Review: Shifting Grounds: Nationalism & the American South, 1848-1865

Paul Quigley's Shifting Grounds: Nationalism & the American South, 1848-1865

“As the great idea of the eighteenth century was that of union against tyrants, so it is that of the nineteenth century, the independence of nationalities.”
– William Woods Holden, Raleigh 1862

Dixie

Paul Quigley’s Shifting Grounds: Nationalism & the American South, 1848-1865 explores the collapse of American nationalism and the rise of the Confederacy from the Mexican War to the War Between the States.

In the span of a mere 13 years, the United States was shaken to its foundation by sectional conflict and was cleaved apart into two rival nation-states. The secessionist vanguard was catapulted from the fringes of Southern society to the mainstream.

Paul Quigley’s book will strike a familiar chord with OD readers: it is a story of disillusionment with the United States, the rejection of American nationalism, the search for alternative models of social and political organization, the sense of being an oppressed minority under siege by a hostile majority, and finally Southern ethnogenesis. There are hundreds of thousands of modern disunionists who are going through the same process in the 21st century.

In the 1850s, the balance of power within the Union between the North and South was shifting. Demographically, the North was becoming more populous than the South. This growth of population was diminishing Southern political power in the House of Representatives. The admission of California as a free state ended sectional parity in the Senate.

As the South was losing political power in the Union, it was also under siege by the abolitionist movement in the North. Yankee abolitionists like William Lloyd Garrison were fanatics who demonized Southerners and who were constantly denouncing Southerners as their moral inferiors. They denounced the “false Union” and the Constitution as a wicked Satanic pact with Southern slaveholders.

The growth of anti-slavery sentiment in the North culminated in the formation of the Republican Party which was based on the “Free Soil” idea that Southern slaveholders should be excluded from the national territories. Henceforth, the national territories would be the exclusive domain of Northerners, an outlet for the expansion of their socioeconomic system.

As the moral inferiors of Northerners, Southern slaveholders would have to “pass through a kind of moral quarantine” to enter “the free soil paradise.” The South would be encircled by free states which would be populated by Northerners. This would further augment Northern political power with the Union and the dominant section would use this power to throw off the shackles of the Constitution and further aggrandize itself at the expense of the South.

In other words, mid-nineteenth century Southerners anticipated the reduction of the South to its late nineteenth/early twentieth century condition as a prostrate industrial colony of the North, and embarked on the dangerous course of independence to avoid sharing the fate of Ireland or Poland.

The North was clearly the aggressor in the conflict: it was the North which nurtured a radical social movement based on hostility to the social and economic foundation of Southern society, it was the North which formed a sectional political party to exclude Southerners from the territories, it was the North that was rapidly changing and demanding corresponding changes in the terms of the Union.

In the Early Republic, peace and harmony had prevailed in the Union. There was an “Era of Good Feelings” under President James Monroe. The North and South expanded into Transappalachia on equal terms. Slavery had not prevented the Founders from creating the Union. With the exception of the Missouri crisis, which Jefferson saw as “a firebell in the night,” it had not disturbed the Republic for over forty years following the ratification of the Constitution.

Southern nationalism was a reactionary phenomenon: the Nullification Crisis of 1828 to 1832 was a reaction by South Carolina to the Tariff of Abominations which had been passed under the Adams administration, the Bluffton movement of 1844 was a reaction to the Tariff of 1842, the Secession Crisis of 1848-1851 was a reaction to the Wilmot Proviso and the admission of California as a free state, the Secession Winter of 1860 was a reaction to John Brown’s 9/11-style terrorist attack on Harper’s Ferry and the election of Abraham Lincoln as president.

William Lloyd Garrison had been the most prominent champion of disunion for twenty years preceeding the formation of the Confederacy. Garrison advocated Northern disunion on the grounds that the Constitution was an immoral pro-slavery document that made the North complicit in Southern slavery. He was advocating disunion for almost ten years before even the most prominent Southern fire eaters like Robert Barnwell Rhett, William Lowndes Yancey, and Edmund Ruffin finally embraced secession.

