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Mandela Still a Fighter

August 18, 2013

Mandela Still a Fighter

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Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Richmond Free Press

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - World hero Nelson Mandela’shealth is slowly recovering buthe remains in critical condition,South Africa’s government statedSunday in its first update on hishealth in nearly two weeks.

The 95-year-old anti-apartheid leader and former South Africa president has been in a Pretoria hospital for two months for treatment of a recurrent lung infection.

“The former president is making a slow but steady improvement,” South Africa’s President said in a statement, adding Mandela still remained in a critical condition. Mandela’s youngest daughter told state broadcaster SABC that her father’s health was improving daily and he was able to sit up for minutes at a time.

Mandela became South Africa’s first democratically elected president in all-race elections in 1994 that marked the end of the apartheid system.He spent 27 years in prison under white minority rule, including18 years at the notorious Robben Island penal colony. His lung infection dates back to his time on the winds wept island, where he and other prisoners were forced to work in a limestone quarry.

Judge Sentences Former U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. to Prison by Frederick H. Lowe

August 18, 2013

Judge Sentences Former U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. to Prison
Black men call Jackson greedy and are not sympathetic

By Frederick H. Lowe

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from TheNorthStarNews.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - A U.S. District Court Judge on Wednesday sentenced former Illinois Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr., 48, and his wife Sandra Stevens Jackson, 49, to prison, but the sentences were less than what federal prosecutors had recommended.

Judge Amy Berman Jackson of the U.S. District Court for District of Columbia sentenced Jesse Jackson Jr., son of Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., founder of the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, to 30 months or 2 ½ years in prison.

Prosecutors wanted Jackson, who had represented Illinois 2nd Congressional District, which includes Chicago and some suburbs, to serve 48 months, or 4 years in prison. Jesse Jackson Jr. represented Illinois 2nd Congressional District from 1995 to November 2012, when he resigned from office, aware that he was under investigation.

Judge Jackson, who is not related to either of the Jacksons, sentenced Sandra Jackson, a former Chicago Alderman, to 12 months in prison. Prosecutors had recommended that Sandra Jackson serve 18 months in prison.

Sandra Stevens Jackson served as a Chicago alderman from May 2007 to January 2013.

Judge Jackson also allowed the Jacksons to served staggered sentences, with the former Congressman serving his sentence first, followed by Sandra Jackson. The judge allowed the arrangement so one parent could be with their two young children.

Jesse Jackson Jr. is expected to serve his sentence at a federal prison in Alabama or one close to Washington, D.C., where he and his wife have a home. The couple also has a home in Chicago.

The U.S. Bureau of Prisons, however, will make the final determination about where he will serve and when he will have to surrender.

U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. called Jesse Jackson Jr.'s demise a tragedy of his own making.

"Jackson's political potential was unlimited, but he instead chose to treat his campaign account as a personal slush fund, stealing from people who believed in him so he could live extravagantly."

Jesse Jackson Jr. pled guilty to conspiring to defraud his re-election campaign of nearly $750,000. He spent the money on expensive appliances, electronic equipment, a $43,350 men's gold-plated Rolex watch, expensive furs and pricey cigars.

Sandra Stevens Jackson pled guilty in February to filing false federal income tax returns on $570,000 from 2006 through 2011.

Although Machen expressed sympathy for Jesse Jackson Jr., some Black men were not sympathetic.

The men who spoke on condition their names would not be used said Jesse Jackson Jr. and Sandra Jackson had a very large combined income. Prosecutors said in 2011 the couple had a combined annual income of $344,000.

"They made enough money to live a very good life," one of the men told The NorthStar News & Analysis. "But they were greedy."

Holder Rejects Mandatory Minimum Sentences by Zenitha Prince

August 18, 2013

Holder Rejects Mandatory Minimum Sentences
By Zenitha Prince

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Attorney General Eric Holder’s recent announcement of a set of prosecutorial reforms, including ways of avoiding mandatory sentences for low-level drug offenses, is being praised by people on both sides of the ideological aisle.

“I think this will be pretty well received whether you look at it from a social justice perspective or a fiscal perspective,” said Chris Deutsch, spokesman, National Association of Drug Court Professionals. “It appeals to people over a broad spectrum. Everyone is ready for a change.”

