Friday, November 11, 2022

A Liberal Dose, November 10, 2022 "Have We Reached Our Preston Brooks Moment?"

 


Note: this edition carries both my column from last week and this week's follow-up. HERE is a link to last week's column.


A Liberal Dose

November 10, 2022

Troy D. Smith

“Have We Reached Our Preston Brooks Moment?”


I am writing this before election day, but the election will have come and gone by the time it sees print. As I sit here on what to you was this past Sunday night, I can’t help but think that it is quite likely that the anger, and the violent rhetoric, which has me so worried will have increased -no matter who wins what, or who controls Congress. Last week I was outraged by the (very predictable to anyone paying attention) attempted murder of the House Speaker’s husband in their home. Little did I know what was coming -because, from some corners, it surprised even me.

I was not surprised that some conservatives (and Elon Musk, however we describe him) were repeating a totally fabricated story that Mr. Pelosi was attacked by a gay prostitute he had hired. I was not surprised that Donald Trump, Jr. tweeted a photo of a pair of underwear and a hammer, saying it was his Paul Pelosi Halloween costume. I wasn’t surprised that other people were posting similar bad jokes that minimized -and seemed to celebrate -the brutal assault of a senior citizen over politics, and more broadly made light of the very dangerous place Donald Trump has led us. I was surprised by some of the people who joined in. There is no minimizing, no successful false equivalency, of events like this and the attempted rebellion on January 6. My good friend John Gottlied, a couple of weeks ago, admitted that some Trump followers weren’t the most well-behaved, but that he had never heard of a conservative trying to kill a Supreme Court Justice. I assume he means the incident when people were protesting outside Kavanaugh’s house and one of them was found to have a gun in a case. They probably did have ill intent, and I condemn it. But I would point out that, A) conservatives have no current reason to be mad at the Supreme Court and B) a couple of thousand of them were too busy trying to kill the other two branches of government on live television. Many of whom also were armed.  It is not equal.

The jokes about Mr. Pelosi reminded me of an event that occurred on the floor of the Senate in 1856, during the lead-up to the Civil War. I, and many other historians, have used that incident to demonstrate that the country was on the dangerous path to war because they had stopped looking at each other as fellow Americans and human beings.

In brief, Massachusetts senator Charles Sumner (an abolitionist) had given a speech condemning the violence going on in “Bleeding Kansas” at that time between pro-and-anti-slavery citizens, as well as condemning slavery itself. I think he was totally correct. The problem was how he did it. He singled out SC senator Andrew Butler, who had recently had a stroke and whose speech was slurred, and essentially made fun of his stroke and made veiled references to his alleged raping of slave children. Butler’s cousin, Preston Brooks -who was in the House of Representatives -decided to challenge Sumner to a duel to protect his family’s honor. He was told that duels were for your social equals, so instead he beat Sumner almost to death with a cane while he was sitting at his desk on the Senate floor. He beat him until the cane broke.

Northerners claimed this as proof Southerners were brutal savages and could not be reasoned with. Southerners claimed it was proof Yankees deserved a good beating. From all over the South, people mailed Brooks new canes -one of them inscribed “good job.”

Political violence in Kansas led to more in the Capitol, with supporters of the perpetrator making it into a joke. It was all more kindling added to the pile, lacking only the final spark, which would be fanned by hatred.

I want to leave you with the words of Lincoln on his inauguration, when the flame had already started, and entreat us all to hear his words:

“The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.”

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.


You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE

No comments:

Post a Comment