Page 16 j^ortlanò (Dbseruer December 22, 20!0 Opinion articles do not necessarily represent the views o f the Portland Observer. We welcome reader essays, photos and story ideas. Submit to news@portlandobserver.com. Ignoring Reality to Embrace Prejudices Richard Nixon’s bigotry L ee A. D aniels “ You won’t have Nixon to kick around anym ore, because, gentlemen, this is my last press conference by If only Richard Nixon had kept the bitter promise he spat out to reporters the day after losing the California gubernato­ rial election in November 1962. His pledge that day, destined to become one of the most fa­ mous lines in American political history, was vintage Nixon: full of bitterness - and completely false. That fundamental part of the character of Richard Milhous Nixon is on display again in the newly-released batch of record­ ings, courtesy of the Nixon Presi­ dential Library and the secret taping system he had installed in the Oval Office when he be­ came President. In them he exhibits a peevish disregard for a large swath of American population, snapping off disparaging remarks about Jewish Americans, Irish-Ameri­ cans, Italian-A m ericans and African-Americans. For example, speak­ ing to his longtime loyal secretary, Rose Mary Woods, Nixon refers to the relatively enlightened view of blacks held by William P. Rogers, then his Sec­ retary of State: “Bill Rogers has got somewhat - and to his credit, it’s a decent feeling - but some­ what, sort of, a sort of blind spot on the black thing because he’s been in New York. He says, well, ‘They are coming along, and that after all, they are going to strengthen our country in the end because they are strong physically and some of them are sm art.” Nixon, however, makes it clear that he’ll have none of it. “My own view is that I think he’s right if you ’ re talking in terms of 500 years. I think it’s wrong if you’re talking in terms of 50 years. What has to happen is they have to be, frankly, inbred. ... that’s the only thing that’s going to do it, Rose.” The vehem ence and breadth of N ixon’s bigotry, which was w idely suspected in the years when he occupied the W hite House, no longer has the pow er to shock. It was first proved in the backw ash o f m aterial that came flooding out of the W hite House during the W atergate scandal, and has been deep­ ened by the L ibrary’s periodic releases of other Nixon tapes through the years. But the newly-available tapes are no less important, because N ix o n ’s harsh language and harsh views underscore some­ thing we should never forget: the persistence of bigotry. Richard Nixon cam e of age during the middle decades of the tw entieth century, the era indelibly m arked by the cata­ clysm o f W orld W ar Tw o. A m erica’s literal and rhetori­ cal fight in that war against G erm any’s and Jap an ’s ver­ sio n s o f the M a ste r R ace theory substantially destroyed the respectability in A m erica itself o f discrim ination against w hite-ethnic Americans -and it helped prepare American so­ ciety for black Am ericans’ all- out challenge to legalized racism that would burst into the open in the 1950s and 1960s. As Vice President for eight years under Dwight Eisenhower, and as a partner in a white-shoe New York law firm during the mid-1960s, Nixon had easy ac­ cess to the “ best and the bright­ est” of American society at a time when it was abundantly clear that the old prejudices were just that: prejudices. He, how ever, preferred to cling to stereotypes - against Irish- and Italian Americans that were staples of the anti-immi­ grant fervor of the 1800s and early 1900s and stereotypes against blacks and Jews that were much, much older. C onsiderable progress has been made in reducing the power of prejudice in American society since N ixon’s term s in office. But prejudice still exists. It still has an impact, not only because racial bias remains ingrained in the American system, but also because some significant num­ ber of individuals ignore, as Ri­ chard Nixon did, the reality of American society in order to cling to their prejudices. O ne need only com pare to N ix o n ’s ran ts m any o f the b lo g g ed read er resp o n se s to E dw ard S c h u m a c h e r-M a to s’ W ash in g to n P ost colum n a co u p le o f S un d ay s ago on the D ream A ct having hit a snag in the S enate. A nd, on the sam e d ay , b lo g g e d re a d e r resp o n se s to a W ash in g to n P o st n ew s a r tic le on th e se ttle m e n t o f the b lack fa rm ­ e r s ’ d is c rim in a tio n c la im s a g a in st the fed eral D e p a rt­ m ent o f A g ricu ltu re. The illogical thinking and the callousness that consume some of the respondents underscore the point: In some people, big­ otry is impervious to logic or the experience of living in a multira­ cial society. Now, as in Richard N ixon’s time, that affliction can grip those at all levels of the society, right up to the very top. Lee A. Daniels is director o f com m unications fo r the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. ■m hr » The Immorality of ‘America at War’ ‘We the people,’ are removed from war’s burdens J im H ightower Are you aware that A m eric a has now been at war for nearly a d e c a d e ? W e'v e been fighting, bleed­ ing, and dying in two by till * u u n v hellacious, multi-trillion-dollar conflagrations since 2001 - and our blood continues to flow, with no end in sight. Well, not our blood. Not yours and mine. We continue to go about our daily routines — go to work, go to the mall, go out to eat, go golfing, go to church, go on vacation, go dancing and drinking. War? Americans pay far m ore attention to the World Series than to the ongoing carnage in Af­ ghanistan and Iraq. In a little-noticed speech, Pen­ tagon chief Robert Gates re­ cently pointed out that, "For most Americans, the wars remain an abstraction — a distant and un­ pleasant series of news items that do not affect them person­ ally." Military service, he bluntly says, "has become something for other people to do." He's right. You see, "we" are not at war. We handed off that awful duty a decade ago to the 2.4 million active and reserve soldiers in the armed services, less than one percent of our nation's people. They and their families are the ones "at war," cycled and recycled into debili­ tating and deadly deployments. "We the People" are not even making the minimal sacrifice of paying for the burden we've so carelessly stacked on their shoul­ ders. Both the Bush regime and the O bam acans—fully backed by both Republican and Democratic majorities in Congress — cra- venly put Afghanistan and Iraq on the national credit card. W e’re piling up trillions of dollars in debt for future generations to cover. The widening disconnect be­ tween Americans and America's wars is not only dangerous for our democracy. It's immoral, al­ lowing politicians and corporate profiteers to sink our national soul in the diabolical depths of perpetual war. Jim Hightower is a radio commentator, writer and pub­ lic speaker. -i L S ia D llS n e a 197 0 Port*and Observer welcomes freelance submissions. Manuscripts and photographs should be clearly labeled and will be returned if accompanied by a self addressed envelope. 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