Sunday, August 9, 2020

Thomas Jefferson Scholar Dr. Mark Andrew Holowchak Weighs in on What the "Neo-Bolsheviks" are Missing...


“We could tell something had happened”  

The Argument for Preserving at Least Most of Our Early American Symbols  

A  
nnie Gowan of The Washington Post writes of a recent incident where a group of Portland, Oregon, protestors, gathered a high school and used bungee cords, wires, and human muscle to topple a statue of Thomas Jefferson off its pedestal and into the cement. Said 26-year-old removalist Triston Crowl, “When it came down, we could tell something had happened. This was a moment in history, at least in the city. There should be a line at the Civil War. Every forefather prior to that should be considered a Confederate.” “There is no point in having these statues,” said 21-year-old Rosario Navalta, who was part of the activism. “All they do is remind everybody of the history of the United States and its role in perpetuating white supremacy and the institutionalization of anti-blackness.” She added that Jefferson enslaved over 600 blacks in his life and had four children with teenager Sally Hemings.  

Crowl and Navalta are illustrations of the rage of thousands of removalists, profoundly ignorant of U.S. history and taking it upon themselves to act on behalf of the citizenry as if they were suitable spokespersons to do that. As the discretionary comment of Crowl shows—“we could tell something had happened”—much of the removalist activity is by the hands of restive youths, who feel the need to be a part of something significant, and so when they not texting, they topple statues.  

Something had happened. What precisely was that? I am sure that Crowl is unsure.  

It is the same narrative, iterated and reiterated bromidically, and it is coupled with unsanctioned acts of vandalism that is tolerated by others only because any opposition to removalism is immediately taken as racism. It is just not a good time in our country to be white, and so the compunction-driven actions to remove our symbols of the past to forget our past.  

Navalta’s claim that statues like that of Jefferson do nothing more than remind us of white supremacy and anti-blackness is profound in its naïveté—purest psittacism. As American Studies scholar Ari Helo notes, we live in a time where everyone wants to be heard and few are willing to listen. That was Plato’s criticism of pure democracy: Everyone thinks he is fit to be ruler over all others. When that is the case, the obvious result is chaos. Eschewal of potential chaos is why the Founders aimed to have elected representatives of the citizenry instead of a direct democracy in the manner of ancient Athens.  

Yet perhaps we should follow Crowl’s insightful sentiment and draw a line “at the Civil War.” Every white person prior to the Civil War can be taken as a racist and we can be open-minded about Whites thereafter—each perhaps to be examined on his own by a jury of removalists.  
There are however some incommodious difficulties.  

First, slavery was not confined to the South. There were slave owners in the North. Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation of January 1, 1863, applied only to the slaves in rebellious states. It allowed slaveholders in non-rebellious states to keep their slaves. It also gave Union soldiers the illusion that their cause, to preserve the Union, was really moral: to free those unfortunate Blacks in the Southern states. Yet that was a political maneuver, dressed up as a moral maneuver. There were many abolitionists in both the North and the South, yet very few were willing to go to war for the cause of freeing slaves. There never was and perhaps never will be a war fought chiefly for a moral cause, though they are always conveniently cloaked in “moral” verbiage to get soldiers to fight.

The Civil War was essentially about the South’s Constitutional right to secede, not about slavery. That Lincoln sent 75,000 Union troops to keep the South from secession is inexplicable. The South had little option other than declaring war.

Second, symbols, like the statue of Jefferson, mean different things to different persons. Human lives and the events in which they find themselves engaged are rich, complex tapestries. It is wrongheaded to see symbols of our American past only as representations of Southern slaveholding and as signs of hatred. Gen. Jubal Early’s monument near Fort Early in Lynchburg, Virginia, was erected because the general risked his life to defend the city against the rush of Union general David Hunter’s troops, advancing on the city in June 1864 and pillaging and burning as he traveled. Early, who was at first a staunch Unionist, changed his mind when Virginia voted for secession in readiness for war with the North.

The adoption of that ordinance wrung from me bitter tears of grief; but I at once recognized my duty to abide the decision of my native state, and to defend her soil against invasion. … I recognized the right of resistance and revolution as exercised by our fathers in 1776 and without cavil as to the name by which it was called, I entered the military service of my State, willingly, cheerfully, and zealously.

Early was never shy of his belief in inferiority of Blacks. Yet the valor of Early and other generals forced Hunter, with superiority of numbers, to retreat after several skirmishes outside Lynchburg and saved the city.