The abolitionist hate campaign toward the South collided with an honor based culture where the Jeffersonian-Tertium Quid-John C. Calhoun tradition of states’ rights political philosophy was the dominant understanding of the Constitution. Southern nationalism hatched out of this matrix when a secessionist vanguard emerged in the Lower South that began to perceive Northern aggression as a threat to their interests, their honor, their security, and especially their rights.

In the backdrop of these developments in the United States, the intellectual and political landscape was shifting overseas in Western Europe. If the eighteenth century had been the Age of the Enlightenment, the nineteenth century was the Age of Romanticism, and nowhere was romanticism more fervently embraced than in the Old South.

German philosophers like Johann Herder and Johann Fichte had articulated a powerful new version of nationalism, romantic nationalism, in reaction to the French Revolution and the expansion of the French Empire across the German-speaking areas of continental Europe.

Herder had argued that peculiarities of geography and climate formed the national economies of different peoples. The customs and economies of different peoples gave rise to different historical experiences, different cultures, and ultimately to different ethnicities who had different ways of understanding the world.

Johann Fichte expressed the unity of language and nation in his “Thirteenth Address To the German Nation” in 1806:

“The first, original, and truly natural boundaries of states are beyond doubt their internal boundaries. Those who speak the same language are joined to each other by a multitude of invisible bonds by nature herself, long before any human art begins; they understand each other and have the power of continuing to make themselves understood more and more clearly; they belong together and are by nature one and an inseparable whole.

Only when each people, left to itself, develops and forms itself in accordance with its own peculiar quality, and only when in every people each individual develops himself in accordance with that common quality, as well as in accordance with his own peculiar quality-then, and then only, does the manifestation of divinity appear in its true mirror as it ought to be; and only a man who either entirely lacks the notion of the rule of law and divine order, or else is an obdurate enemy thereto, could take upon himself to want to interfere with that law, which is the highest law in the spiritual world!”

By the 1850s, this new type of blood and soil romantic nationalism was destroying ancient empires and sculpting Europe into rival ethnostates. Germany and Italy were in the process of unifying into nation-states.

When Southern secessionists looked toward Europe, they were inspired by ethnonationalist historians and freedom fighters like John Mitchel of Ireland, Guiseppe Garibaldi and Guiseppe Mazzini of Italy, Lajos Kossuth of Hungary, Joachim Lelewel of Poland, and František Palacký of Bohemia. From Kossuth in particular, White Southerners adopted the romantic tradition of place-based nationalism.

Didn’t the South have a peculiar institution? Didn’t the South have a peculiar climate? Hadn’t this peculiar climate and peculiar institution combined to create a different organic and historical nation in the Southern states? Weren’t White Southerners joined by a multitude of invisible bonds like other nations? Didn’t Southerners belong together in a separate and divinely ordained nation state like Hungary and Ireland?

Southern secessionists like William Lowndes Yancey and Robert Barnwell Rhett were beginning to draw analogies between South’s relationship with the Union and the romantic nationalist movements in Western Europe:

“Secessionists sometimes identified themselves overtly with oppositional nationalist leaders in Europe. Thus William Lowndes Yancey, responding to the charges that he was a “rebel,” defiantly identified himself with other nationalist heroes battling colonial-style oppression: “Washington was a rebel! Lafayette was a rebel – and so was Tell and so is Kossuth – rebels against abuse of power; and welcome to us be the appellation received in defense of our rights and liberties.” In a speech of the late 1850s, Robert Barnwell Rhett looked toward Europe and saw “a bloody contest for the independence of nationalities.” God had meant for there to be national differences, and a nation’s right to independence was particularly strong when it was battling against a foreign occupier, as was the case in places such as Ireland, Poland, and Italy. “Let Italy be for Italy,” he urged. Aligning his own nationalist cause with the others, Rhett argued that “the people of England and Ireland, Russia and Poland, Austria and Italy, are not more distinct and antagonistic in their characters, pursuits, and institutions, their sympathies and views, than the people of our Northern and Southern States.”

