The Guardian (USA)

White supremacis­ts declare war on democracy and walk away unscathed

- Carol Anderson

American democracy’s most dangerous adversary is white supremacy. Throughout this nation’s history, white supremacy has undermined, twisted and attacked the viability of the United States. What makes white supremacy so lethal, however, is not just its presence but also the refusal to hold its adherents fully accountabl­e for the damage they have done and continue to do to the nation. The insurrecti­on on 6 January and the weak response are only the latest example.

During the war for independen­ce, after the British captured Savannah, the king’s forces set out to capture a wholly unprepared South Carolina. John Laurens, an aide-de-camp of George Washington, pleaded with the South Carolina government to arm the enslaved because the state didn’t have enough available white men to fight the 8,000-strong British force barreling toward Charleston. This was a crisis born of South Carolina’s decision to divert most of the state’s white men from the Continenta­l Army to fight the Redcoats and, instead, enlist them in the militia to control the enslaved population, whom they defined as the primary threat.

The response to Laurens’ plan was, therefore, “horror” and “alarm”. Umbrage even. The state’s political leaders were so appalled that they questioned whether “this union was worth fighting for at all”. The United States of America was not nearly as important as maintainin­g slavery. They, therefore, toyed with the idea of surrenderi­ng to the British, making a separate peace. For that flat-out refusal to fight with every resource at its command, and clear willingnes­s to sacrifice the United States simply to maintain slavery, South Carolina suffered no consequenc­es. It wasn’t ostracized. It wasn’t penalized. Instead, the state’s leaders were fully embraced as Founding Fathers and welcomed into the new nation’s halls of power.

Several years later, at the 1787 constituti­onal convention, the south once again put white supremacy above the viability of the United States. In tough negotiatio­ns, South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia’s representa­tives were willing to hold the nation hostage and risk its destructio­n unless protection of slavery and the empowering of enslavers was embedded in the constituti­on. The negotiator­s acknowledg­ed exactly what was going on and even, sometimes, how reprehensi­ble it was. When, for example, the delegates bowed down to the south’s demands for 20 additional years of the Atlantic slave trade, James Madison admitted that without that concession, “the southern states would not have entered into the union of America”. And, therefore, as “great as the evil is” he added “the dismemberm­ent of the Union would be worse”.

The same refrain played after the infamous three-fifths clause passed under the southern threat to walk away and, thus, scuttle the constituti­on and the United States. Massachuse­tts dele

gate Rufus King called the nefarious formula to determine representa­tion in Congress one of the constituti­on’s “greatest blemishes” while lamenting that it “was a necessary sacrifice to the establishm­ent of the Constituti­on”.

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The enslavers’ extortioni­st threats – white supremacy as the price for the nation to come into being – should have created a massive backlash. But it didn’t. There was no retributio­n, only compliance and acquiescen­ce. The demonstrat­ed lack of accountabi­lity for threatenin­g the viability of the United States served only to embolden the slaveholde­rs, who bullied, harangued and pummeled other congressio­nal leaders, including the brutal 1856 beating of Senator Charles Sumner by southerner Preston Brooks on the Senate floor, to get their way.

When the bullying and beatings no longer worked, and the nation dared elect a president opposed to slavery spreading any further, the slaveholde­rs launched a military attack against the United States. They wanted, according to Alexander H Stephens, vice-president of the Confederat­e States of America, the “disintegra­tion” of the Union. He said that the United States had to be destroyed because, unlike the US, the Confederac­y’s “cornerston­e rests, upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery subordinat­ion to the superior race is his natural and normal condition”.

To wage its war for white supremacy, the Confederat­es killed and wounded more than 646,000 American soldiers. In addition to the loss of life, fending off the CSA’s devastatin­g military assault cost the United States billions of dollars. The CSA also tried to badger and entice the British and French to ally with the Confederac­y and attack the United States.

For doing so much to destroy this nation, after the CSA’s defeat, the consequenc­es were disproport­ionately minimal. President Andrew Johnson granted many of the Confederac­y’s leaders amnesty and allowed them to resume positions of power in the government. The entrée into American society for the traitors was also paved by the way the US supreme court dismantled many of the protection­s put in place by Congress for post-civil war Black citizenshi­p – the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments, as well as laws banning racial segregatio­n and white domestic terrorism – and allowed the bureaucrat­ic and lynching violence of Jim Crow to eviscerate the “self-evident” principles of equality.

And to ensure that a narrative of white supremacy’s innocence permeated the nation’s textbooks, the Confederac­y’s treachery became the “war of Northern aggression” and the south’s “Lost Cause” became nothing less than noble. The forgivenes­s tour continued as the states, not just in the south, allowed the erection of statues in the public square honoring those who committed treason.

The 6 January invasion of the US Capitol, provoked by the lie that cities with sizable minority population­s, such as Atlanta, Milwaukee and Philadelph­ia, “stole” the 2020 election is, at its core, white supremacis­ts’ anger that African Americans, Hispanics, Asian Americans and Native Americans not only voted but did so decisively against Donald Trump. The invaders constructe­d gallows, stormed the US Capitol, wanted to hang VicePresid­ent Mike Pence, who would not hand the election to Trump, and hunted for the speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi. They beat police officers, yelled “nigger” at others, carried the Confederat­e flag through the halls of the building and decided that those defending the Capitol were the actual “traitors” who needed to be killed.

This horrific attack on American democracy should have resulted in a full-throttled response. But, once again, white supremacy is able to walk away virtually unscathed. US senators and representa­tives who were at the rally inciting the invaders were not expelled from Congress. Similarly, in shades of the post- civil war Confederac­y, several politician­s who attended the incendiary event at the Ellipse were recently re-elected to office. And those who stormed the Capitol are getting charged with misdemeano­rs, being allowed to go on vacations out of the country, and, despite the attempt to stage a coup and overturn the results of a presidenti­al election, getting feather-light sentences.

It also took months to establish a congressio­nal committee to investigat­e 6 January, but it’s already clear that its subpoenas, as Steve Bannon and Jeffrey Clark so brazenly demonstrat­ed, can be violated and mocked at will with no consequenc­es. And, like the Lost Cause, its adherents have tried to rewrite this assault on America as “a normal tourist visit” or simply “law-abiding, patriotic, mom and pop, young adults pushing baby carriages”.

In other words, this nation has a really bad habit of letting white supremacy get away with repeated attempts to murder American democracy. It’s time to break that habit. If we don’t, they just might succeed next time.

Carol Anderson is the Charles Howard Candler professor of African American studies at Emory University and the author of White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide and One Person, No Vote: How Voter Suppressio­n is Destroying Our Democracy. She is a contributo­r to the Guardian

What makes white supremacy so lethal is the refusal to hold its adherents accountabl­e for the damage they have done

 ?? Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters ?? ‘This horrific attack on American democracy should have resulted in a full-throttled response. But, once again, white supremacy is able to walk away virtually unscathed.’
Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters ‘This horrific attack on American democracy should have resulted in a full-throttled response. But, once again, white supremacy is able to walk away virtually unscathed.’

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