Donald Trump’s reelection campaign platform consists of only one theme: American cities are being torn apart by black mobs and antifa terrorists, and only he—the law and order president—can bring order back to the nation.
The idea that Trump, who has presided over
the most corrupt White House administration in history, is campaigning as a “law
and order” president would be laughable except for one thing: by spewing his hateful
and racist rhetoric for more than three years, he has set the stage for a
violent right-wing, white nationalist takeover of the country.
It happened here once before on a smaller scale.
It happened in 1898 in Wilmington, NC.
As it neared the turn of the 20th
century, that North Carolina city was hailed as a prime example of the New
South. The state’s largest city, its population was mostly black and prosperous.
There were African American doctors, educators, and entrepreneurs, and it was
run by black elected officials. In fact, North Carolina in general was more
progressive than other southern states, having sent four black Republicans to Congress
between 1875 and 1899.
This success was the result of a political
coalition of Republicans—including black Republicans—and the Populist Party, which
was comprised white farmers hit hard by a bad economy.
The Racist Democrats
That didn’t well with the conservative and
racist Democratic Party.
Yes, back then the Democratic Party was largely
the party of the South and that meant the party of racist white men. Most black
voters cast their ballots for the Republican Party. We wouldn’t see the ideological
line up we see today until the mid-20th century, when progressives
began taking over the Democratic Party and “Dixie Democrats” the Republican
Party.
Trump, a Republican who filled his campaign
staff and White House staff with self-avowed white nationalists like Steve
Bannon and Stephen Miller, would feel quite at home with the Democrat Party of
1898. The North Carolina Democratic state party handbook for that year stated, “This
is a white man’s country and white men must control and govern it.”
State GOP leaders Furnifold Simmons, a future
U.S. Senator, Charles Aycock, a future North Carolina governor, and Alfred
Moore Wadell developed a plan to break up the Republican-Populist alliance: stoke
white anger and resentment against blacks.
Their plan was supported by a FoxNews-like
North Carolina newspaper which published racist political cartoons warning of “Negro
domination” and the need to protect “white womanhood” from black men.
Red Shirts and other white supremacists pose following a violent coup that overthrew an interracial city government in Wilmington, NC. |
The Democrats also had a private militia called the “Red Shirts.” Much like Trump’s support from white supremacist militias today, the Red Shirts used threats and violence to intimidate black voters. Armed Red Shirts attended Republican rallies to frighten away attendees, and patrolled polling places to keep black voters at bay—much as Trump is currently recruiting “an army” to guard polls today.
Shortly before the election, Alfred Moore
Waddell addressed a Democratic rally announcing that “negro office-holding
ought at once and forever be brought to an end. Even if we have to choke the
current of the Cape Fear River with carcasses.”
The Democrats overwhelmingly won the
election, taking over every city office that was open. But the coup didn’t stop
there.
Following their election “victory,” the Democrats then forced any remaining coalition office holders out, with a show of force by marching 2,000 armed Red Shirts through the streets. Then they set to destroying the black economy. Any protests were met with violence, living up to Waddell’s promise to block “Cape Fear River with carcasses.” No one knows exactly how many black Americans were killed. Estimates vary from 40 to 60, but the death toll was probably higher.
On September 10, in a threat that sounded
reminiscent of Waddell’s promise, Trump declared that if he wins, he will invoke
the Insurrection Act to “put down” any protests with military force.
Same Rhetoric
The violence in 1898, of course, was blamed
on black “instigators” just as Trump blames the riots raging about the country today
on black activists and the largely mythical “antifa,” despite FBI reports that
much of the violence is the work of white supremacist militias.
Following the violence, the Democratic
victors announced a “White Declaration of Independence” declaring, “We will no
longer be ruled, and will never again be ruled, by men of African origin.” Jim
Crow laws, including literacy tests and poll taxes, were enacted to prevent
blacks from voting. Wilmington, once a shining example of black opportunity,
was now the domain of white nationalists.
And today, the nation has a president with
a long record of open hostility toward black Americans who preaches hate-filled
rhetoric about people of color and finds succor and support from the KKK and
other white nationalist groups. He has spent more than three years driving a
schism between the races, encouraging enmity between fellow Americans, lighting U.S. cities ablaze, and setting the stage for what he and his racist allies
hope to be a white supremacist victory in November.
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