William Tell was a folk hero of Switzerland whose legend played a central role in the restoration of the Swiss Confederacy following the downfall of Napoleon Bonaparte. Although Paul Quigley never raises the subject in his book, Mark Twain famously blamed the influence of Sir Walter Scott for creating the honor bound, aristocratic, feudal culture that caused the War Between the States:

“Sir Walter had so large a hand in making Southern character, as it existed before the war, that he is in great measure responsible for the war. It seems a little harsh toward a dead man to say that we never should have had any war but for Sir Walter; and yet something of a plausible argument might, perhaps, be made in support of that wild proposition. The Southerner of the American Revolution owned slaves; so did the Southerner of the Civil War: but the former resembles the latter as an Englishman resembles a Frenchman. The change of character can be traced rather more easily to Sir Walter`s influence than to that of any other thing or person.

One may observe, by one or two signs, how deeply that influence penetrated, and how strongly it holds. If one take up a Northern or Southern literary periodical of forty or fifty years ago, he will find it filled with wordy, windy, flowery `eloquence,` romanticism, sentimentality– all imitated from Sir Walter, and sufficiently badly done, too– innocent travesties of his style and methods, in fact. This sort of literature being the fashion in both sections of the country, there was opportunity for the fairest competition; and as a consequence, the South was able to show as many well-known literary names, proportioned to population, as the North could.”

Like modern oil sheiks in the Middle East who romanticize the Islamic Caliphate, the wealth created by plantation slavery in the Antebellum South created the perfect environment for a romantic fantasy ideology to take root and evolve into the foundation of Confederate nationalism.

White Southerners could imagine themselves as knights from the Middle Ages, as the rural lords of great estates (or humbler abodes) who were honor bound to protect their dependents, who were engaged in an ethnic struggle with the Yankee to create an autonomous Southern nation-state.

Jefferson Davis echoed the new romantic ethnic nationalism in his first speech in Montgomery:

“FELLOW-CITIZENS AND BRETHREN OF THE CONFEDERATE STATES OF AMERICA: For now we are brethren, not in name merely, but in fact, men of one flesh, one bone, one interest, one purpose and of an identity of domestic institutions, we have hence I trust a prospect of living together in peace, with our institutions subject to protection not defamation. It may be our career will be ushered in in the middle of storm. It may be that as this morning opened with clouds, mist and rain, we shall have to encounter inconvenience at the beginning; but as the sun rose it lifted the mist and dispelled the clouds, and left the pure sunlight of Heaven, so will the progress of the Southern Confederacy carry us safe to the harbor of constitutional liberty and political equality. [Applause.] Thus we have nothing to fear at home, because we have homogenity. We will have nothing to fear abroad, because if war should come, if we must again baptize in blood the principles for which our fathers bled in the Revolution, we shall show that we are not degenerate sons, but will redeem the pledges they gave, preserve the sacred rights they transmitted to us, and show that Southern valor still shines as brightly as in 1776, 1812, and in every other conflict.”

Davis explicitly defines the Southern cause in terms of ethnic homogeneity. He says if the war comes, Southerners will “baptize in blood the principles for which our fathers bled in the Revolution.” This is an instructive example of how the Confederacy blended the new European romantic ethnic nationalism with the Tertium Quid political philosophy of state sovereignty.

Southern secessionists argued that the United States had never been a real nation. It was based on a type of civic nationalism, the eighteenth century ideal of a union of free men against tyrants to preserve their liberties, which had been expressed as a contract based on reason and self interest, not on more primordial feelings like common ancestry, sentiment, and culture. In Fichte’s words, Yankees and Southerners are not the same people. They do not “understand each other” or “belong together” under a common government.

It was an ethnonationalist war for Cavalier liberation:

“The planters celebrated slavery because it ensured the stability and perpetuation of a republican aristocracy. “The planters are a genuine aristocracy, who cultivate themselves in a leisure founded on slavery,” London Times correspondent William Russell reported from South Carolina on the eve of war. “The admiration for monarchical institutions on the English model, for privileged classes and for a landed aristocracy is undisguised and apparently genuine.” One planter told Russell: “If we could only get one of the Royal race of England to rule over us, we should be content.” Many others expressed regret for the revolution, noting they “would go back tomorrow if they could.”