Why did Early exhibit such valor? Early felt a deep duty to follow the decisions of his native state.

Would Crowl and Navalta put their life on the line to fight for racial justice? Toppling a statue as part of an irate mob is no large act of justice, though it is “a moment in history” and has earned Crowl quick celebrity on the internet—a celebrity that will be quickly lost in history. It was “a moment” in Lynchburg’s history when I took my dog last Sunday for a swim in James River—it was a real moment, as he had never been in the James River—though I doubt that future historians will find any need to record that event for posterity.

Moreover, the narrative of the good Northerns and the bad Southerners is enormously puerile and it is frightening that it needs to be address. That is a consequence of the profound ignorance of removalists of their own history, from which they wish to extricate themselves. There were hateful and kind white slaveholders. There were black slave owners, many of whom too treated illy their slaves. There were numerous thousands of white slaves.

Removalists are imposing willy-nilly a monolithic interpretation on symbols, as if the life of any one person, prior to the Civil War, can be reduced to one thing. As John Locke notes, no one has a right tell another how to think and what to think. Each has a right to freedom of conscience. I suggest that study of the intricacies of U.S. history and the dimensionality of U.S. historical figures might give removalists greater perspective so that if they do act, it will be thoughtful action. Action on ignorance is perilous. Yet many American youths are unacquainted with books, which are ever becoming cumbersome obsolescencies.

In the process of removing symbols of our country’s past, removalists are doing more to retard the cause of racial injustice than to advance it. They are aggravating many Americans who see more in the symbols than removalists see. The aggravation will continue to build, if removalists continue to act shortsightedly, and will have consequences that hopefully will not be sanguinary.

Finally, the moment is kairotic to recognize that our current racial problems cannot be solved by removing early symbols of our past. If one indescribably ignorant of Thomas Jefferson chooses to see the man as racist and lustful, then one is free to do that. Yet reading good history might conduce toward a change of mind, though good history, due to the “politesse” of political correctness, is hard to find, and reading for many today is agonizing.

Thus I proffer the following tautology on which to ponder: Our history is our history. If some symbols are reminders that our history was not all glorious, then let that be. Should we raze the Coliseum in Rome because of the sanguinary gladiatorial games? Should we raze the Cathedral of Notre Dame because of the Crusades? Should we remove all symbols of Martin Luther King, Jr., because of his rampant womanizing?

If Navalta feels pain, it is her pain, cause by her guilt. The urgency to remove such symbols is, in psychoanalytic terms, displacement. The evil is in the markers and what they represent, so that once removed, the evil too is removed. That is sophomoric reasoning. The racism is in us, Whites and Blacks, and so this is a time for self-reflection and discussion, not displacement and forgetfulness.  

The racism of our day—and I am not so convinced that it is as widespread as many make it out to be, as Americans are faddish and inordinately fond of self-deprecation—is our racism. It was not caused by Founding Fathers or by Confederates. It is just oversimple to inculpate them and exculpate ourselves. If any of us feel pain when looking at a statue of, say, Gen. Robert E. Lee, then we need look in the mirror and see what it is about ourselves by which we are discomfited.

Removalists like Crowl and Navalta cannot do that. Theirs is the language of segregation: They use “their past,” not “our past.” They are not part of America’s avowed racist past, because they are above racist sentiments. Hence, our American past could never be their past. Out of sight is out of mind.

I do not feel the same pain when I see American symbols. When I see Gen. Early’s gravestone, I am reminded of his racism, but also of his intelligent crustiness—I like intelligent crustiness—and his unstinted bravery. When I drive down Martin Luther King Boulevard, I am reminded of his salaciousness, but also of his large, powerful vision of racial equality. I cannot assure anyone that the world would be a better place, if Early had not been racist and King had not been salacious. They are parts of my past, and I willingly accept the symbols for what they remind me about what is good and what is bad about us as well as what is good and bad about me. Self-growth is, as Jean Piaget has shown, essentially a painful process.

Thomas Jefferson is known to have been fond architecturally of “building up and tearing down.” For him, that was part of a process of improvement and beautifying. We are today eager to tear down in order to forget, but we have no plan for building up. Again following Helo, we want to be heard, but are unwilling to listen.

Plato was not such a poor prophet!


M. Andrew Holowchak, Ph.D.