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Death of a Nation

Page 41

by Dinesh D'Souza


  Triumph of the Will, 2

  See also fascism

  neo-Nazism, 5–6, 8, 11, 27, 49, 161–162, 243, 258–259, 261, 263, 267, 281

  New Deal, 11, 21–22, 24, 78, 155, 158–159, 163–164, 185, 200–201, 205

  Eisenhower and, 278

  National Recovery Act (NRA), 142, 159, 170–171, 173–174, 177

  Social Security, 171

  Tennessee Valley Project, 171

  New Republic, 3, 78, 129, 170, 181

  New York Times, 3, 7, 74–75, 77, 89, 164, 205, 226, 261

  Nixon, Richard, 223

  Democratic dominance and, 277–278

  law and order platform, 203–204

  Southern Strategy and, 11, 24, 180–182, 202–207

  Watergate, 202

  Noden, Kirk, 8

  Norrell, Robert, 125

  North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), 257

  Nussbaum, Martha, 287

  Obama, Barack, xii-xv, 16, 27, 90, 121, 128, 162, 183, 260, 289

  Affordable Care Act, 159

  class warfare and, 174

  Coates on, 11

  Democratic National Convention (2012), 166

  Democratic plantation and, 22, 25, 159–160, 212, 284

  federal auto bailout (2008), 178

  Hispanic vote and, 75, 239

  immigration policy, 72–73, 75

  Obama-Trump voters, 249–251

  supporters, 250–251, 260

  O’Brien, Luke, 262–263

  Occupy Wall Street movement, 27, 260

  O’Hehir, Andrew, 7

  Olivetti, Angiolo, 168

  Olmsted, Frederick Law, 55, 61

  Omi, Michael, 13

  Ottoman dynasty, xiii, 252

  Outer South. See American South: Peripheral South

  Patterson, Orlando, 16, 46

  Payne, Stanley, 126, 162–163

  Pearson, Jay, 5

  Pelosi, Nancy, 174

  Pendergast, Tom, 89

  Peripheral South. See American South

  Philadelphia Plan, 205

  Phillips, Kevin, 202, 206–207, 209

  Phillips, Wendell, 139

  Pierce, Franklin, 19, 281

  Pinckney, Charles, 46

  plantation, Democratic, 14–29

  Big House and the state, 149–178

  boss, 14–15, 23, 25, 134, 160, 186, 194

  civil rights and, 179–211

  Civil War and, 20, 95–118

  defined, 14–15

  Democratic master class psychology and, 19, 48–71

  founders’ dilemma and, 30–47

  multiculturalism and, 25, 212–242

  nationalism and, 273–292

  overseers, 14–15, 21, 25, 59, 128, 134, 151–152, 194, 202, 225–233, 283–285, 291

  progressives and, 20–22, 25–26, 119–149

  urban politics and, 17–19, 72–94

  Plato, 85

  Plunkitt, George Washington, 72, 90, 94

  political action committees (PACs), xiv

  Politico, 8, 49

  Pomeroy, Marcus, 110–111

  Potter, David, 55

  progressive era, 119–148

  Ku Klux Klan and, 21, 121, 123, 129, 139–142

  Nazism and, 125–128, 145–148

  race and, 119–128

  segregation and, 142–145

  white supremacy and, 134–142

  progressive narrative of American history, 8–13

  protest

  anti-Trump protests, 4

  antiwar protests, 203

  Charlottesville rally and, 12, 49

  civil rights protests, 189

  counter-protest, 244, 259

  NFL protests, 31

  Punic Wars, xii

  racism, 13–14, 22–29, 50, 55–56, 97, 101–102, 108–109, 282–283, 286–287

  charge against Trump, 5–12

  civil rights era and, 180–190, 195–198, 201–211

  fascism and, 150, 154–155, 161–162, 168–173, 180

  invisible racism, 214–215

  multiculturalism and, 212–218, 228–229

  progressive era and, 120–148, 270

  working-class whites and, 244, 252–253, 255, 258, 260–266

  Ramos, Jorge, 229, 245

  Rangel, Charles, 226

  Ransome, Noel, 31

  Rasmussen, Holly, 250

  Rayburn, Sam, 155–156

  Reagan, Ronald, 24, 149, 159, 179, 181, 209–210, 246, 268–270, 278, 288–290

  Reconstruction, 11, 20, 96–99, 111–118, 119, 121, 138–139, 170, 187, 195, 213, 270, 287