The planters’ loathing of Yankees startled outsiders, “South Carolina, I am told, was founded by gentlemen, [not by] witch burning Puritans, by cruel persecuting fanatics implanted in the north … [and her] newly born colonies all the ferocity, bloodthirstiness, and rabid intolerance of the Inquisition,” Russell reported. “There is nothing in all the dark caves of human passion so cruel and deadly as the hatred the South Carolinians profess for the Yankees,” he continued. “New England is to [them] the incarnation of moral and political wickedness and social corruption … the source of everything which South Carolina hates.” Another planter told him that if the Mayflower had sunk, “we should have never been driven to these extremes.” …

As the conflict with the Yankees loomed, there was renewed interest in the old Tidewater theory that racial differences were to blame. In wartime propaganda, the Deep Southern elite was explicitly included in the allegedly superior Norman/Cavalier race in an effort to increase the bonds between the regions, with the (decidedly un-Norman) Appalachian districts often embraced for good measure. For Tidewater in particular, casting the conflict as a war for Norman liberation from Anglo-Saxon tyranny neatly sidestepped the more problematic slavery issue. The Southern Literary Messenger,Tidewater’s leading journal, conceded in 1861 that “the Roundheads” may gain many victories in view of their superior strength and their better condition” but assured “they will lose the last battle and then sink down to their normal position of relative inferiority.” The journal argued the Confederate aim was to create “a sort of Patrician Republic” ruled by people “superior to all other races on this continent.”

This propaganda was embraced in the Deep South as well. In an 1862 speech, Jefferson Davis told Mississippi legislators that their enemies were “a traditionless and homeless race … gathered by Cromwell from the bogs and fens of the north of Ireland and of England” to be “disturbers of peace in the world.” The war, DeBow’s Review declared, was a struggle to reverse the ill-conceived American Revolution, which had been contrary to “the natural reverence of the Cavalier for the authority of established forms over mere speculative ideas.” By throwing off monarchy, slaveholders endangered the wondrous “domestic institution” that rested “on the principle of inequality and subordination, and favored a public policy embodying the ideas of social status.” Democracy “threw political influence into the hands of inorganic masses” and caused “the subjection of the Cavalier to the intellectual thralldom of the Puritan.” Other Tidewater and Deep Southern thinkers came to agree that the struggle was really between respect for established aristocratic order and the dangerous Puritan notion that “the individual man was … of higher worth than any system of polity.” As Fitzhugh put it, it was a war “between conservatives and revolutionists; between Christians and infidels … the chase and the libidinous, between marriage and free-love.” Some even championed the dubious notion that the Confederacy was fighting a Huguenot-Anglican counterreformation against Puritan excess. Slavery was not the issue, they argued –defeating democracy was.”

As the war raged, Southern nationalism continued to evolve. William Trescot’s “great, red river of blood” created a visceral and sacred chasm between the North and South that had been only speculative before the war. The Yankee was now the total alien to the Southerner:

“As the war progressed, the Examiner continued to assert national difference. In April 1862, the paper approvingly excerpted a passage from the New Orleans Bee that detailed racial distinctions between Yankees and southerners. Whereas northerners were intolerant, abusive of power, and inclined toward fads and “isms,” southerners were more honest, moral people who distrusted “new-fangled theories.” To the Examiner, this confirmed that the war was not only about the protection of slavery against northern assaults but also about “certain radical and irreconcilable differences of nationable character” between North and South.”

In the year 2012, there are still “certain radical and irreconcilable differences of nationable character” between the North and South, almost 150 years after the demise of slavery. The Yankees are still intolerant, still abusive of power, and they are still “inclined towards fads and “isms.” Their pursuits of these fads and “isms” has metastasized to the point where they threaten destroy their own civilization.