In his Aug. 12 speech to the American Bar Association in San Francisco, Holder said Justice Department officials have worked for months on proposals to begin fixing a “broken” criminal justice system that is rife with disparities.

As part of his “Smart on Crime” initiative, Holder gives federal prosecutors more discretion to use locally-tailored guidelines for determining when federal charges should be filed, with an eye to focusing resources on fighting violent crime.

He has also directed “all U.S. Attorneys to create – and to update – comprehensive anti-violence strategies for badly-afflicted areas within their districts. And I’ve encouraged them to convene regular law enforcement forums with state and local partners to refine these plans, foster greater efficiency, and facilitate more open communication and cooperation,” he said.

“Today, a vicious cycle of poverty, criminality, and incarceration traps too many Americans and weakens too many communities,” Holder said. “And many aspects of our criminal justice system may actually exacerbate these problems, rather than alleviate them.”

“By prioritizing prosecutions, we increase the resources that we can devote to battling the violent offenders who threaten our neighborhoods,” said Ronald C. Machen Jr. U.S. attorney for Washington D.C., in an e-mailed statement. “We look forward to implementing the Department’s new guidance in a manner that conserves our resources so that we can best confront our most pressing and persistent public safety challenges.”

The plan also calls for averting mandatory minimum sentences for low-level, nonviolent drug offenders with no ties to gangs or large-scale drug organizations; reducing sentences for elderly, nonviolent inmates and promoting diversion programs instead of prison for nonviolent criminals.

“The bottom line is that, while the aggressive enforcement of federal criminal statutes remains necessary, we cannot simply prosecute or incarcerate our way to becoming a safer nation. To be effective, federal efforts must also focus on prevention and reentry,” Holder said.

Liberal lawmakers and social justice groups are praising the attorney general for addressing the issue of hardline anti-drug penalties—a “misguided” policy birthed from the so-called War on Drugs—which, they say, has perpetuated a “cradle-to-prison pipeline” among Blacks and Hispanics.

“Mandatory sentences have been disproportionately invoked against people of color ever since their inception 20-30 years ago,” said A. Dwight Pettit, a well-known Baltimore lawyer who said he’s seen many clients over the years who have been overly penalized by draconian judicial policies.

Pettit said change to the patently “unfair” system, which he compared to “modern slavery,” was slow in coming because “loading up of jails became a new industry.”

The impact of such policies on communities of color has been devastating, activists say, straining and draining their resources.

“Mandatory minimum sentences are not only unfair in stature and consequence, they represent a serious threat to the civil rights gains and progress of the 1960s and 70s,” said Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law President and Executive Director Barbara Arnwine in a statement.

“These sentences are counterproductive and create a long-term adverse cycle of negative reinforcement, have disastrous effects on housing, employment and education, and tear apart families and communities – while doing little or nothing to make us safer.”

Hilary Shelton, NAACP Washington Bureau chief, said disproportionate incarceration among Blacks—who comprise about 40 percent of the nation’s prison population—has led to decreased political power.

“Voting capital is also lost because you’re taking voting population off the street…and in many states they receive a lifetime ban on voting rights,” Shelton said, citing statistics that one-third of the ex-felons who can’t vote are African American.

Conservatives concerned with over-criminalization’s rising toll on the federal budget have also given Holder’s plan faint praise—sprinkled with criticism that his efforts lag behind those already implemented by states.

“Over the years, political leaders have failed to hold the criminal justice system accountable for its alarming increase in spending and lack of results,” said Marc Levin, on behalf of Right on Crime, a conservative criminal justice reform movement. “It’s good to see the administration following the lead of conservative states such as Texas, South Carolina, and Georgia that have proven it’s possible to reduce crime while also reducing criminal justice spending.”

There are currently about 2.4 million persons being held nationally in U.S. prisons and jails across the country, half of them for nonviolent drug offenses. In federal prisons alone, the number of inmates skyrocketed from approximately 25,000 in 1980 to nearly 219,000 in 2012, an almost 800 percent increase, and the Bureau of Prisons’ (BOP) is operating at almost 40 percent over capacity, the Congressional Research Service found in a recent report.

Taxpayers pay about $26,000 to house an inmate for one year, which translated to a nationwide cost to state and federal budgets of about $80 billion in 2010 alone.