  Reid, Eric, 30

  Reid, Joy, 5

  Remini, Robert, 80–81, 84

  Rhett, Robert Barnwell, 53

  Rich, Frank, 5–6

  RINOs (Republicans in Name Only), 144

  Ritchie, Thomas, 82–84

  Rivers, Eugene, 221

  Rocco, Alfredo, 165

  Rodriguez, Junius, 62

  Roe v. Wade, 24

  Rolling Stone, 5, 6, 31

  Roman Empire, xii-xiii, 252

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 16, 18, 66, 77, 128, 183–184

  African American vote and, 201–202

  civil rights and, 173, 188

  class warfare and, 173–176

  Democratic plantation and, 283, 285

  fascism and, 21–22, 149–178

  Japanese American internment, 154, 230

  Ku Klux Klan and, 153–156

  labor union movement, 21, 27, 170–171, 176–178

  Tammany Hall and, 94, 175–176

  taxation, 21

  See also New Deal

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 119–123, 125, 127, 134

  Ross, E. A., 132

  Rosaldo, Renato, 237

  Ruffin, Edmund, 61

  Russell, Richard, 186–187, 197, 208

  Rutledge, John, 37

  Saletan, Will, 259

  Salon, 3, 6, 7, 181–182

  Sanders, Bernie, 167, 249

  Sanger, Margaret, 144, 147–148

  Schaaf, Libby, 73

  Schlesinger, Arthur, Jr., 154

  Schumer, Charles, 174, 236

  Schurz, Carl, 117

  segregation, 11–12, 154–155, 171–172, 283, 287

  civil rights era and, 180–191, 196–198, 201–208

  multiculturalism and, 213–215, 217

  progressive era and, 120, 123–125, 129, 134, 142–143, 145–146, 148

  Seitz, Scott, 251

  Seligman, Martin, 25, 224–225

  Seward, William, 20

  Seymour, Horatio, 106

  Shafer, Byron, 208–210

  Sims, Marion, 57

  Skinheads, 258, 259

  Slate, 6, 7

  slavery

  abolitionism, 30–47, 53, 61, 67–69, 87, 133, 93, 107–108, 139, 246–248, 276

  Civil War and, 95–118

  Crittenden Compromise, 95, 108, 274

  Dred Scott, 32–33

  “Dyaesthesia Aethiopica” and “Drapetomania” diagnoses, 60

  Emancipation Proclamation, 51, 86, 97, 103, 109–113, 131

  equality clause, 31–38, 44–45

  Jefferson and, 19, 30, 31–32, 34, 35, 37–42

  Lincoln on, 24–25, 34–37, 40–42, 44–47, 49–51, 67–71, 198–200

  Missouri Compromise, 36, 95, 273

  U.S. Constitution and, 10, 16, 31–36, 44, 101


  white supremacy and, 19–20, 120, 125–128, 134, 138, 144–147

  Snyder, Timothy, 7, 151–153

  Sofsky, Wolfgang, 151

  South. See American South

  Southern Strategy

  big switch theory and, 181–183, 196, 208–211, 243

  LBJ and, 24, 182–183

  Nixon and, 11, 24, 180–182, 202–207

  Sowell, Thomas, 123, 228

  Spaeth, Ryu, 3

  Spencer, Richard, 6, 27, 244, 258, 267–272

  Spielberg, Steven, 79

  Sracic, Paul, 250

  Stalin, Joseph, xii, 126–128

  Stampp, Kenneth, 26

  Steele, Michael, 180

  Steele, Shelby, 195, 212, 228

  Stephens, Alexander, 34, 95, 98–100

  Cornerstone Speech, 108–109

  Sternhell, Zeev, 166

  Stiglitz, Joseph, 7

  Stoddard, Lothrop, 144

  Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 124

  Sumner, Charles, 106, 114–115

  Swain, Carol, 263–266

