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    A Short History Of Liberals Using The Nazi Card

    Long before it became verbotento use a certain

    word to describe Black people, Liberals were usinganother N-Word to malign their political opponents

    that word, of course, being NAZI.

    Memories of Left-wing propaganda comparing

    George W. Bush to Adolf Hitler were burned out of

    the Conventional Wisdom last summer with House

    Speaker Nancy Pelosis fallacious statement that

    health care protesters were wearing swastika

    armbands to townhall meetings. The extreme overuse of the term then looked like everyone

    finally realized what some of use have known all along labeling someone a nazi is not only

    clich, its a cheap and easy thing to do.

    Now that Arizona has enacted the strictest anti-immigration laws in America, it looks like it s

    springtime for Democrats who want to call Republicans nazi again. So, lets take a look

    back at some of the other more memorable times Liberals brought up this colorful analogy.

    Clinton Years and The Gingrich Revolution

    After witnessing the disastrous beginnings of Bill Clintons first administration, Americans

    voted en masse for Republican candidates in 1994s Congress and Senate races. This, of

    course, did not sit well with Democrats, who histrionically whined about nazis as they licked

    their wounds from the electoral beating they had just gotten. Here are a few highlights:

    1. On CBS This Morning, Democrat Sam Gibbons of Florida compared

    Republicans to Nazis when he said:

    Youre a bunch of dictators, thats all you are. I had to fight you guys

    fifty years ago!

    2. During the battle of the

    budget in April of 1995, Democratic

    Congressman Tom Lantos tried to compare

    Republicans with the Nazis when he said:

    Republicans were Goose Stepping in

    their pursuit of legislation.

    Lantos also tried to compare independent

    counsel Donald Smaltz, who was

    investigating Clinton scandals, to a nazi. While testifying before Lantos and a

    Congressional Committee, Lantos said to Smaltz:

    You remind me of the late and unlamented Curt Waldheim, who also had a lapse in

    memory. He conveniently forgot several years when he was a Nazi.

    When he was encouraged to apologize to Donald Smaltz for this remark, Lantos again

    tried to compare the Republican Party to the Nazi party, as well as the KKK, when he

    said:

    If you overlook your involvement in the KKK, the Nazi Party, or the Republican

    Party, you are lying, you are deceitful.

    (Announced on The Steve Malzberg Showwhen he played tapes of these remarks,

    12/13/97)

    3. In a Sunday sermon on Jan. 30, 1995, the Fort Lauderdale Sun-

    Sentinelquotes Jesse Jackson comparing Conservatives to

    Fascists:

    In South Africa we

    d call it apartheid. In Germany we

    d call it

    Fascism. Here we call it Conservatism. These people are

    attacking the poor!

    4. In August 1995, after the passage of Republican legislation, sore

    loser Democrat George Miller of California compared Republicans to Fascists when

    he said:

    Its a glorious day if youre a Fascist.

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    5. Black Democratic New York Assemblyman Denny Farrell

    equated Republican lawmaker John Ravitz with Nazi

    propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels. Farrell said that

    calling Assemblyman John Ravitz a liberal Republican in the

    mold of New York Governor George Pataki,

    is like saying Goebbels was a liberal because he wasnt

    as big a Nazi as Hitler.

    This quote from Farrell, printed in The New York Observer,

    is typical of the hate from the liberal left, comparing everyone

    they disagree with Nazis. ( Pressured Dem Pol Backs Off

    Nazi Slur, New York Post, by Dan Janson)

    6. Although this quote is not specifically about The GingrichRevolution, it is interesting to quote that Hollywood lefty Alec

    Baldwin has not had a love for the GOP for a long time. From in an

    interview in US Magazinein 1997:

    Republicans are evil rotten people and they re out to get our

    President!

