Reading House Un-American Activities Committee's Klan hearing transcripts again (here with Grand Klucker Sam Bowers (Laurel) refusing to answer questions), it's really not hard to spot what we could today call "Twitter logic" among grown men red-baiting as an excuse for terrorism
BTW, if you're white from Mississippi and ever wondered if your dad, granddad, uncles were in prominent KKK positions in the 1960s in the state, this report names a lot of names. Not all or rank-and-file members, but many leaders. Steel yourself and look.
If your family was part of a white-terrorist org, you don't have to collapse into guilt, shame or denial. BUT understand this wasn't long ago, and that the terrorism and barrier creation still affects Black Mississippians today. Decide to be part of the solution. Start with facts
Many more names listed. That's just the kleagle level (like my distant-y kin Edgar Ray Killen in Neshoba County). Kleagles organized violence. He finally went to prison, but most did not. And I rather doubt most Kluckers changed what taught their children to carry racism forward.
OK, here's another Bowers/Klucker logic section y'all need to read. And you know, old racist grandpa was a fine Christian, too, leading his Christian soldiers to the promised white land or some such bullshit. Because God (only) loves white supremacists, the illogic goes.
Never forget KKK, Citizens Council and other terrorist orgs (some of them more business-suited than others) REALLY HATED white people participating in anti-racist activity, or just, say, letting a Black man pee in his gas-station bathroom or such. They terrorized white traitors.
Before any racism apologist tries to tell you that "all that" was done by crazy, uneducated rednecks, look into the bios of the KKK leaders since Reconstruction. You're being lied to. Many were wealthy and passed wealth forward after destroying Black wealth-building.
Like Bowers:
Here, back to the Laurel/Jones County Klan and the strategy for Kluckering up the whole state to terrorize Black people and any white folks who supported them—just like KKK did back in the 1860s, 1870s: mississippifreepress.org/17323/kkk-whit…
Sorry, went down the rabbit hole of figuring out where this Greaves Plantation near Jackson was where this big-ass Klucker confab happened. The Greaves were huge slavers here, apparently. This, btw, was three days after KKK killed Chaney, Goodman and Schwerner in my county.
Y'ALL: "The White Christian Protective and Legal Defense Fund."
Recall: Americans for the Preservation of the White Race (APWR) launched in Mississippi: upstanding citizens collecting legal funds to defend Kluckers.
Also: paranoia over African troops in Cuba 🤪
Note J.K. Greer there. That's former KKKman James Greer, whom I interviewed in his home while I was investigating 1964 Dee-Moore murders in 2005. He told us James Ford Seale still alive though media had reported him dead for years. My piece on him: jacksonfreepress.com/news/2005/oct/…
More on that White Christian Defense Fund (feels a bit like we've heard of this happening more recently, too, eh?):
More Laurel + King Edward Hotel has entered the chat. As has Florence in Rankin Cty (our guv attended Florence High). King Edward would soon close to avoid integration and be bombed-out eyesore in cap city for decades. Many white Jacksonians fled to Rankin Cty post-integration.
Allow me to put fine point on this Jones County terrorism (in towns/rural areas around "Smokestack City" when I was 4.
BTW, KKK bombings were huge especially in south Mississippi. That doesn't get talked about enough. McComb was called bombing capital of the US—when I was a kid
I'm organizing KKK research from yesterday. Should anyone have a direct interest in the "especially active and violent" white terrorism in Jones County (Laurel, Ellisville, smaller towns) in the 1960s, you might check out this research at USM: lib.usm.edu/spcol/collecti…
My periodic reminder that white terrorism—massacres, lynchings and intimidation—happened across US through our history. Don’t read what I’m posting, shake your head at Mississippi and move on. Research your own damn postage stamp. It’s not hard with Internet. Use your keywords.
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I'll be honest. A lot of the vibe I and many students from rural southern places have long gotten in higher-education circles outside of Mississippi is condescension. I've spoken publicly before about how I was shocked by belittling responses to things I didn't know in north.
I've long looked at those as lessons about how-not-to-teach. And some of it challenged my mental health and sent me into therapy. Here's the thing: I knew things they didn't, and still do. In j-school, I was stunned at lack of intellecual curiosity about what I knew about South.
Growing up here in Mississippi, it was a toxic stew of miseducation (lies) about our history and low expectations about what was possible for Mississippi kids, and too little prep about what to expect outside bubble here. Plus, belittlement for wanting more than a husband, kids.
What a year and a half it’s been. Thank you for supporting @msfreepress nonprofit journalism in so many ways. It’s been a lot of work, but also so gratifying to watch our new model for journalism explode in our home state. Thanks to all of you in and outside Mississippi.
BTW, we’re about to take @msfreepress journalism to Level 2 of our model as our first official systemic-reporting bloc kicks off. You’ll see what I mean very soon. Stay close.
We are also about to announce growth of our team. Two things made this happen: (1) continual, loud, active reader support in so many way, and (2) the team’s excellent journalism that helps us grow our funding base. When I say that the @msfreepress is teamwork, I mean y’all, too.
1. As editor, I'm going to point out that IHL wanted us to change an earlier accurate story by @ashtonpittman to gloss over this conflict between its motion and what they later said. I said NO WAY without knowing if they actually passed what they were saying they did. They hadn't
2. After IHL reached out, @AshtonPittman started pressing for minutes and evidence of what the motion they passed said, versus what they and colleges were saying it said.
Now, we learn that they revoted today to change motion to forbid mandates. Too bad, but at least it's clear
3. And seriously, IHL, don't come at us wanting corrections when it's your own confusion or subterfuge or whatever that is the problem. We can read and reason.
It’s good that quality media outlets are starting to dump horserace coverage and bad concept of even calling someone a “political reporter,” but damn, the harm we could’ve avoided had they admitted the obvious sooner.
I think the worst threat on this front are the powerful corporate, (white male) donors and board members, and white men running newsrooms in Mississippi. They *like* game of politics among people who look like them with little apparent regard for people, issues, sanity left out.
It’s journalism-dictionary definition of “old school”—and Mississippi has always been hamstrung by old-school, fake-middle, political-game obsessed journalism. I’ve never made a more serious statement: Needles will not move in Mississippi until this media approach is mothballed.
1. Jim Prince of the Neshoba Democrat in my hometown repped media at the big state dominionist prayer service this week (one of 7 centers of power); see below. @AshtonPittman and I've written about him a few times already.
2. In 2015, Jim Prince came for me because I called out a sexist comment by House speaker. He brought all the overwrought, dumb insults (basically: I'm a communist. I'm decidedly not). He was then immediate past president of @MPAnewspapers. I fired back: jacksonfreepress.com/news/2015/nov/…
3. In 2020, Jim Prince went after a minor boy who protested our hometown's Confederate statue and then ran an editorial claiming that Marxists were trying to take it down (he's kinda a one-trick pony with the red-baiting): jacksonfreepress.com/news/2020/jul/…
This is seriously what happens when a nation, and its media, frames everything as a two-sided, us-or-them game that serves only a few politically. It’s a sick narrative, and deadly.
Americans need to learn to think systemically, not along a fake partisan dividing line even about a pandemic. Media should lead on this front—not bolster and profit from this binary game. For one, let’s end what’s called “political reporting”—now just games of already-powerful.
Replace so-called “political coverage” (usually done by too-often-misogynistic and arrogant white men seeking fame/clicks) with policy coverage—focused on real people, needs and how needs served, how, who. That is, stop serving those who benefit from fake “red-blue” reporting.