| WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Do my eyes deceive me? Is that surly fellow
staring at me from the front page of the good old Drudge Report wearing a
Confederate general's uniform a United States senator -- a current United
States senator?
It is indeed, and the senator in the suit that fought under the
Stars and Bars of unhappy memory is not Sen. Trent Lott, the Democrats'
vision of Pitchfork Ben Tillman reborn. No, the grizzled and
menacing-looking United States senator in Confederate drag is Democratic
Sen. Robert Byrd.
He is clutching a sword. Does that not send a chill down the
backs of every Democrat in the country? The senior senator from West
Virginia -- a border state! -- has a cameo role in "Gods and Generals," a
film about to come out from Warner Brothers.
Fie on both Warner Brothers and the senator, who incidentally is
the only sitting member of the United States Senate to have once served as a
member of the Ku Klux Klan, a group whose civil rights record has been even
more unsatisfactory than that of the modern Republican Party. Even the
Clintons would agree with that.
How could Byrd and Warner Brothers be so insensitive? What with
all the controversy about the Stars and Bars flying from Southern state
capitals, there has to be more to it. My estimate is that Byrd is trying to
send racists all over the country a message. "I am with you, fellows" --
that is his message, and he probably is. Will the Clintons join me in asking
Byrd quietly to resign his office before the Republicans break out in full
cry against this act of racial callousness?
Both Clintons were superb last week during the Trent Horror.
Hillary publicly pronounced that what Lott "did was state publicly what many
of them (Republicans) have stated privately over many years in the back
roads and back streets of the South." And Hillary spent a lot of time in the
"back roads and back streets of the South," chasing down her errant hubby.
But Hillary, what were the monsters saying in those unlovely
purlieus? You lived there for two decades, and I have not heard of your
complaints about the indigenes of those back roads, not when they were
voting for your husband. You and your husband did very well politically in
those regions.
Last week, husband Bill was singing the same song. Said he of
the foolish Sen. Trent Lott, Lott "just embarrassed them (Republicans) by
saying in Washington what they (Republicans) do on the back roads every
day." Back roads again -- well, we now know what our
ithyphallic ex-prez is suspected of doing "on the back roads every day."
Bubba should talk of back roads. He acted in the White House about the same
way he acted on the back roads. So are the Clintons with me? Is it time we
send Byrd into the same opprobrious pit we sent Lott?
Byrd is the same galoot who last year erupted with: "There are
white niggers. I've seen a lot of white niggers in my time, if you want to
use that word." Hey, wait; I do not want to use that word. But Democrats
such as Byrd have used such words for years. They represent the party that
enforced Jim Crow. They made up the Dixiecrats. Now they, with their
Northern liberal allies, have used and abused the African-American vote as
one of their last holds on political power. Rather than bringing the nation
together and noting that race is no longer a major issue, these Democrats
make it an issue to the discredit of the nation and to the pain of black
people.
It is worth noting what researchers on the editorial page of the
venerable Wall Street Journal dug up this week. Even after Byrd left the
Klan, he wrote to the Klan's Imperial Wizard in 1946: "The Klan is needed
today as never before, and I am anxious to see its rebirth here in West
Virginia. ... It is necessary that the order be promoted immediately and in
every state in the Union. Will you please inform me as to the possibilities
of rebuilding the Klan realm of W. Va.?"
A year later, as a member of the West Virginia State Senate, he
wrote that he would "never submit to fight beneath that banner (the American
flag) with a Negro by my side. Rather, I should die a thousand times, and
see old Glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again, than to see this
beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongers, a throwback to the
blackest specimen from the wilds."
Today, the Democrats take warm pride in calling him the great
orator of the Senate. He has not lost his touch. But, I think the Clintons
will agree with me that it is time that he go. And for that matter, so
should all those who play the race card today much as old Bobby Byrd played
it in the late 1940s. So long Bobby, and for that matter so long Hillary and
Bill. Race should no longer be an issue exploited by the bloodless pols of
either party.
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