Dixie is effectively an occupied nation. The culture and heritage of White Southerners is deliberately oppressed in every facet of American society. The media dehumanizes the White Southerner in movies and television frequently. They've deliberately made the Southern dialect out to be a sign of being uneducated while simultaneously making Ebonics out to be something of cultural importance. They depict "trailer trash" as horrible, backwards people who don't deserve any sympathy while simultaneously crying about the horrible plight of the poor black man - who is clearly a victim of systemic oppression. Furthermore, Christianity (the primary religion of White Southerners) is becoming increasingly bastardized as the media and government effectively demonize the faith. And all that's not to mention the deliberate demographic replacement of White Southerners, not just by non-Whites today, but also by carpetbaggers immediately following the Civil War.
I'd argue that the progressive, liberal, Marxist, etc. don't have any interest at all in "educating", "reforming", or "reconstructing" the South. They're interested in the cultural and ethnic genocide of the South. Consider that it is taboo for the Southern White man to fly any flag relating to Southern independence, to celebrate men like Robert E. Lee, to argue for his rights as a Southern White man, to so much as suggest that the Civil War narrative is flawed, or even to assert that his race is
real. Now consider the situation of the freed blacks: It is NOT taboo for blacks to form explicitly racial organizations of any kind, it is NOT taboo to celebrate murderers like Nat Turner, it is NOT taboo for blacks to argue for their rights as blacks, it is NOT taboo to demonize the Southern White man, and it is most certainly NOT taboo to assert that the black race is real.
In fact, modern American society is essentially built upon the oppression of Southern Whites. The core of American social policy resides not in any document dating back to this country's founding, but rather in the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which itself is the descendant of the Supreme Court's Brown v. Board decision, which stripped Southern schools of their freedom of association. The notion that the Civil Rights Act made anyone the equal of anyone else is ludicrous, because it simply did the opposite. Whereas the law previously applied to everyone equally, the Civil Rights Act effectively made minorities into a protected class and gave them the freedom to go where they simply weren't wanted. And what did the federal government do when White Southerners stood up for their right to decide who went to the schools that
they built and
they paid for? Same things as always, they used force.
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And to what end was this done? Black people are in an arguably worse position than before. They can now go and eat in White restaurants and ride in the front of the bus, sure. But has that fixed their communities? No, it didn't. Blacks are less safe than they were back then. All that unleashing them on the rest of us did was make us less safe, degrade our communities, cripple our schools, and destroy our cities. Are we supposed to believe that wasn't intentional? If the issue was that black schools were underfunded, why didn't the feds just give them funding? If the issue was that blacks weren't allowed in White businesses, why didn't the government do anything to help black businesses? If the problem was that blacks had terrible housing, why didn't the government try to improve their housing? Desegregation didn't solve any of these problems because it wasn't designed to. It, just like the emancipation of blacks in the Civil War, was no more than a strategy to disenfranchise the White Southern voter.
On a side note, the idea that segregation was unconstitutional is a total farce. The Founders never intended for blacks to be free, and Thomas Jefferson explicitly stated in his
Notes on the State of Virginia that emancipation of blacks would require that they "be removed beyond the reach of mixture". So anyone who wants to argue along the lines of American ideals need not apply.