In the Antebellum era, Quigley notes that Southerners perceived a vast number of threats emanating from the North, a multiplicity of different radical utopian social reform movements, not all of which were related to slavery: abolitionism, “Free Soilism,” Bloomerism, Free-Loveism, socialism, atheism, and temperance being the most readily identifiable fanaticisms (“Civil Rightsism” would make its debut in 1866) that seemed to be emanating from the perfectionist reform culture of the Deep North:

“For a range of nonfictional southern spokesmen as well, civilization itself rested on appropriate gender roles and relations. While the slave South was maintaining the proper order of things, the North and sometimes the rest of the Western world, was not. In his 1856 graduation address to the Virginia Military Institute, George Rumbough explained that free society was foolish to question the natural, divinely ordained order of things. Listing the dangerous “isms” he saw to the north, Rumbough included women’s rights, Bloomerism, and Free-Loveism, along with socialism, atheism, and abolitionism. The North’s distorted ideas about slavery were not only tied up with its misguided ideas about religion, liberty, and government, but also with its foolish misconceptions of manhood and womanhood. Rumbough contrasted the South, “where woman, the most powerful, the purest, noblest element of society, is considered as an object of love,” with the North, “where woman “is viewed as an object of distrust, and far from beautifying, transcends the boundaries of modesty and decency, and sighs for an MD suffix or the transcendent reputation of a philanthropic lecturer.” One of many advantages of basing a society on slavery rather than free labor, according to Rumbough and others, was that the institution safeguarded hierarchies of gender as well as of race.

Southern fears about gender proprieties illustrate how urgent the sectional conflict could become when it appeared to enter the realm of the home and family. One Virginia farmer, writing to a local newspaper in 1854, expressed just such fears. Responding to rumors that a female preacher had been plying her trade in the area, the farmer expressed disbelief then sharp anxiety. “Some hundreds are right uneasy about their wives,” he wrote. “They are afraid that some of them women’s rights folks, from the N., are traveling among us, and that some wives are encouraging them.” Even an antislavery fanatic would be more acceptable than a feminist, though the letter-writer. “One would spoil our negroes, but the other would spoil our wives and sweethearts, and either, would be made a bad piece of property.” Perhaps intending that his readers should take the loaded word “insurrection” with a grain of salt (the word was strongly associated with slave revolts in the antebellum South) the farmer concluded: “It is feared that there will be an insurrection among the women, and that they will begin to chew tobacco and drink whiskey.” Likewise, the North Carolina congressman David Outlaw recoiled at the apparent immorality of the society he encountered in Washington, D.C. In Outlaw’s eyes, it was the behavior of northern women there that caused moral deterioration. “There is a boldness,” he wrote to his wife, “a brazenfacedness about Northern city women, as well as a looseness of morals which I hoped may never be introduced south.” In this way white southerners who worried about such matters sectionalized anxieties about moral decline, projecting those anxieties onto their image of the North.”

In hindsight, it is easy to see why these perceptions inspired such ferocious resistance in the Antebellum South: they were prescient, right on target, as that was exactly the egalitarian trajectory of Northern society, and that was exactly the personal threat it posed to every Southern household. We open the year 2012 with Delaware and Hawaii joining the list of Northern states that allow gay marriage and same-sex civil unions.

Everything that the secessionists warned about has since come true. You could even say that BRA as it exists today goes far beyond even their worst nightmares. The Negro has been liberated, transformed into an “African-American,” and has been elevated above Whites in BRA by liberal fanatics. Feminism, Bloomerism, and “Free-Loveism” have destroyed traditional gender roles and are now so commonly accepted that some imagination is required to envision a different type of social order.

In their fanatical quest to elevate their pet “African-Americans” over Whites, the modern liberal has even gone so far as to deny the very existence of racial differences, and has totally proscribed White racial identity as evil and immoral. An Iron Curtain of political correctness and racial conformism now stretches across North America. It is creating a backlash similar to the one that destroyed the Union in the 1850s.

Perhaps the most amazing thing about the modern disunionist movement is that it is no longer really regional in character. It is doubtful the majority of modern disunionists are even White Southerners. In the 21st century, the same fanatical egalitarian spirit that destroyed the Confederacy has been turned against the White population of the North and West whose ancestors fought for the Union. It has been turned against the entirety of Western civilization.

Imagine what the world would be like if it had been strangled in its cradle. Alas, if Napoleon III had only been a little more courageous.


About Hunter Wallace 12379 Articles
Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Occidental Dissent

17 Comments

  1. I’m definitely a regionist.

    I’ll be honest. Back in 06-07 I was a racialist.

