Republican Rep. Jon Hubbard is the latest to
deem it a blessing. His position is not as uncommon as you'd think
By Mark Howard,
Alternet
Friday, Oct 12, 2012 10:42 AM EDT
Jon Hubbard (Credit: AP/Arkansas Secretary of State, Lori McElroy)
This article originally appeared on
AlterNet.
For obvious reasons, the American conservative movement has long been
dogged by accusations of racism and racial insensitivity. From their
famed Southern strategy to their determined efforts to suppress minority
voting via phony voter ID initiatives to their race-baiting Obama
attacks, conservatives have made clear their opposition to a tolerant,
multicultural America. In fact, much of their electoral strategy relies
on scaring older, white voters about blacks and Hispanics taking over
“their” country.
So it’s not uncommon to hear a prominant
conservative, even one who holds elected office, make patently offensive
remarks. Yet some occasionally hit an unimaginable low. This week, it
was revealed that Republican Rep. Jon Hubbard has published a book in
which he wrote that “[T]he institution of slavery that the black race
has long believed to be an abomination upon its people may actually have
been a blessing in disguise.” He defended his book on Wednesday,
telling the Jonesboro Sun that
he still believed slavery to be a blessing because it helped blacks
come to America. Yes, he praised slavery. And when given the opportunity
to backpedal, he doubled down.
You may think that this does not
occur often. You would be wrong. Here are a few other prominent
conservatives who have suggested slavery was not all that bad.
1. Pat Buchanan. In
his essay “A Brief for Whitey,” Buchanan suggested that slavery was a
net positive, saying that,“America has been the best country on earth
for black folks. It was here that 600,000 black people, brought from
Africa in slave ships, grew into a community of 40 million, were
introduced to Christian salvation, and reached the greatest levels of
freedom and prosperity blacks have ever known.”
2. & 3. Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum.
Bob Vander Plaats, the leader of the arch-conservative Family Leader, a
religious organization that opposes same-sex marriage, got GOP
presidential candidates Bachmann and Santorum to sign his pledge
asserting that life for African-Americans was better during the era of
slavery: “A child born into slavery in 1860 was more likely to be raised
by his mother and father in a two-parent household than was an
African-American baby born after the election of the USA’s first
African-American President.”
4. Art Robinson.
Robinson was a publisher and a GOP candidate for congress in Oregon.
One of the books he published included this evaluation of life under
slavery: “The negroes on a well-ordered estate, under kind masters, were
probably a happier class of people than the laborers upon any estate in
Europe.”
5. Rev. Jesse Lee Peterson. Peterson is
a conservative preacher who articulated this bit of gratitude: “Thank
God for slavery, because if not, the blacks who are here would have been
stuck in Africa.”
6. David Horowitz. Horowitz is
the president of the David Horowitz Freedom Center and edits the
ultra-conservative FrontPage magazine. In a diatribe against reparations
for slavery, Horowitz thought this argument celebrating the luxurious
life of blacks in America would bolster his case: “If slave labor
created wealth for Americans, then obviously it has created wealth for
black Americans as well, including the descendants of slaves.”
7. Wes Riddle.
Riddle was a GOP congressional candidate in Texas with some peculiar
conspiracy theories on a variety of subjects. His appreciation for what
slavery did for African Americans was captured in this comment: “Are the
descendants of slaves really worse off? Would Jesse Jackson be better
off living in Uganda?”
8. Trent Franks. Franks is
the sitting congressman for the second congressional district in
Arizona. As shown here, he believes that a comparison of the
tribulations of African Americans today to those of their ancestors in
the Confederacy would favor a life in bondage: “Far more of the African
American community is being devastated by the policies of today than
were being devastated by the policies of slavery.”
9. Ann Coulter.
Known for her incendiary rhetoric and hate speech, Coulter was right in
character telling Megyn Kelly of Fox News that, “The worst thing that
was done to black people since slavery was the great society programs.”
10. Rep. Loy Mauch. This Arkansas GOP state legislator has found biblical support for his pro-slavery position. He wrote to the
Democrat-Gazette to
inquire, “If slavery were so God-awful, why didn’t Jesus or Paul
condemn it, why was it in the Constitution and why wasn’t there a war
before 1861?”
There is an almost palpable nostalgia among some
conservatives for a bygone era wherein they could sip mint juleps under
the magnolias while the fields were tended to by unpaid lackeys. And it
isn’t a vague insinuation. Mitt Romney supporter Ted Nugent
declared,
“I’m beginning to wonder if it would have been best had the South won
the Civil War.” No one should regard it as a coincidence that so much of
this racist animus has surfaced during the term of the first
African-American president of the United States. It’s one thing to
harbor such offensive racial prejudices privately, but when people in
public life are comfortable enough to openly express opinions like
these, it reveals something of the character of their movement. And
what’s worse is that conservative and Republican leaders, given the
opportunity, refuse to repudiate the remarks. Mitt Romney has stated
that all he’s concerned about is getting 50.1% of the vote, and if that
means tolerating appeals to racist voters in order to attain his goal,
then it’s just a part of the process.
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