hrothgar, on 2020-July-27, 03:47, said:
In the period before the American civil war, the Democratic party was very much concentrated in the South. The Whigs (and the later, Republican party) was more heavily represented in New England and what was then the West.
After the war, the Democratic party was very much a regional Southern party until two major realignments. The first occurred in the the 1930s during the great depression. The second in the 1960 - 1980s, and resulted from the civil rights movement.
Its not at all surprising that that the overwhelming majority of statues being taken down belong to "Democrats". The party history is awful.
With this said and done, Breitbart is playing fast and loose with the truth. Breitbart is most likely trying to insulate "The Party of Lincoln" from claims of racism and point out that the "Democratic Party" was full of slave holding KKK members. (As if the 1960 political realign wasn't all about race and as if the modern Republican party bears any relationship to the party of Lincoln)
Note in passing: Breitbart is a cesspool of idiocy and racism. There is absolutely no reason to ever bother reading it. In particular, if you aren't familiar enough with American politics and history to know right off the top of your head why the overwhelming majority of the statues that are being removed belong to Democrats, I'd argue that it is actively detrimental for you to be reading Breitbart.
It was just an interesting stat and I was trying to provoke a bit of discussion
I just have Breitbart in my feed for a bit of "light" relief and actually a bit of variety from the tedious monotony of whatever the dominant media culture is these days. I even follow Fox for similar reasons. Having said that the only chance I had to see a fully unedited Trump Covid Taskforce presentation was via Breitbart. It was educational seeig something unedited, uncommented on and unexpurgated etc
I am trying to learn more about the Civil War and confederacy. The democrat thing was something I only discovered relative recently. As a non-US citizen its not exactly core to my historical learnings - although I remember an amazing and brutal Civil War series from many years ago. And of course I know a fair bit about the civil rights movement. A little about the war of independence etc I've been to quite a few monuments (in my tour round the USA) and seen a large number of statues no doubt - some of whom were people I would have known from the history books and some maybe not - I tended not to be able to take every experience and tourist site into my brain. But I didn't study history once I chose my electives at high school (in those days we were streamed for science or humanities etc) so never got much beyond the standard fare at the time in the UK (ancient history, Romans, Vikings, Norman conquest up to mix of kings and queens and local history) - we certainly didn't learn much about the colonies, battles for independence etc I don't think the English liked talking about the US Independence Battles for some reason - it took a visit to the USA for people to delight in telling me a lot about it
I regret not learning history more. I would prefer to learn history backwards and why things happened but they started at the beginning which takes a long time to get interesting.
As an aside for a long time (my childhood) all I knew about the issue was the controversy between Neil Young and Lynyrd Skynrd over Sweet Home Alabama, I remember the Wallace assassination attempt In Birmingham in the 70s. Most of the other news from/about the USA in the 70s when I was growing up related to Vietnam or the space race and the presidencies (EDIT and Watergate of course) etc Obviously we all knew something of the civil rights movement Martin Luther King, Malcolm X etc (apologies for my edits - I'm piecing together memories from a long time ago). Most of what I knew about slavery would have come from the TV show Roots back in the 70s. During the 70s there was a huge amount of bad stuff going down in the UK (economic issues and race conflict, justice movements etc) and apartheid in South Africa which tended to dominate my consciousness and that of the music of the main political phase of my life in late 70s and early 80s. Sorry I didnt know much more about USA. Oh, we knew something of the Pilgrim Fathers. And I learned something about Harvard from a Harvard scholar at my college (I just looked him up to remember - its good to remember people ometimes -possibly the first American I ever met to chat to much - other than a US exchange student at my high school for a term or two). Oh, how could I forget the 2nd World War. That dominated most of my knowledge about the US for ages - especially through movies (as I said trying to piece together what you knew, when and why other stuff was so lacking). My main personally purchased hisotry book was a Modern History of the World (1500-now) book from the Sorbonne so very dominated by French view of history - a little bit about the New World in early Chapters
I am trying to catch up on areas of history I dont know much about (especially those where my country of birth were involved) - which sadly is a great deal