    Now I’m more of a regionist and therefore a disunionist. I support the southern movement for Independence but don’t consider myself a southerner. But I realized that there are places where you can go if you want to be around whites. Just go to smaller metro areas. Hardcore racial politics is dropping from my worldview.

  2. A lot of white nationalists don’t get regionalism because it isn’t necessarily racial although i’d argue that on average the whites in north are of a different stock than the whites in the south. Different areas of the northeast differ as well.

    A good example of region based conflict involves the coastal feuding in black=dominated hip hop that lead to actual murders of rappers. Fighting based on region isn’t limited to ultraconservatives who are romancing the confederacy.

  3. @ Hunter Came across some interesting information relating to the coming of the Civil War. I’ve mentioned to you before the Northern railroad corporations like the B&O, and their interest in seeing the South destroyed. Came across the fact that the State of Virginia tried to buy the main West-East connecting rail link between Parkersburg on the Ohio River and Grafton, a central railroad terminal in what is now central West Virginia. The logic was that by owning that connecting line they could divert rail traffic south to Richmond, Norfolk, Wilmington rather than to Baltimore, and north to Philadelphia, New York and Boston.

    The State of Virginia could not raise enough money to buy the Parkersburg to Grafton rail line and it went into Northern hands.

    This was 7 to 10 years before the Civil War. Not everything was cotton, and negroes or moonlight & magnolias by a long shot. LOL.

  4. Came across some interesting information relating to the coming of the Civil War. I’ve mentioned to you before the Northern railroad corporations like the B&O, and their interest in seeing the South destroyed. Came across the fact that the State of Virginia tried to buy the main West-East connecting rail link between Parkersburg on the Ohio River and Grafton, a central railroad terminal in what is now central West Virginia. The logic was that by owning that connecting line they could divert rail traffic south to Richmond, Norfolk, Wilmington rather than to Baltimore, and north to Philadelphia, New York and Boston.

    The State of Virginia could not raise enough money to buy the Parkersburg to Grafton rail line and it went into Northern hands.

    This was 7 to 10 years before the Civil War. Not everything was cotton, and negroes or moonlight & magnolias by a long shot. 😉

  5. I’m much more interested in Southern liberation then racial issues, partly because I know it will end our race problems as well as restore liberty to my descendants.

  6. The race issue is just one major focal point of the assault. It goes far beyond the race issue. The family itself is no long safe. Even Christmas has become controversial. The definition of marriage is now a point of contention.

  7. The Confederate cause is not lost – its ultimate success was merely delayed by a few scores of years. Let us hear no vile slanders against Jewish ladies and gentlemen, nor against Muslims, nor against anyone except those who stand in the way of Confederate victory. By the aid of Italian-Americans, Polish-Americans, Ukrainian-Americans and others who weary of an incompetent and tyrannical federal government, the Confederacy may yet win ultimate victory. Don’t ban the Confederate flag. Ban the Union flag! Let us strike as Uncle Sam becomes the sick man of the world!

  8. Agreed HW, and I think the South free of interference from the damnyankees has a better chance of restoring sanity to our people and culture. I see no hope of being a strong, free and prosperous people as long as we’re saddled with them.

  9. Quote of the Year:

    Ben N Indiana said…

    What we DON’T see is black flight escaping White racism. There is no underground railroad terminating in Zimbabwe.

    January 2, 2012 9:32 PM

  10. Freemasonry is a controlling arm of the European Black Nobility. In the South there is the Scottish Rite Masons. Most, Judges, Lawyers, Politicians, CEOs, Government Administrators, High Ranking Cops are Masonic. Many are in the State Highway Patrols, and Prison Administrators are also in this. It covers a broad Spectrum of society including the military and top chosen Officers, its the all seeing eye. This is also true in the rest of the USA. The Jews have their own Masonic Order which is at the top. All the top BRA leaders are PRINCE HALL. If we went around shotting all our enemys, we would run out of ammo and the barrel on the gun would melt. If we got up one morning and their was no more State Capitals or D.C. or New York City or Hollywood——there would still be millions to replace the scumbags who got wacked. We live in a New Dark Age were everything gets darker and darker! Some believe that Refuge Safety areas will only work. Others believe that no matter were we go we will be with the Tares. We grow up with them just like the tares and weeds in wheat. But…..when the thrashing and cleaning comes, the weeds and tares will go. Just what that Thrashing and sifting will be I dont know, but I pray that it comes SOON!!!!!