That is money “that can be put towards the education system, towards creating jobs…towards helping with health care and retirement…. There are an awful number of things that this money can be used on,” Shelton said.

Holder said the Justice Department is also supporting bi-partisan legislation that seeks to enshrine some of his reforms into law.

Shirley Sherrod's Ongoing Battle for Racial Cooperation in Georgia By Ryan Cooper

Article VI of an 11-part Series on Race in America - Past and Present

A Dedicated Life:
Shirley Sherrod's Ongoing Battle for Racial Cooperation in Georgia
By Ryan Cooper

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Shirley Sherrod

 
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Ryan Cooper

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Almost three years ago, in late March 2010, Shirley Sherrod, who was then the USDA state director of rural development for Georgia, gave a forthright speech about her life story at an NAACP banquet. She told of how a White sheriff had lynched her cousin in 1943, how her father was killed by a White neighbor who went uncharged despite three witnesses, and how after her father's death she dedicated herself to staying in Georgia to work for change. Initially, she said, her commitment was limited to the Black community, but in 1985, her mind was changed.

That year, while Sherrod was working for the Federation of Southern Cooperatives, a nonprofit helping Black farmers hang on to their land, Roger Spooner, a White farmer in danger of foreclosure, approached her for help. She took Spooner to a White lawyer, assuming that one of his "own kind would take care of him." But when she discovered that the lawyer would do nothing for him, she did what she could instead. Eventually, she helped Spooner to keep his farm. This was a lesson from God, Sherrod said during her NAACP speech, to teach her that it's not all about Black and White, but about poverty also. "Working with him made me see that it's really about those who have versus those who don't," she said.

Andrew Breitbart, the late conservative provocateur, published a video of that speech several months later. His version had been heavily edited to remove the context and ending, making Sherrod sound as if she were baldly discriminating against a White man because of his race. Although Breitbart's reputation as a dissembler was well known, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack panicked after the video went viral. Sherrod's supervisor called her later that day while she was driving home and asked her to pull over and type her resignation on her BlackBerry. Even the NAACP denounced her without watching the tape of its own event.

The next day, the truth came out. Spooner's wife defended Sherrod on CNN, launching a full media firestorm. Vilsack called Sherrod to apologize and later offered her a high-level advocacy job in the USDA. Sherrod felt this was a "backhanded apology" and refused the new post. The president himself called as well to smooth things over.

To Sherrod, all that's old news. These days, she has returned to the work she was doing before all the publicity. She still lives with her husband, Charles, in Albany, Ga., where they raised their children and where she still spends her days working with poor and minority farmers. At the USDA, she oversaw development programs for poor rural communities, and before that she worked on the other side of the fence, for several private organizations advocating for poor and minority farmers. Now, as she explained in an interview with the Washington Monthly and in her recent autobiography, The Courage to Hope, she and her husband run two nonprofits.

The first organization is called New Communities, which was started in 1969. Back then, it was common for Blacks who participated in the civil rights movement to lose their land on legally dubious grounds. White landlords would arbitrarily evict their activist sharecroppers, and White law enforcement would imprison workers on trumped-up charges. The idea behind New Communities was to form a collective farm for those dispossessed people, modeled on the Israeli kibbutzim, so they could work their own property without interference.

They acquired 5,700 acres, becoming one of the largest Black-owned properties in the nation at the time. It was a success that did not come without caveats. Racist terrorists would occasionally strafe the farm's buildings with gunfire, and local banks still often refused financing to the community. They also faced systematic discrimination from the local and national government, especially the USDA. When drought struck in the early 1980s, the USDA refused New Communities an emergency loan for an irrigation system with no explanation, while giving loans out to white farmers in similar situations. In 1982, when New Communities sold some timber to raise cash, the USDA insisted on taking the profits from the sale before giving another loan. An arbitrator later wrote, "The payment smacks of nothing more than a feudal baron demanding additional crops from his serfs." The following year, when New Communities applied for another loan, the USDA demanded the title to their land as collateral, but then did not disburse the loan. By 1985, New Communities was forced to close its doors.

