White People Always To Blame: NBC News Blames ”Confederate Diaspora” For Shaping Systemic Racism All Across American Life
10/10/2023
A+
|
a-
Print Friendly and PDF

No matter what, white people long dead will always be blamed for racial inequalities that exist anywhere throughout the United States, and white people living today (or in the future) will be blamed for enjoying the unearned fruits of this insidious “White Power” flower long ago planted in the fertile soil of white privilege, implicit bias, and systemic inequality.

Call it the true source of shade equity.

How ex-Confederates spread racist attitudes far and wide after the Civil War: The “Confederate Diaspora” has contributed to systemic racism in almost every area of life, and it continues [sic] shape “racial inequities in labor, housing, and policing,” researchers wrote, by Curtis Bunn, NBC News, June 21, 2023

A new study outlines how white people’s migration during and after the Civil War, from the Confederate South to the West, bolstered white supremacy and institutional racism in non-slave states, helping create the vast racial disparities that exist today nationwide.

Five researchers from separate colleges collaborated on the study, called “Confederate Diaspora,” to compile and study census data that tracked the migration to the West of white Americans, including 60,000 former plantation owners. The former Southerners took on local positions of authority, like police officers, clergy and politicians, giving them influence to create a post-Civil War culture that continued to oppress Black people even after slavery had ended.

This results in structural and systemic racism in almost every walk of life today—education, housing, jobs, health care and wealth, among other areas—that continues to hamper progress for Black people, according to a working paper by the National Bureau of Economic Research this month.

The former Confederates “continued to transmit norms to their children and non-Southern neighbors,” the researchers wrote, “shaping racial inequities in labor, housing, and policing.”

Researcher Patrick Testa, an assistant professor of economics at Tulane University in New Orleans, said the impact of the Confederates on other parts of the country was deep and long-lasting.

In the three decades following the Civil War, white Southerners were more likely than other white people to take on work in governance, he said, and former slaveholders were even more likely to assume those positions, he said.

“What we show ultimately is that these migrants,” Testa said, “through these governance channels and channels of public-facing authority, helped lay the groundwork for these types of symbols and racial norms and a broad-base Confederate nostalgia to really take off at a national level by the early 20th century.”

One of those “norms” was the institution of the Ku Klux Klan and the racial terror it inflicted in many parts of the country. In the report, the researchers identify “overrepresentation of first-and second-generation migrants in the KKK,” adding that the second generation of the KKK established in 1915 helped to “rejuvenate and mainstream Confederate culture.”

Those born in the South were 11% more likely to belong to the KKK in the Denver metropolitan area, for example, a major hub of Klan activity in the 1920s beyond the South, the report said.

“The harmful legacies of slavery persist beyond those that experience being slaves, but across generations and across places,” Testa said.

When you realize how amazing our nation would be had the American Colonization Society succeeded in their stated goal, the following story is only all the more melancholy.

[Comment at Unz.com]

Print Friendly and PDF
LATEST