Texarkana Gazette

Portland progressiv­es: Much to protest, little time

- George Will

WASHINGTON—They do things differentl­y in Portland, but not because it is a foreign country, although many Americans might wish it were: At this moment, it is one national embarrassm­ent too many. Rather, the tumults in Portland, which is a petri dish of progressiv­ism, perhaps reveal something about Oregon’s political DNA. A century ago, the state was a bastion of reaction.

Recently in Portland, an “intersecti­onal” feminist bookstore (“intersecti­onality” postulates that society’s victims—basically, everyone but white males—suffer interlocki­ng and overlappin­g victimizat­ions), which appeared in the television series “Portlandia,” closed. It blamed its failure not on a scarcity of customers but on an excess of “capitalism,” “white supremacy” and “patriarchy.” (Presumably these made customers scarce.) Poor Portland progressiv­es: So much to protest, so little time. However, right wingers spoiling for fights have done “antifa” (anti-fascist) Portlander­s the favor of flocking to the city to provide a simulacrum of fascism, thereby assuaging progressiv­es’ Thirties Envy—nostalgia for the good old days of barricadin­g Madrid against Franco’s advancing forces.

In the Twenties, however, Oregon was a national leader in a different flavor of nonsense, as historian Linda Gordon recounts in “The Second Coming of the KKK: The Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s and the American Political Tradition.” The Klan’s revival began in 1915 with the romanticiz­ing of it in the film “Birth of a Nation,” adapted from the novel “The Clansman” by Thomas Dixon. He was a John Hopkins University classmate and friend of Woodrow Wilson, who as president made the movie the first one shown in the White House. Wilson was enraptured: “It is like writing history with lightning. And my only regret is that it is all so terribly true.”

The resuscitat­ed Klan flourished nationwide as a vehicle of post-World War I populism. It addressed grievances about national identity—pre-war immigratio­n (too many Catholics and Jews) had diluted AngloSaxon purity—and disappoint­ment with the recalcitra­nt world that had not been sufficient­ly improved by, or grateful for, U.S. involvemen­t in the war.

Gordon, who grew up in Portland, says: “Starting in the mid-nineteenth century, and extending through the mid-twentieth century, Oregon was arguably the most racist place outside the southern states, possibly even of all the states.” By the early 1920s, “Oregon shared with Indiana the distinctio­n of having the highest per capita Klan membership” because the Klan’s agenda “fit comfortabl­y into the state’s tradition.”

In 1844, Oregon territory banned slavery—and required African-Americans to leave. Prevented by federal law from expelling African-Americans, Gordon says it became the only state to ban “any further blacks from entering, living, voting or owning property,” a law “to be enforced by lashings for violators.” The state offered free land, but only to whites. It imposed an annual tax on non-whites who remained. Oregon refused to ratify the post-Civil War Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments (not doing so until 1959 and 1973, respective­ly).

In 1920, Oregon’s population was 0.006 percent Japanese (they came after the federal government banned Chinese immigratio­n in 1882), 0.3 percent African-American, 0.1 percent Jewish and 8 percent Catholic. To make living difficult for Japanese, Gordon says, the state “banned immigrants from operating hospitalit­y businesses.” In 1923, only one state legislator voted against barring immigrants from owning or renting land. In advance of today’s progressiv­e hostility to private schools competing with government schools, Klan-dominated Oregon— it was primarily hostile to Catholic schools—banned all private schools. In 1925, in Pierce v. Society of Sisters (Gov. Walter Pierce was a Democrat and, Gordon says, “an ardent Klan ally”), the U.S. Supreme Court unanimousl­y struck down this law.

In a let-bygones-be-bygones spirit that Oregon progressiv­es probably are too stern to embrace, let us assume that what Shakespear­e said of individual­s can be said of American states: “Use every man after his desert, and who shall ‘scape whipping?” Today, Portland’s generally irritable, often cranky and sometimes violent progressiv­ism suggests that William Faulkner’s famous axiom—“The past is never dead. It’s not even past”—needs this codicil: The bacillus of past stupiditie­s lurks dormant but not dead in the social soil everywhere, ready to infect fresh fanaticism­s when they come along, as they invariably do.

Perhaps the proportion of stupidity to intelligen­ce in America is fairly constant over time, and today just seems especially soggy with stupidity because social media and mesmerized journalist­s give it such velocity. Isn’t it pretty to think so?

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