    The George W. Bush Years

    While Liberal use of the Nazi Card was strong during the Clinton Years, it was nothing

    compared to what happened after the Democrats lost the US Presidential campaign in 2000,

    which was Democrat Al Gore lose to Republican George W. Bush. Here are some highlights:

    1. When George W. Bush supporters finally got fed up

    and demonstrated vocally in Florida against theDemocrat-Party-controlled electoral board attempting to

    conduct a recount in secret during the presidential

    election battle of 2000, New York Congressman Jerrold

    Nadler did the inevitable by comparing Republicans to

    Fascist! He said:

    Theres a wiff of Fascism in the air.

    This from liberals who invented violent demonstrations!

    2. In Albany on May 16, 2000, Democratic Party delegates spit at the honor guard made

    up of Albany State Troopers attending Hillary Clintons official acceptance of the

    Democratic nomination for the Senate held in Albany, calling them Giulianis storm

    troopers. (Rush Limbaughand Sean Hannityradio shows, Thursday, May 18, 2000)

    3. In his New York Postcolumn ofWednesday, August 20, 2003, page 29,

    entitled In the Land of Bush Haters, Rich

    Lowry writes:

    President Bush is routinely portrayed as a Nazi on left-wing Web sites, which post

    pictures of Bush with a Hitler mustache and sell T-shirts with Bushs name spelled

    with a Swastika.

    Proving Lowrys point, on the left-wing Web site Counterpunch.com, Dave Lindorff, a

    contributor to The Nationmagazine and Salon.com, wrote in an article titled Bush and

    Hitler: The Strategy of Fear:

    Its going a bit far to compare the Bush of 2003 to the Hitler of 1933. Bush simply is

    not the orator that Hitler was. But comparisons of the Bush administrations fear-

    mongering tactics to those practiced so successfully and with such terrible resultsby Hitler and Goebbels [....] are not at all out of line. Hitler would be proud that an

    American president is emulating him in so many ways.

    4. In an attempt to derail Arnold Schwarzeneggers campaign to replace California

    governor Gray Davis in the October 7, 2003 recall election, liberals tried to portray

    Arnold as a Nazi because his father was a member of the Nazi Party. Of course,

    liberals never claimed that Al Gore was a Southern separatist bigot because his father

    voted against the 1964 Civil Rights Act!

    5. In December 2003, the cover of the British edition of

    left wing Bush-hating New YorkTimes columnist Paul

    Krugmans book, The Great Unraveling, was

    published with a photo of Vice President Dick Cheney

    defaced with an oil mustache in the style worn by

    Adolph Hitler. The words Got Oil? are dripped

    across Cheneys forehead, in an obvious attempt to

    parody the famous Got Milk? advertisements.

    Krugmans book cover also carries an image of

    President Bush with Frankenstein-like stitches across

    his mouth and the word Enron dripped in oil across

    his forehead. Putting aside the lies which the book is

    obviously filled with, the shear hatred expressed on

    just the cover of this book is a classic example of all

    the political left has remaining. Hatred and lies!

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    (Newsmax, December 2003)

    6. During the 2004 presidential campaign, the left-

    wing website moveon.org, financed by Marxist

    billionaire George Soros, posted a picture of

    George Bush wearing a Hitler mustache. This

    was far from an isolated incident on that

    website, which is one of the biggest over-users

    of the Republicans are Nazis mantra.

    7. In

    another one of his anti-George Bush tirades in

    June 2004, Al Gore accused Republicans of

    working with rapid response digital

    Brownshirts.the usual comparison ofRepublicans to Nazis. Of course, Al Gore

    conveniently forgot that his 2000 presidential

    campaign manager, Donna Brazile, set up a

    location known as the slaughter house where

    young computer whiz kids just sat at their

    computers all day, digging up dirt on Republicans in an effort to smear them during the

    election cycle. (Sean Hannitytalk show, Thursday, June 25, 2004)