In 1997, this and other similar cases of discrimination led to an enormous class-action lawsuit against the USDA, Pigford v. Glickman. It resulted in more than $1 billion in payouts-the largest civil rights settlement to date. A 2008 bill, passed over George W. Bush's veto, expanded the criteria of who could apply for the Pigford funds, so in 2009 New Communities finally got restitution. The organization was resurrected after receiving $12.8 million. Sherrod and her husband got $150,000 each for pain and suffering.

With that money, and under Sherrod's leadership, New Communities was able in June 2011 to buy a new piece of property, called Cypress Pond. A 1,638-acre estate, complete with a colossal white-pillared antebellum mansion, it was originally owned by the largest slaveholder and richest man in Georgia. Due to the housing collapse, the price had been marked down from $21 million to $4.5 million. Sherrod plans to establish an agricultural training program there, as well as a program that will bring local Blacks and Whites together in partnership and promote racial healing. The old mansion is currently being renovated to make room for a conference center and additional meeting space. "White and black together in this area, I think it becomes the perfect place for being helpful in getting folks to get beyond race," she says. In the meantime, they're doing some actual farming. Just over the last year, they harvested $50,000 worth of pecans from previously planted trees to help defray maintenance costs.

Sherrod and her husband's second nonprofit is the Southwest Georgia Project, which helps poor farmers sell their food to local schools. While the organization is currently battling bureaucratic snags, the idea is to help local farmers increase revenue by selling to reliable local buyers while simultaneously providing healthy, fresh food to schoolchildren.

In addition to her work on these two organizations, Sherrod also received a grant in April 2011 from the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. With that grant, she is working to help improve race relations and foster cooperation and partnership between Blacks and Whites in the often racially divisive region of southwest Georgia. She admits that so far it's been an uphill battle. While things are "probably a little better" than they were in the 1960s, she says, people in southwest Georgia still "kind of know their place, and that's the way it's been through the years." Institutionally, race relations have improved since the Jim Crow era, but in some ways things have gotten worse. "People can still go and sit in a restaurant, and eat. They can go and stay in a hotel somewhere. But when you look at what's happening in the school system, they've almost been re-segregated again," she said. Wilcox County High School, for example, does not have a school-supported prom, so Black students and White students organize their own proms separately. Sherrod and her colleagues are working to change that.

The irony of Shirley Sherrod's burst of fame nearly three years ago is that it had almost nothing to do with her at all. A race baiter thrust her briefly onto the national stage, where she stood accused of doing the exact opposite of what she'd spent her life doing. She has since returned to the grassroots advocacy work to which she has dedicated her life, and it's here, it seems, she'd like to stay.

Ryan Cooper is a Web Editor at the Washington Monthly. This article, the sixth of an 11-part series on race, is sponsored by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation and was originally published by the Washington Monthly Magazine.

Deconstructing Reconstruction by Nicholas Lemann

August 12, 2013

Article V of an 11-part Series on Race in America - Past and President
Deconstructing Reconstruction
By Nicholas Lemann

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Nicholas Lemann

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The tumultuous decade that followed the Civil War failed to enshrine Black voting and civil rights, and instead paved the way for more than a century of entrenched racial injustice.

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Children in elementary school often come home with the idea that the purpose of the Civil War was to end slavery-but if that were true, then why did it take Abraham Lincoln so long to issue the Emancipation Proclamation, and why was it less than universally popular in the Union states?

If you see the movie Lincoln, you get a much fuller picture of the contingency of emancipation, and of the difficulty of passing the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which abolished slavery completely-but why didn't Lincoln and the Congress think to address at the same time the obvious question of what status the freed slaves would have after that?

After Lincoln's assassination, Congress and the state governments settled that matter by passing the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, which gave the former slaves full civil rights and voting rights-but why was it necessary for exactly the same rights to be reenacted, after enormous struggle, nearly a century later, during the civil rights era?

The answers to all these questions are essentially the same: For most of American history, White America has been highly ambivalent, or worse, about the idea of full legal equality for Black Americans. Emancipation itself was a forced move, an obvious consequence of the war only in retrospect; it happened because in war zones in the Confederate states, slaves left their plantation homes and appeared at Union army encampments (they were known at the time as "contraband"), and somebody had to decide what to do about them; sending them back to their owners would be both morally suspect and a form of material aid to the enemy.

