am an artist and so the references to different colors litter my speech. Examples like I feel really blue , I need things in black or white , or its a very gray and close day etc.
Anyways one of my many trips to the US I was talking to an African American and through out our whole conversation this person was over reacting to very innocent statements and trying to literally take offense to anything I said. It was without a doubt the most bizarre conversation I have ever had or would ever want to experience again. I do not have a racist bone in my body but I felt extremely uneasy because of this person ABSOLUTE defensive position regardless of what was being said.
Another example of this was a couple years ago I was on Maui and I told this rather dark and handsome waiter that I was looking forward to going to the beach and getting a little color on my skin . ( I have a very pale complexion ) Well he was rather struck by my comment and then he gave me this huge beautiful smile and said you must be from Canada . Which I replied yes even though I was a bit taken back by his response . What I had said, seemed to be the most ordinary of comments and yet his reaction was of genuine shock and later humor .
In short Kathleen perhaps both sides need to step back a bit and rethink their postures.
Anyways one of my many trips to the US I was talking to an African American and through out our whole conversation this person was over reacting to very innocent statements and trying to literally take offense to anything I said. It was without a doubt the most bizarre conversation I have ever had or would ever want to experience again. I do not have a racist bone in my body but I felt extremely uneasy because of this person ABSOLUTE defensive position regardless of what was being said.
Another example of this was a couple years ago I was on Maui and I told this rather dark and handsome waiter that I was looking forward to going to the beach and getting a little color on my skin . ( I have a very pale complexion ) Well he was rather struck by my comment and then he gave me this huge beautiful smile and said you must be from Canada . Which I replied yes even though I was a bit taken back by his response . What I had said, seemed to be the most ordinary of comments and yet his reaction was of genuine shock and later humor .
In short Kathleen perhaps both sides need to step back a bit and rethink their postures.
08-06-2009 08:08
OWM wrote:
I doubt you could cross the street without seeing racism.
08-05-2009 07:52
OWM wrote:
Bull
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