12 August 2006

Digby: Acid, Amnesty, Abortion and Amnesia

Maha discusses "The Story of 1972" today and does something quite innovative. She pulls up Richard Nixon's acceptance speech and reminds everyone what he was really running against that year: acid, amnesty and abortion --- as well as "law and order" which was George Wallace's racist war cry in 1968 and stood the Republicans in good stead for a generation of race baiting.
The first issue Nixon launched into was not Vietnam, but quotas. He was speaking out against Affirmative Action. He spoke of “millions who have been driven out of their home in the Democratic Party” — this was a nod to the old white supremacist Dixiecrats who were leaving the Democratic Party because of its stand in favor of civil rights (the famous Southern Strategy). McGovern had proposed a guaranteed minimum income for the nation’s poor that was widely regarded as radical and flaky and (in popular lore) amounted to taking tax money away from white people and giving it to blacks. Nixon warned that McGovern’s policies would raise taxes and also add millions of people to welfare roles — another racially charged issue. Then Nixon took on one of his favorite issues, crime. If you remember those years you’ll remember that Nixon was always going on about “lawnorder.” This was another issue with racial overtones, but it was also a swipe at the “permissiveness” of the counterculture and the more violent segments of the antiwar and Black Power movements.

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