  Tammany Hall, 18, 77–78, 88–94, 106, 160, 175–177, 193, 226

  Taney, Roger, 15–16, 19, 32–35, 37, 41, 49, 68, 281

  Taylor, Jared, 263–266

  Thomas, Clarence, 228

  Thompson, William Hale “Big Bill,” 89

  Thurmond, Strom, 208

  Tilghman, Tench, 135

  Tillman, Benjamin, 122

  Tompkins, John, 56

  trade, 256–257, 289

  Treuer, David, 233

  tribe, American, ix-xii

  Tribe, Laurence, 4

  Truman, Harry, 22, 128, 154–156, 171–172, 174, 188

  Trump, Donald

  American Nationalism of, 27–29, 93, 97, 273–292

  Charlottesville Unite the Right rally and, 243–245, 248, 258–259

  compared to Lincoln, 277–279

  defeat of the plantation and, 288–292

  Giuliani, Rudy, 262–263

  holdout voters (white working class) and, 27, 243–272

  immigration and, 28–29, 73–74, 161–162, 228–229, 236, 256–257, 271, 289–290

  Make American Great Again (MAGA), 6, 27, 74, 161, 228, 243, 245, 249–250, 256

  Never Trump movement, 246, 289

  Obama-Trump voters, 249–251

  progressive narrative of, 2–8, 12, 96, 161–162, 165, 167, 181–182

  Warsaw speech, 1–2

  white nationalists and, 267, 269, 271–272

  Trumpsters, 3–4, 12, 41, 245, 290

  Tugwell, Rexford, 159, 170

  Turner, Lisa, 264

  Tweed, William “Boss,” 89–90, 281

  “Uncle Toms,” 123–124, 228, 286

  Unite the Right rally (Charlottesville, VA), 6, 12, 27, 31, 48–49, 243–245, 248, 258, 260

  Vallandigham, Clement, 106–107, 130–131

  Van Buren, Martin, 16, 18, 79–88, 92–94, 160, 238, 247, 281–282, 285

  Vance, J. D., 254–255

  Vardaman, James, 122

  Venezuela, xiii, 74, 240

  Vice, 31

  volte face (about face), 23, 179–180, 183, 195–197, 205

  Voorhees, Daniel, 106

  Voting Rights Act of 1965, 23, 113, 181

  Vox, 2

  Wagner, Robert, 177

  Wagoner, Rick, 159

  Wallace, George, 14, 24, 181, 198, 207

  Wallace, Henry Scott, 164–165

  Warnock, Raphael, 229

  Warren, Elizabeth, 5, 167

  Washington, Booker T., 56, 121, 123–124, 195, 228, 285

  Washington, George, 36–38

  Washington Post, 3, 287

  Weber, Jennifer, 109

  Week, The, 5

  West, Kanye, 228

  Whig Party, 20, 85, 99–100, 112, 246–247, 278

  White Face, Charmaine, 232

  white nationalism, 29, 263–272

  American Renaissance, 263–265

  Charlottesville rally and, 27, 243–244, 248

  marginalization of, 266

  multiculturalism and, 28, 267, 271

  “new white nationalism,” 263

  progressives and, 2, 5–6, 20

  white nationalist vote, 248, 271–272

  World Church of the Creator, 264

  See also American nationalism; Spencer, Richard

  white privilege, 64, 214–215, 255

  white supremacy

  African American progressives and, 125, 127

  American founding and, 31–33, 38, 41, 45–47

  antebellum Democrats and, 19, 50, 54, 64, 69

  big switch and, 181–182

  Charlottesville rally and, 6, 12, 27, 243–245, 260

  Coates on, 10–13, 216–217, 249

  Democratic Party and, 14, 19–24, 114, 120, 125–128, 134, 137–138, 144–147, 181–184, 189–190, 198

