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Related: About this forumThe right defends a new Jim Crow: 50 years since the Civil Rights Act, wingnuts still don’t get it
http://www.salon.com/2014/03/01/the_right_defends_a_new_jim_crow_50_years_since_the_civil_rights_act_wingnuts_still_dont_get_it/?source=newsletterThe right defends a new Jim Crow: 50 years since the Civil Rights Act, wingnuts still dont get it
Elias Isquith
Watching the debate over Arizonas SB 1062 (better known as the states anti-gay Jim Crow law) unfold this past week, I couldnt help but think of the already iconic line from Matthew McConaugheys True Detective character Rust Cohle: Time is a flat circle. As is always the case with the nihilistic and willfully esoteric Cohle, its not entirely clear what hes trying to say with the metaphor, but we get the gist: Like Nietzsches eternal return, Cohles flat circle theory holds that all of us are destined to relive every moment of our conscious lives, forever. Its as if we all were stuck in the late Harold Ramis Groundhog Day, but instead of repeating a single day, we repeat our entire lives.
Beyond the fact that, like many others, obsessing over True Detective has increasingly become the chief way I spend my free time, Arizonas brief foray into the politics of segregation reminded me of the flat circle quote because I had recently seen Bryan Cranstons Broadway debut, All the Way, in which the Breaking Bad star plays former president Lyndon B. Johnson during the historic period between Kennedys assassination and Johnsons reelection, a time when the 36th president was working feverishly to ensure the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The play is good and Cranston is great, but what was most striking throughout was how much Johnsons opponents then sounded like SB 1062s supporters today. It was, as Cohle would say, some heavy shit.
The similarities werent merely superficial, either. Sure, the play, written by Pulitzer prize-winning playwright Robert Schenkkan (who obviously did his homework), was littered with hysterical charges of fascism and socialism and big government from no-name Dixiecrats that most of us never knew or were happy to forget. And of course these moments brought to mind much of the anti-Obamacare rhetoric that has emanated from conservatives during the past five years. But the parallels went deeper than that. It wasnt just the language that sounded so familiar, but the logic behind it, too. Whether conservatives were defending Jim Crow proper or the Southwests latest variant, their worldview, all these years later, was disturbingly unchanged.
~snip~
As the opposition to SB 1062 increased in fervency and numbers, the usually loquacious Paul was, unlike his fellow Senate Republican John McCain (who opposed the bill), deafeningly mute. Anyone familiar with Pauls history knows why: Because the obvious presidential aspirant wanted to avoid reminding people of the unfortunate 2010 interview with Rachel Maddow in which he stated that, even today, he would not support the government-run dismantling of Jim Crow. I dont want to be associated with those people, Paul said, referring to white supremacists whod bar blacks from their restaurants, but I also dont want to limit their speech in any way Pauls orthodox libertarianism told him that the freedom to discriminate was too valuable, too sacred, to let the federal government stand in its way. Like Sen. Barry Goldwater did in 1964, when he voted against the Civil Rights Act, Paul argued that the Constitution had no room for anti-discrimination.
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