Times-Dispatch editorial expresses regret for Massive Resistance

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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

Flag Comment Posted by MeToo on July 16, 2009 at 10:04 am

Wow, I never knew the RTD (or whatever it was called in that day) was responsible for Massive Resistance?!  I’d rather see the state leaders of the time (those that are still alive today anyway) stand up, look those affected in the face, and offer a sincere apology.

Regardless, an apology doesn’t do anything to fix what happened and nothing really can fix it.  Perhaps the RTD doesn’t understand that an entire generation of African Americans and poor Whites (who’s parents couldn’t afford private school or to move) were denied an education- something you can never give back to them with a half-hearted apology.

Nevermind the fact that your very own ‘journalist’, MPW, writes fluff pieces that reek of today’s version of Massive Resistance.  (I’m sure this post will be deleted as the RTD always deletes posts that challenge them directly and do not in any way violate the terms and conditions of use.  What’s that free speech/press thing again?)

Flag Comment Posted by woodford on July 16, 2009 at 9:38 am

I don’t regret massive resistance, nor white flight, nor slavery, nor anything else that occurred when I wasn’t alive - and until people leave the past alone the “wounds” will never heal and people will always carry a chip on their shoulder.

Flag Comment Posted by Reverend on July 16, 2009 at 8:35 am

You apologizing is the same thing as a 40 year old German apologizing for the Holocaust.

He/She had nothing to do with it, the association does not connect. Those from the past know their guilt, let them bear the brunt of their actions.

Forgiviness is rare in this day, and age. Everyone wants revenge, or “payback”.

Flag Comment Posted by Anon on July 16, 2009 at 6:46 am

It is noble to accept responsibility and plead for forgiveness.  But back then Richmond Newspapers was totally controlled by the Byrd Machine.  Pretending your editors had a choice is giving them too much credit.

Flag Comment Posted by H.Everton on July 16, 2009 at 6:46 am

Nice try, but I didn’t hear “we’re sorry.“ An expression of regret is not an apology.

Flag Comment Posted by allie on July 16, 2009 at 5:45 am

I wonder how many editorial stances you are taking today that you will be apologizing for in 50 years. (assuming there is a RTD in 50 years.)

Flag Comment Posted by Gil in Mechanic on July 16, 2009 at 2:17 am

Okay, so get over it…

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