There has always been a debate about what kind of Reconstruction regime Lincoln would have instituted after the war, had he lived; his racial impulses were generous, but he was not an abolitionist until he actually abolished slavery. Reconstruction-the tumultuous decade or so that followed the Civil War-was an enormous shaping force in American history, and not just in the area of race relations. It's worth recounting in basic outline, because it's a far less familiar story than that of the Civil War itself, but far more relevant today.

The word "Reconstruction" is somewhat misleading in the American case, because it implies that the main challenge was managing the tension between punishing the South for seceding and getting it back on its feet economically and politically. In this instance the more pressing question was what the lives of the millions of freed slaves in the South would be like.

Would they be able to vote? To hold office? To own property? To sue White people? Would government undertake an active, expensive effort to educate them and put them on the way to economic self-sufficiency? Merely to say that former slaves were now free turned out to resolve remarkably little.

In the period just after the Civil War, Lincoln's vice president and successor, Andrew Johnson, was impeached for moving too slowly on these matters, and for being too lenient with the South. Then the fiercely antislavery "radical Republicans" took power, rammed through the Fourteenth (civil rights) and Fifteenth (voting rights) Amendments, maintained the presence of federal troops in the South to enforce those laws, and ran a proto-War on Poverty through a new federal agency called the Freedmen's Bureau, which was meant to help the freed slaves. Just as the Emancipation Proclamation and the Thirteenth Amendment were enormously controversial in the North as well as the South, so too - only more so - were these "radical Reconstruction" measures.

The freed slaves never got "forty acres and a mule," a land-reform idea that has resonated through the years but wasn't enacted (see "Rumors of the Land"
but they did get the basics of citizenship-most importantly, the right to vote. One of the most amazing achievements in the history of Black America was the creation, in just a few years, of an elaborate political machinery-Republican, of course-that produced far higher (in fact, pretty close to 100 percent) voter turnout among freed slaves in the South than the United States as a whole has now. One result of this was that the South elected dozens of Black officials to national office, and another was that state and local governments delivered, at least to some extent, what the freed slaves wanted, notably education at all levels.

None of this was especially popular in the North and it was wildly unpopular in the White South. Most of the rest of America chose to understand Black political empowerment in the South in terms that are still familiar in conservative discourse today: excessive taxation, corruption, and a power imbalance between federal and state government.

These arguments were more presentable than simply saying that Black people shouldn't be allowed to vote, and they built sympathy for the White South among high-minded reformists in the North who were horrified by the big-city political machines that immigrants had created in their own backyard. Good-government reformers hated the idea of uneducated people taking over the democratic machinery and using it to distribute power and patronage, rather than in more high-minded ways. Liberal northeastern publications like the Nation, the Atlantic Monthly, and Harper's Weekly were reliably hostile to Reconstruction, and their readers feasted on a steady diet of horror stories about swaggering corrupt black legislators, out-of-control black-on-white violence, and the bankruptcies of state and local government.

The Ku Klux Klan, which began in the immediate aftermath of the war and was suppressed by federal troops, soon morphed into an archipelago of secret organizations all over the South that were more explicitly devoted to political terror. These organizations-with names like White Line, Red Shirts, and White League-had shadowy ties to the more respectable Democratic Party. Their essential technique was to detect an incipient "Negro riot" and then take arms to repel it. There never actually were any Negro riots; they were either pure rumor and fantasy that grew from a rich soil of White fear of Black violence (usually entailing the incipient despoliation of White womanhood) or another name for Republican Party political activity, at a time when politics was conducted out of doors and with high-spirited mass participation.

The White militia always won the battle, if it was a battle, and nearly all the violence associated with these incidents was suffered by Black people. In the aggregate, many more Black Americans died from white terrorist activities during Reconstruction than from many decades of lynchings. Their effect was to nullify, through violence, the Fifteenth Amendment, by turning Black political activity and voting into something that required taking one's life into one's hands.

All of this was known at the time (the movie Birth of a Nation can be seen as an extended brag about the effects of these techniques during Reconstruction), and there was no mystery about what the remedy to Southern political terrorism was: federal troops. Just as in every "Negro riot" the White militia won, in every encounter between the U.S. Army and a white militia, the Army won.

