Our story begins in 1901, when John Garner published his dissertation—what became for decades the standard history of #Reconstruction in #Mississippi—with adviser William A. Dunning at Columbia, the leading historian.
1/11
Garner had to answer why in 1875 an armed insurrection overthrew the elected government of Mississippi under Gov. Adelbert Ames. He started with the carpetbagger stereotype: thieving yankees came to despoil the prostrate South. But he found that Ames didn't fit it.
2/11
A few facts. Mississippi had a Black majority. Ames was made provisional governor under Congressional Reconstruction. He named its first Black officeholders & oversaw a constitutional convention that enfranchised Black men—creating real "home rule," lifting federal control.
3/11
Mississippi soon elected Black legislators, officials, members of Congress—like John Lynch—& senators. The largely Black wing of the Republican party convinced Ames to enter politics, first as senator, then governor. He ran a good government. That takes us back to Garner.
4/11
Garner found no non-racist explanation for the insurrection of 1875. He couldn't blame Ames for corruption. So Garner said, "He did not know then that a superior race will not submit to the government of an inferior one." The problem, he wrote, was democracy.
5/11
Remember: Garner's account, based on interviews and archival research, written for a Ph.D. at Columbia University, became the standard account of Reconstruction in Mississippi. He justified an armed rebellion against elected government because Black people. It's that simple.
6/11
Untold numbers of Black leaders died in the bloodshed of 1875. Ames resigned, moved briefly to Minnesota, where former Confederate guerrilla Jesse James robbed a bank because Ames had invested in it. Ames, a Medal of Honor winner, walked up & encouraged a man who fired back.
7/11
Ames served in Cuba in 1898, became John D. Rockefeller's only friend, and had a great-grandson named George Plimpton. Some Black leaders survived, including Lynch, who wrote an invaluable account, which you can read here.
8/11 google.com/books/edition/…
Another so-called carpetbagger who embraced Black politics—and did not enrich himself—was Albert T. Morgan. He wrote a vivid account of Reconstruction in Yazoo County, including the Democratic Party's insurrection of 1875. You can read it here.
9/11 google.com/books/edition/…
Lynch's career remarkably went on. Morgan's life went into a tailspin. Ames prospered, but failed to set the record straight. You know who did OK? Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar, architect of the insurrection. He became an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.
10/11
When faced with the reality of Reconstruction in one Black-majority state, John Garner couldn't fall into corruption stereotypes. The state wasn't ruled by Washington, but by the actual majority. So he went all-in on racism. It was conventional wisdom.
Don't bring it back.
11/11
* James W. Garner, not John. We regret the error.
* Again, James Garner, not John. We regret repeating the error.
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🧵
History thread!
Because I need to do something today, here is a long thread on why the 1890s were NOT a golden age, and no model for fiscal or monetary policy today.
tl;dr: The very reason we have the income tax today is because in the 1890s we realized tariffs sucked.
1/22
During the Civil War, the United States underwent radical monetary and fiscal changes to pay for the huge expenses of waging an existential war. It adopted a paper currency that the federal government would not redeem in gold coin.
2/22
It created the national bank system, in part to guarantee a market for huge new bond issues (national banks had to maintain a reserve of federal bonds). And it instituted an income tax.
In the 1870s, the United States reversed some, not all, of this successful experiment.
3/22
“Since fluoride was removed from Calgary drinking water in 2011, dental infections that need to be treated by IV antibioitics have increased by 700 per cent at the Alberta Children's Hospital. Half of those infections are in children under five.”
Link: cbc.ca/news/canada/ca…x.com/robertkennedyj…
The Calgary horror story didn’t stop in 2019. The costs of restarting fluoridation are high. Meanwhile, an excellent review of RFK Jr’s “theories” ran recently in “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.” Well worth watching.
The conspiracy theorists have been saying other countries don’t fluoridate (they have naturally occurring fluoride, like Japan, or fluoridate salt, or are no model for us), or cite studies of high levels of fluoride in uncontrolled water sources. They are exhausting but wrong.
🧵Trump victory, optimistic scenario:
Divided Congress means executive action
Tariffs cause stagflation & recession. Schedule F restarts the spoils system. ACA crippled. We stay in NATO but abandon Ukraine. Deportations feed recession; no camps. Trump names 1-2 SCOTUS wackos.
Trump victory, pessimistic scenario:
GOP Congress
High tariffs largely end trade. High inflation, shortages, depression. Social Security bankrupt. Trump controls Fed; low rates feed stagflation. Out of NATO; Ukraine falls. China invades Taiwan. National abortion ban. Then…
…Mass round-ups of the foreign born & detention camps lead to mass protests. Trump orders army to fire on protesters & orders military commissions to try “ringleaders.” Declares a national emergency & cancels 2028 election. Calls out military & orders arrests of opponents…
Let’s break down J.D. Vance’s attacks on Walz’s military record.
1) He seizes on a single comment by Walz in 2018 that civilians should not have “weapons of war that I used in war,” suggesting this is “stolen valor” because he never served in combat.
Vance is wrong.
1/6
Vance is playing a trick, conflating “war” with “combat.” During the “Global War on Terror,” Walz deployed to Europe to supplement base security. In a major war, a very small portion of the military is in combat. But all of it is in a war. Walz did as he was ordered—in a war. 2/
2) Vance attacks Walz for deserting his unit to avoid Iraq, claiming he retired when he got deployment orders.
This is a lie. Walz was eligible to retire after 20 years, but extended his service after 9/11. His unit received deployment orders *after* he retired.
3/
Trump's Gettysburg chat led some historians to write good threads. (Links ahead.) On the anniversary of Lincoln's death, let's ask why he was a successful strategist—why Jeff Davis failed—and how "revisionist" history makes military history better.
The answer is slavery.
1/17
🧵
Yes, slavery caused the Civil War. Long story short: The White South believed slavery would only endure if extended. Not just abolitionists but all Yankees resented this political aggression of the "slave power." Two newspaper clippings from 1860, Maine & South Carolina.
2/17
The White South rejected Lincoln's election, because they lost control of federal slavery-expansion policy. Eleven Southern state governments decided that, if they couldn't get slavery everywhere, they'd create a new republic that enshrined it in its constitution.
But why?
3/17
Trump says it's "where our Union was saved by the immortal heroes," adds a string of random adjectives, and clarifies that he thinks it was a good thing: "such a big portion of the success of this country." Inarticulate, reductive, but sure, why not?
2/9
Then Trump turns to Robert E. Lee, commander of the Army of Northern Virginia. That was the Confederate army, the one trying to break up our union. Let's skip over his initial comment for now, and consider his analysis of Lee's failure.
3/9