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A brief history of southern racial politics, struggles for suffrage
and the reengineering of America's Black vote.
This book (my first book) has taken several twists and turns prior
to production. The initial direction was blacks and politics in
North Carolina; then it was the history of racism in the southern
United States; and finally it was Southern Racial Politics and
North Carolina's Black Vote- a convenient pairing of the former
two.
Before my critics start ranting and raving about what seems to be
repetitive and disjointed appointments, let me say what seems to be
repetitive and disjointed is actually intended. I've known for some
time that some readers of non-fiction are cherry pickers (they read
chapter I and II but then skip to chapter VI or VII). And I've
always wondered why writers don't give backgrounds and lead-ups to
new chapters, topics and sub-topics. In this book you'll find that
I've given considerable attention to the foundation of materials as
well as the main content. And in many cases the foundation may be a
repeat of an issue previously discussed. But this is my style and I
hope you'll find comfort in it.
With all due respect to the nations' preeminent historians, John
Hope Franklin, North Carolina History and Archives Director, Dr.
Jeffery Crow and NC senior Appellate Court Judge James A. Wynn Jr.,
I have invested a considerable amount of time, energy and patience
in laying the foundation for my version of the development of
America's prejudices, biases and racism. Judge Wynn, in particular,
tried to persuade me from historical discussions of antebellum and
post civil war politics. But I felt that America's racism has
become the common thread that has woven a quilt of mistrust,
deception and outright lies in national state and local politics-
especially in the South.And it needed exploring.
The "beginning" is a wonderful place to start. In Part I (the
Beginning) an attempt is made to outline the circumstance that led
to the development of notions of racism and bigotry, and how
unscrupulous politicians used the publics' propensity for both to
gain political advantage. In many historical accounts of blacks in
America the American Civil War is a centerpiece and hub for
documentation, speculation and d justification of positions. The
Civil War is therefore discussed from a perspective of the black
man- the reasons for the war, and blacks- service during the war.
The core of this book really begins with Reconstruction and blacks-
newfound freedom, elected officials, Party affiliation, and voter
rights protection. The end of Reconstruction is when the ugliness
began. Many Southern whites saw this as a time to put blacks back
in their places and they produced groups and organizations to
ensure that the white man was restored to his "rightful" position
of racial superiority. This was a time of Race Riots, Black Codes,
Lynching and Jim Crow.
The later half of the twentieth century was the start of real
political and social gains for blacks in America; and by the end of
the 20th century blacks has gone through a political metamorphosis,
moving from the Party of Lincoln to the Party that Lynched and
enslaved them- the Democratic Party. The impact of the saga of
"trading places" between the Democratic and Republican Parties
still lingers today. And although the number of black elected
officials is at an all time high and blacks have attained very high
appointed offices, there are forces that would intimidate black
voters, disenfranchise black votersand even steal elections form
black and white voters all in the name of politics and winning
elections.
These extraordinary circumstances require extraordinary remedies.
The final Part of this book is devoted to the "Reengineering" of
the black vote. The reengineering of black vote is a process that
is long over-due and a process that will help empower all voters
and bring a sense of fairness and equality to the politics of race
in America.
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