The Army was in the South to enforce the Fourteenth and Fifteen Amendments, and it became increasingly clear that without its presence, the white South would regionally nullify those amendments through terrorism. But the use of federal troops to confront the white militias was deeply unpopular, including in the North.

Remember that in the 1870s, despite the Civil War, few Americans thought of their national government as properly occupying an ongoing active presence in their lives. The country had never been entirely for full rights for African Americans in the first place, and it wanted to put the Civil War and its legacy behind it. In January 1875, troops under the command of General Philip Sheridan, the great Union cavalryman, marched onto the floor of the Louisiana legislature to ensure that representatives elected by Black voters would be seated. This incident was denounced by virtually every respectable liberal voice in the North; at a public protest meeting in Faneuil Hall in Boston, most of the leading White former abolitionists demonstrated that they had turned against Reconstruction. It's a clear example of the idea that the past is another country-it is hard for us to imagine today how abolitionists could support emancipation but not full black citizenship, but many of them did.

President Ulysses S. Grant, perhaps out of conviction and perhaps out of political calculation (Black Southern voters were a big part of the Republican electoral base), placed himself close to the pro-Reconstruction edge of White opinion. Every member of his Cabinet was more hostile to Reconstruction than he was. But he did not feel confident that he could empower federal troops again and again to enforce black voting rights until the South finally accepted those rights. The crucial moment came in the fall of 1875 (election dates were less standardized then than they are now), when Mississippi and Ohio held state elections.

White terrorists in Mississippi made it clear, by arming themselves and disrupting Republican political activity, that they intended to suppress the Black vote to the point that the Democrats would win. A group of Ohio politicians visited Grant and told him that if he had federal troops enforce the Fifteenth Amendment in Mississippi, it would be so unpopular in Ohio that the Democrats would win there. Grant tried to compromise by sending a negotiator to Mississippi to broker a peace treaty between the Republicans and the White Line organization, but the Democrats immediately violated the treaty, there was a wave of electoral violence in November, and the Democrats swept back to power (while the Republicans held Ohio).

The next year, militia organizations across the South copied "the Mississippi plan" for Black vote suppression, and this was one reason the 1876 presidential election ended in a tie-which was resolved by the Republicans promising to withdraw federal troops from the former Confederacy, in return for the presidency. From that point on, enforcement of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments in the South grew increasingly lax.

Whites with guns "called upon" politically active Republicans, Black and White, and urged them to move to the North or drop their political activities-and the advice was frequently taken. By the 1890s the Southern states were able legally to institute the Jim Crow system, which formally rescinded Black civil rights and voting rights, without challenge from the federal government. Through at least the first half of the twentieth century, most White Americans, North and South, understood Reconstruction to have been a miserable failure on its own terms, and even most liberals regarded Jim Crow as an impregnable fortress. In 1957, Congress passed a civil rights bill, and President Dwight Eisenhower sent federal troops to the South to ensure Black Americans' rights (specifically, the right to attend Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas) - the first time either had happened since 1875.

Once your ear is tuned to hear them, echoes of Reconstruction are all around us today. The distinctive voting patterns of the South are a product of Reconstruction and Jim Crow, and the dramatic switch in the South's political loyalties beginning in the 1960s is a direct result of the Democratic Party's aligning itself with the original goals of Reconstruction. Reconstruction was the beginning point for most of our debates about the proper size and extent of the federal government; the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments were the first important measures directing the national government to do something affirmatively, rather than forbidding it to do something.

It's no accident that African-Americans are consistently the group with the most favorable view of government; essentially all of their progress toward full legal equality came as a result of government-specifically, federal government-action. Periods of greater state and local power were periods of at best no progress, and at worst more terror. And psychologically, the yawning gap that still exists between the way Whites and Blacks understand Reconstruction-which, unlike the Civil War and the civil rights movement, has had almost no depictions for popular audiences since the days of Gone With the Wind, but gets communicated privately inside family homes in very different ways-must partly account for what remains of the profound gaps between the races in their perception of the essential nature of the national project.

Nicholas Lemann a Washington Monthly contributing editor, is dean of Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism and the author of "Redemption: The Last Battle of the Civil War." This article, the fifth of an 11-part series on race, is sponsored by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation and was originally published by the Washington Monthly Magazine.
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