  Lincoln and, 51, 97, 103–104, 114

  profiles of white supremacists, 260–261

  progressive view of, 5–13, 27–28, 31, 127–128, 201–202, 213–215, 266

  Republican Party and, 114–116, 201–202, 287, 291

  as tool of enslavement, 19–20, 120, 125–128, 134, 138, 144–147

  white nationalists and, 263, 267

  white supremacist vote, 258–259

  World War II and, 23

  See also Charlottesville Unite the Right rally

  whiteness and white politics, 3, 5, 10, 12, 87

  history, 251–255

  identity politics, 263–267

  Know-Nothing party, 246–248

  Obama-Trump voters, 249–251

  white working class (holdouts), 27, 243–272

  See also white nationalism; white supremacy

  Whitman, James, 146–147

  Whitney, Eli, 52

  Whitney, Leon, 147

  Widmer, Ted, 78, 80–81, 87, 91

  Wilkerson, Isabel, 190, 195

  Williams, Walter, 228

  Williamson, Joel, 118

  Wills, Garry, 35

  Wilson, James Q., 278

  Wilson, Woodrow, 20–22, 27, 148, 153–154, 182, 270, 281, 283, 285

  admiration of Lincoln, 128–134

  centralized state (progressive plantation) and, 119–148

  election of 1912, 119–128, 143

  eugenics and, 143, 145, 148

  Wilson, Woodrow (continued)

  History of the American People, 119, 120–121, 145

  immigration and, 143–145

  Ku Klux Klan and, 139–142

  segregation and, 142–143

  white supremacy and, 134–142

  Winant, Howard, 13

  Witherspoon, Boykin, 57

  Wood, Fernando, 106

  Wood, Gordon, 16, 47, 56

  World War I, xiii, 9, 21, 138, 190

  World War II, 21, 23, 150, 157–158, 160, 165, 171–172, 188, 230, 249, 283

  Holocaust, 9, 123, 151, 161, 281

  See also Nazi Germany and Nazism

  Wright, Fielding, 208

  Wright, Silas, Jr., 88

  Wyche, Steve, 30

  Yancey, William, 53

  Zeitz, Joshua, 49

  About the Author

  Terry Turner Photography

  DINESH D’SOUZA has had a prominent career as a writer, scholar, public intellectual and filmmaker. Born in India, D’Souza came to the United States as an exchange student at the age of seventeen and graduated Phi Beta K
appa from Dartmouth College. The author of many bestselling books—Illiberal Education, Obama’s America, America and The Big Lie—he is also the creator of three of the top ten highest-grossing political documentaries ever made.

  For email updates on the author, click here.

  You can find the author’s website here.

  ALSO BY DINESH D’SOUZA

  The Big Lie

  Hillary’s America

  Stealing America

  America: Imagine a World without Her

  Obama’s America

  Godforsaken

  The Roots of Obama’s Rage

  Life after Death

  What’s So Great about Christianity

  The Enemy at Home

  Letters to a Young Conservative

  What’s So Great about America

  The Virtue of Prosperity

  Ronald Reagan

  End of Racism

  Illiberal Education

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  For email updates on the author, click here.

  Contents

  EPIGRAPH

  DEDICATION

  PREFACE: On Gaining and Losing a Country

  1. INTRODUCTION: Who Is Killing America?

  2. DILEMMA OF THE PLANTATION: The Antislavery Founding

  3. PARTY OF ENSLAVEMENT: The Psychology of the Democratic Master Class

  4. URBAN PLANTATION: Martin Van Buren and the Creation of the Northern Political Machine

  5. THE PLANTATION IN CRISIS: How Democrats North and South Fought to Extend Slavery

  6. PROGRESSIVE PLANTATION: White Supremacy as a Weapon of Reenslavement

  7. THE STATE AS BIG HOUSE: What FDR Learned from Fascism and Nazism

  8. CIVIL RIGHTS AND WRONGS: LBJ, Nixon and the Myth of the Southern Strategy

  9. MULTICULTURAL PLANTATIONS: Expanding the Culture of Dependency

  10. HOLDOUTS: Democrats and the Problem of White People

  11. EMANCIPATION: How American Nationalism Can Save the Country

  NOTES

  INDEX

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  ALSO BY DINESH D’SOUZA

  COPYRIGHT

  DEATH OF A NATION. Copyright © 2018 by Dinesh D’Souza. All rights reserved. For information, address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.

  www.allpointsbooks.com

  The Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.

 

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