The date was January 14, 1963. Fifty two years ago. The
streets of Montgomery were packed with visitors from all over the state. Many
others were there from other states. The local, state, and national media
were there as well. The occasion was the inaugural address of the newly elected
governor. The speech had been written by Asa Carter, founder of the local Ku
Klux Klan. The editors of the local daily newspaper, the Montgomery Advertiser,
had urged the fiery young governor-elect to remove the fateful passage from the
speech, but their request was denied. He stood on the portico of the Capitol
building, looking down on the mass of people stretching down the boulevard
known as Dexter Avenue. Surely, he was aware of the symbolism. This was the
same place that Jefferson Davis had stood as he was sworn in as the first (and
only) President of the Confederacy.
“Today I have stood, where once Jefferson Davis stood, and took an oath
to my people. It is very appropriate then that from this Cradle of the
Confederacy, this very heart of the great Anglo-Saxon Southland, that today we
sound the drum for freedom as have our generations of forebears before us have
done, time and again through history. Let us rise to the call of freedom-loving
blood that is in us and send our answer to the tyranny that clanks its chains
upon the South. In the name of the greatest people that have ever trod this
earth, I draw the line in the dust and toss the gauntlet before the feet of
tyranny….and I say….Segregation today….Segregation tomorrow….Segregation
forever!”
Five years later, the man that said these words would run
for President as an Independent. He would carry 5 states, including Georgia,
Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, and Alabama. He would garner 46 Electoral
votes, 13.5% of the total vote, and 9.9 Million votes. In other words,
he was not alone in his sentiments or his vision for the future of America.
It would be foolish to think that this point of view on
diversity, that was so demonstrably prevalent 50 years ago no longer exists.
Xenophobia, homophobia, and racism are all fueled by fear.
So what are so many people in America afraid of? Why the intolerance? Why so
many voter suppression efforts? Why
so many reactionary laws targeting the
LGBT community? Why so much animosity toward immigration reform efforts?
According to the US Census Bureau, the percentage of the
American population classified as white was 75.1% in 2000. In 2010 it had
decreased to 63.7%. At the current rate, it is estimated that in
less than thirty years America will no longer be a country where white people
are in the majority. In 2005, only 28% of the American public supported
same-sex marriage. Today, more than 50% of the public supports it, thirty seven
states have legalized it, and a conservative Supreme Court seems primed to make
it the law of the land.
America is changing. Rapidly. And “Change”, is scary.
The number of Americans that are 65 years or older is larger
than it has been at any time in the country’s history. According to the 2010
census, more than 40 million Americans
are 65 or older. They make up 13% of the total population. They also make up
the base of the Republican Party. They grew up in the sixties. Many of them did
not go to integrated schools, do not socialize with minorities, and did not
compete against them in the workforce. They are very resistant to the change that is
occurring in America today.
The firestorm generated by Indiana’s religious freedom law
is the latest example of the conflict between competing views of America’s
future, the old and the new, “segregation forever” or “I have a dream”.
The differences are real, deeply ingrained in the fabric of
our nation’s culture. They will not go away easily, if ever. It is a cultural
divide that was settled, but not forgotten, by civil war. Economic forces have
forced the Indiana legislature to reconsider its effort to clothe its bigotry
in subtle legislation. The same forces have prompted the governor of Arkansas
to reconsider his legislature’s similar effort. Nevertheless, every Republican presidential candidate
did not hesitate to weigh in on the side that the Republican base demands. They
know that they cannot win a Republican primary without pleasing the base.
I am reminded of the first shots fired at Fort Sumter.
Once, George Wallace was asked why he started using racist
messages. He is quoted as having said, “I tried to talk about good roads and
good schools, and all these things that have been part of my career, and nobody
listened. And then I began talking about n*****s, and they stomped the floor.”
They stomped the floor. They stomped the steps. They stomped
the street and they stomped the grass in Montgomery….On January 14, 1963.
The minorities are coming. Will the older, white Americans
allow it to happen? Or will they take America with them, to their graves?
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