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William Fisher

William Fisher

Posted: December 30, 2010 11:11 AM

Barbour Burning?

What's Your Reaction:

The state of Mississippi, which ranks last in just about everything, is about to be first in something.

And that something is almost as bizarre as who's making it happen.

The "what" of this story: Starting with the 2011-2012 school curriculum, civil rights will be a required course for all Mississippi students from kindergarten to 12th grade all across the state. State officials believe Mississippi could be the first state to require civil rights studies throughout all grades in its public school systems.

The "who" of this story: None other than Haley Barbour, Mississippi's flaming civil libertarian governor. For it was this cherubic presidential wannabe who signed the new curriculum into law five years ago.

Barbour told the Associated Press he sees the value in the new curriculum.

"To not know history is to repeat it. And to learn the good things about Mississippi and America and the bad things about Mississippi and America is important for every Mississippian," Barbour said of the new curriculum.

Three cheers for the governor!

And, yes, this is the same Haley Barbour who dove into deep doodoo by rewriting history to transform the White Citizens Council in his hometown, Yazoo City, Miss., from a bunch of segregationist rednecks determined to thwart the orders of the Supreme Court to a community of upright business leaders and parents focused on keeping the Ku Klux Klan out of town.

Barbour told The Weekly Standard he didn't remember the civil rights struggles of the 1950s and 60s as "being that bad."

But then, predictably, the Governor was obliged to back off from singing the praises of the champions of segregation after his remarks caught the attention of the media nationwide.

"When asked why my home town in Mississippi did not suffer the same racial violence when I was a young man that accompanied other towns' integration efforts, I accurately said the community leadership wouldn't tolerate it and helped prevent violence there," Barbour said in a statement picked up by the Associated Press. "My point was my town rejected the Ku Klux Klan, but nobody should construe that to mean I think the town leadership were saints, either. Their vehicle, called the 'Citizens Council,' is totally indefensible, as is segregation. It was a difficult and painful era for Mississippi, the rest of the country, and especially African Americans who were persecuted in that time."

But then, as if to confirm his liberal instincts and outrage at racial injustice, Barbour just this week indefinitely suspended the outrageous prison sentences of Jaime and Gladys Scott, sisters who were convicted in 1994 of an armed robbery that yielded $11 -- a crime in which they have consistently denied any involvement.

A judge sentenced both sisters to double-life sentences. They have been imprisoned ever since, despite troubling questions regarding the accuracy of witness testimony, possible coercion, and the sisters' insistence that they had nothing to do with the crime.

According to Barbour the Compassionate, Gladys Scott's freedom is contingent on her donating her kidney to sister Jaime, who is suffering from kidney failure and requires regular dialysis.

Let us hope that the ordeal of the Scott sisters will work its way into the new civil rights curriculum. Along with the murders of Emmett Till, Medgar Evers, Andrew Goodman, James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and hundreds of others.

Conveniently, the Governor's decision in the Scott case came just a day before his meeting with NAACP President Ben Jealous and Mississippi NAACP State Conference President Derrick Johnson. The NAACP played a major role in persuading Barbour to issue the indefinite suspension of the Scotts' sentence.

Surely freeing the Scotts is intended to burnish Barbour's credentials as a fair-minded, color-blind son of the New South. That is seen as a "must do" if Barbour is serious about seeking the Oval Office in 2012. He cannot even be a contender without some of the black and brown votes won by Obama in 2008.

American voters are frequently praised by politicians and journalists alike for their "common sense." Give an American the facts and he or she will likely make the right decision, the line goes. This is a big part of the narrative of American Exceptionalism that persists and flourishes despite historical facts to the contrary.

American voters may have common sense but they also tend to have very short memories. So we can only live in hope that they will remember to ask the governor where he has been since 1994.

The Scott sisters will have no trouble remembering where they were.

 
 
 
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01:35 PM on 12/31/2010
Did he just compare 2 robbers to civil rights leaders?
10:49 AM on 12/31/2010
Ah, an article about Mississippi...can never be flattering.

So, what exactly can Barbour do that you Can agree with? What's wrong with teaching civil rights? He He denounced segregation. He suspended the prison sentences of 2 African-American women. Not good enough, huh? Mississippi took a direct hit from Katrina, and through his leadership and the people of all races the coast is being re-built. He's still got to be a bigot, after all, it's Mississippi we're talking about. He somehow didn't make the Medgar Evers and similar injustices disappear, and neither did his Democrat predecessors. There's no proving he's Not a bigot.

Mr. Barbour may be talked into running for the oval office...but he's had a huge career as an establishment Repub, (a fading party) a successful governor, (who got 'black and brown' votes, as the author describes). To me, the better decision is for him to go home following his last gubernatorial term and uses the civil rights that apply to him as much as anyone else.

BTW, dialysis is paid for by the Feds (Medicare), not out of the State budget.
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Downrivers
Siskiyou Mountains
11:10 AM on 12/31/2010
wouldn't that be MEDICAID? Which is indeed at least partially out of the state budget.

Barbour's record of PARDONS is about as bizarre as can be and leaves no doubt he has NOT A PRAYER on the national scene.

http://www.slate.com/id/2238938
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
07:16 AM on 12/31/2010
Such a humanitarian Barbour is. No doubt $100,000 a year in dialysis costs paid by the state didn't figure into the decision at all.
08:33 AM on 12/31/2010
Actually it was $190,000 per year. And who do you think will pay it when they get out, Obamacare?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
11:23 AM on 12/31/2010
The idea is that the sisters will be a match and that the transplant will be successful. Taking transplant drugs is much cheaper than thrice-weekly dialysis.
04:09 AM on 12/31/2010
time to change the trope
enough with "American voters have short memories"
saying it legitimizes it as an excuse to be a lazy minded voter
stop saying it
make that self-fulfilling prophesy a thing of the past
06:57 AM on 12/31/2010
Wonderful comment.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ampdem
02:04 AM on 12/31/2010
If their intent is good,for starters maybe states like Mississipi should stop flying/ honoring the confederate flag. Their intent is probably to misinform school aged children, so that by the time they are out of school they can take this misinformation and call it truth . Furthermore I would not be surprised if civil rights courses/ books for the state would be written by Glenn Beck. I sometimes wonder if people like Barbour eaven know what year it is? They will surely find out when, and if, they make it to a debate with our curent President. Borbour should not bother to run for Oval Office, he looks like he embodies it, and I don't mean from a moral stand point.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
GeorgeBurnsWasRight
My micro-bio is running on empty.
09:34 PM on 12/30/2010
But the question remains what the Civil Rights courses in Mississippi will teach. There is a lot of revisionist history out there promoted by Beck, the Texas school board, and the like. Courses based on "facts" like those are much worse than no courses at all.
06:58 AM on 12/31/2010
Bingo.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
01:43 PM on 12/30/2010
whoa
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cleverboots
01:38 PM on 12/30/2010
The Republican Party has changed a great deal since the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964.The Party has many members who were Democrats before The Civil Rights Act was passed,particularly in the South. It is hard to imagine how a man like Haley Barbour could possibly qualify as Presidential material, except as a Post-1964 Republican. It will be interesting to see who supports Barbour's strange system of values. Those who do will undoubtedly be likened to Barbour, and, hopefully rejected.