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The George Wallace We Forgot (Rhymer / NYT)

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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-24-08 12:23 AM
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The George Wallace We Forgot (Rhymer / NYT)
By RUSS RYMER
Published: October 24, 2008
Cambridge, Mass

... Mr. Lewis’s authority to chastise Mr. McCain comes not from his Bloody Sunday stand on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., in 1965, but rather from his subsequent record on the hustings. His mettle was tested not only in Selma but also in three tough campaigns, characterized by tactics of personal destruction ...

Likewise, to describe George Wallace as a simple racist is to give his biography short shrift. As a circuit court judge in the 1950s, Wallace was respectful toward blacks, and as a legislator from 1947 to 1953, he was a moderate. In 1948, when Strom Thurmond led the Southern delegations out of the Democratic convention to protest the party’s pioneer civil rights plank, Wallace stayed in his seat ...

He might have carried a tolerant message into the Alabama governor’s mansion in 1958, but he lost the race after spurning the support of the Ku Klux Klan (which then backed his primary opponent, John Patterson) and being endorsed by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Sadly for Wallace’s state, his region, his nation and himself, he did not respond as John Lewis did after his defeat by Carmichael. Mr. Lewis, whenever confronted with calls to divisiveness, chose to redouble his commitment to reason and tolerance ...

It would behoove everyone in the current race for America’s highest offices to pay attention to what Mr. Lewis was really saying, and judge it for its provenance in his long experience. Better than perhaps any living American, he knows that courage on the front line is one thing, and on the campaign stage quite another, knows how tiny and harmless the seeds of fanaticism can seem, how one cry of “kill him” can crescendo into a chorus that can’t be stifled. Mr. Lewis might be deemed generous in wishing on no other member of his profession the harrowed look I witnessed in George Wallace’s eyes as he struggled up off the floor in Boston and beheld what a hell he’d wrought.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/24/opinion/24rymer.html
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MonteLukast Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-24-08 07:08 AM
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1. The parallel to McCain is amazing.
Embrace and court the very people who ruined your chances in the past. The sad part is, if you asked Wallace, he probably would have told you he had no alternative.

Funny how so many times that tough, "no alternative" choices backfire on us...
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