  11. Check this out on google search for a good laugh: Black Man Angry at Home Depot Part 1 You Tube, Black Man Angry at KFC You Tube, Black Man Angry at Starbucks You Tube.

  12. “….In the 21st century, the same fanatical egalitarian spirit that destroyed the Confederacy has been turned against the White population of the North and West whose ancestors fought for the Union. It has been turned against the entirety of Western civilization….”

    This seems the truth, but is rarely said.

    As the newly-created “Federal” government emerged right before, then after the Civil War, it has steamrolled, like “the blob” in that movie, to consume/subsume whatever it can in its path toward “sameness.”

    As that’s happened, the populace has become ever more Fascist (not only Miltarist-Corporatist –the “right”— but in the little “f” sense of simply people w/ empty interior lives). “Freedom” for them is “freedom to shop.” They must be “nothing from nowhere,” without language, region, real religion (outside that offered by Vatican II for everyone in the “ecumenical councils.”) They must think alike, and their Religion is “we’re all people here.” (shoppers).

    It’s really the strangest thing. Like becoming non-human, lol.

    No IDEA— how this appears to those who have retained no sense of who they are, where they’re from, their actual religious history and sensibility, their “culture” in the sense of creativity that springs from being alive in that particular way.

    Don’t yankees think that is sort of a strange life???

    Anyway— The Southerners were vilified first. Then Appalachians a close second, the midwest and west.

    This is why I have a problem with the standard Puritans-are-the-root-of-all-evil narrative.

    What often ties the initial attacks together are deeply affiliated wasp areas. (Initially, the attacks on the anglos in the east, then the more Germanics in the upper west, where it’s less Episcopal/presbyterian and more Lutheran).

    The immigration from the South is driven –ideologically– by the Liberation Theology narratives (which are anti “anglo” which in the u.s. is code for protestant). When that anti- “anglo” ism is dropped in favor of brown nationalism, it is on the rationalized by “payback for stolen land” (essentially the spin devised for the israel-palestine conflict, land on the basis of “first claim.”— and then the reaction of producing kennewick men, etc.)

    The attack really, ultimately, seems on the Northern Europeans generally, and BY EXTENSION— on their societies, which were still formulated around being ‘A PEOPLE.” (Versus created around “universalism” whether from the “right” (militarist-corporatist-multi-cult like the “republican party” OR the leftist-wealth-redistribution). Both of those are centralist, universalists, and doctrinally-oriented around an Idea, a “doctrine,” which means thinking outside the box has to be punished.)

    Ethnic-libertarianism was the south and the constitution.

    Exactly how the current administrations have gotten both Militarist-Corportist-Fascism out of the constitution, and the others, Central Party Elite Communism out of the constitution, when clearly it was non-docrinal, not an idea-nation, and the docs written for a people (“our posterity”), is impossible for a voiceless majority to understand.

    For years, a lot of them just don’t vote, as they cannot figure out what on earth for.

  13. Oh—

    It’s not REALLY an egalitarian spirit that destroyed anything. That’s just propaganda.

    Both the “right” (neo-cons) and “left” (central party redistribution networks) USE the “egalitarian” IDEA.

    Various ethnic groups have USED the egalitarian IDEA to gain centralized power. But why do academics act as if this is not the case, lol

  14. http://www.bing.com/videos/watch/video/persona-non-grata-stephen-bloom-defends-iowa-comments/6pjhyyq?cpkey=c54859dd-c010-435c-a989-be1aa4f75fd0%7C%7C%7C%7C

    New England yankee-jeudenraus, look at the bastard, “Iowans are not reprisentative of the US” ? they literally want to alienate the entire nation against them don’t they. the first time, the republicans were only able to defeat the rebs because of their reliance on the midwestern “iron brigade”, which took more casualties than any other yankee unit, and upon immigrants and niggers (both camps may still be on their side, although that depends on the future). these vermin are so goddamn arrogant!

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