Times-Dispatch editorial expresses regret for Massive Resistance
Massive Resistance
Times-Dispatch editorial page editor Todd Culbertson discusses the editorial expressing regret for Massive Resistance.Sometimes the era seems ancient; sometimes it resembles yesterday. Fifty years ago Virginia had a rendezvous with destiny and came up wanting. It scorned human rights and the promise of the Declaration of Independence and instead took a course known as Massive Resistance. Tomorrow at the Capitol, the University of Virginia's Center for Politics will convene a conference on the chapter and its legacy.
Throughout the episode, Richmond Newspapers played a central role -- but not a centering one. The hour was ignoble. Editorials in The News Leader relentlessly championed Massive Resistance and the dubious constitutional arguments justifying its unworthy cause. Although not so intimately engaged,
The Times-Dispatch was complicit. The record fills us with regret, which we have expressed before.
Massive Resistance inflicted pain then. Memories remain painful. Editorial enthusiasm for a dreadful doctrine still affects attitudes toward the newspaper. Many remember. We understand. Words have consequences. Artful paragraphs promoted ugly things. Stylish sentences salted wounds. Euphemism was profligate. As members of the Fourth Estate these pages did not keep a proper distance, either. The debate is over. It is done.
Virginia long has prided itself on its gentility. The state's political tradition has lacked firebrands such as Gene Talmadge, Orval Faubus, George Wallace, Bull Connor, Theodore Bilbo, and James K. Vardaman. Massive Resistance shattered pretensions. Although the commonwealth's campaign to evade Brown v. Board of Education did not produce the pyrotechnics seen in other states, it was directed toward the same dead end. Pride, humanity learns ever again, is not a virtue but a sin. Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us.
Hubris prevailed. Those who railed against oppressions visited upon sovereign states by an allegedly imperial Washington relied on government's coercive might to deny the full humanity of their fellow citizens. Massive Resistance was neither a departure nor an exception but the extension of Jim Crow and the attitudes informing it. Segregation and its associated indignities were in retreat. Massive Resistance formed a last stand.
"Empathy" has been politicized and in some circles invites derision. Yet, properly understood, empathy leads away from hatred and cruelty and opens hearts to the loving-kindness men and women are intended to magnify. "As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master," Abraham Lincoln said. Many simply could not see the harm they did to so many others. Jefferson trembled for his country when he reflected that God is just.
Yesteryear's words cannot be revoked. They endure on newsprint yellow and brittle, on microfilm, and in the computer files into which they have been translated. They belong to history, and history lives. It is well and good that the words be remembered, as a warning perhaps best. We will not forget.
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Reader Reactions
All I know is someone did my ancestors wrong sometime ago in history and, therefore, someone owes me some money!
What a rambling diatribe of BS. It’s written like a fortune cookie. You can read into it whatever you want. I’ve seen more succinct horrorscopes. John has a long mustache, and his mother smelled of eldeberries.
Coming to grips with its past in this manner makes the Times-Dispatch a better paper.
yes i am sorry, sorry for something that has gone on since the beginning of time and still goes on today. why don’t you do gooders try and stop what is happening today. and not just cry about something that haappened 150 years ago.its about money, pay me for something that is gone, long gone
Quote: “I apologize that some of my other ancestors persecuted Roman Catholics during the Dutch Rebellion against their Spanish masters in 1500’s.“ (posted by dave)
Woa, woa, wait a minute here Dave. Your ancestors are the bums who tortured mine? I don’t care about your shallow apology—where do you live, fella? Where ya at right now?
on the repentance of a news orgaziation saying it’s sorry for what at that time believed in is totally dumb. So you can print one thing today and next year print a retraction if it is not socially acceptable at that time. It’s just like the south that quit flying the rebel flag at it’s capital buildings because it became to much of political incorrectness at the time when in fact it was a part of u.s. history.What are we going to do, every time an action comes up from the past that a certain group or minority doesn’t like or feel that they are being picked on do we say sorry but this is the U.S.A. land of Free speach.Don’t be so touchy!
so…there was no news today?
Racism, prejudice and bias still sit in the forefront despite Obama being voted in. I will not apologize for things I had no part in, it’s history and people need to move on. What is the real reason people won’t let go? Look in the mirror. And the Richmond Times Dispatch is a leader in prejudice and racism. I wonder what the paper would read like if you just stated the plain facts instead of twisting them.
Posted by ( avm ) on July 16, 2009 at 1:54 pm
“”Asia’s students are giving a licking to their American age equals.””
You have a very good point avm, however not 100% accurate. It‘s all nationalities and countries that are coming after the pot of GOLD now, not just Asians. This is the land of opportunity and too many Americans have lost the drive to work hard or the A## to fight for what’s right in their own homeland.
So it’s the Brit’s, French, Japanese, the whole world that want a piece of the apple pie. And as a country we have allowed this to happen in the land of the offended with the US GOVERNMENTS open door policy and still living in the past way of doing things!
That’s not a North / South thing; it is true STUPIDITY on our government’s behalf!
We are our own worst enemy, and my representatives will gladly hand you the Vaseline!
And I owe no apologies to anyone, Period!
Very sincerely, JB
Howard Waters - It is, quite laughable. I would probably be reading until my eyes hurt with every apology known to man. Who needs that now? Especially if it’s some fake junk. Sorry RTD I don’t accept your staged apology. LOL!
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