    8. When liberals had no facts to refute Vietnam Swift Boat veteran

    John ONeills claim in his book Unfit For Command that

    Democrat presidential nominee John Kerry lied about his

    heroic service in Vietnam, the Left resorted to their usual

    tactic of discrediting the messenger when Left-wing website

    Salon.com referred to ONeills book and the Swift Boat vets

    campaign adds as the Hitler diaries of the 2004 election

    campaign. (Announced on The Rush Limbaugh Show, Friday,

    August 20, 2004)

    9. During the 2004 presidential campaign, Bush-hating-left-

    winger Linda Ronstadt said the Bush administration is a new bunch of Hitlers. (USA

    Today, 11/16/2004)

    Then, after President Bushs

    reelection victory in 2004, the

    lefty singer was at it again

    when she called the Bush

    administration a bunch of

    new Hitlers. (Announced on

    Sean Hannity WABC radio

    show, Thursday, November

    18, 2004)

    It should also be noted that Ronstadt is good friends with fellow fatty Michael Moore,

    whose Fahrenheit 9/11 portrayed Bush as the second coming of Adolf Hitler and the

    terrorist attacks of 9/11 as his Reichstag. Ronstadt also dedicated the song

    Desperadoto him during a Las Vegas concert at The Aladdin Theater for Performing

    Arts on July 17, 2004, which didn t win her any new fans.

    10. On Monday, July 8, 2002, Jesse Jackson struck again when he condemned George W.

    Bushs political tactics during the 2000 presidential campaign as Nazi-like a

    reference to false charges that Republican officials in Florida denied Blacks the right to

    vote. (Newsmaxwires, Wednesday, November 10, 2004)

    11. In April 2005, a special judicial panel ruled that veteran

    appellate court judge Guido Calabresi violated ethicsrules by likening President Bush to Mussolini and Hitler.

    Calabresi charged the U.S. Supreme Court handed Bush

    the disputed 2000 election over Al Gore, and complained

    about the presidents actions after taking office. When

    somebody has come in that way, they sometimes have

    tried not to exercise much power. In this case, like

    Mussolini, Bush has exercised extraordinary power,

    Calabresi said.

    Earlier, Calabresi said neither Hitler nor Mussolini were

    elected by the populace. ( Ethics panel raps

    Bush=Hitler Judge, New York Post, Tuesday, April 12, 2005, page 26, by Carl

    Campanile)

    12. On May 5, 2005, lefty Clinton-lover BarbaraStreisand accused President Bush on her idiotic

    website propaganda rag sheet of controlling the

    nation by ginning up fears of another terrorist

    attack, saying the presidents tactics remind her of

    Nazi Luftwaffe Commander Hermann Goering. In a

    statement headlined A Country Controlled by

    Fear, Streisand complained:

    Bushs actions remind me of Herman Goerings

    quote during the Nuremberg Trials, where he

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    stated:Voice or no voice, the people can always

    be brought to the bidding of the leaders. All you

    have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack

    of patriotism. [....]

    Of course not only is this a lie, but once again liberals hypocrites accuse others of

    exactly what they are guilty of. Fear-monger ing has become a mainstay of the

    Democratic party from scaring senior citizens about Social Security and Medicare to

    predicting riots in the streets if a Democrat isnt elected.

    13. Left-wing radical Cindy Sheehan, whose son

    Casey Sheehan was killed in Iraq, and who

    demonstrated outside of President Bushs

    Crawford, Texas ranch while he was taking a

    working vacation in August 2005, compared

    Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to Hitler

    and Stalin. (New York Posteditorial titled

    Cindy Sheehans Agenda, Tuesday, August

    16, 2005, page 28)

    14. And finally, how could we leave out failed talk show host and so-called comedianne

    Joy(less) Behar, who on Monday, December 18, 2006, said on her hate-filled show The

    Viewthat Donald Rumsfeld wasjust like Hitler:

    15. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. accused Republicans of using Nazi and Fascist tactics during

    the 2004 presidential campaign. (Interview with Sean Hannity on WABC Radio,

    Wednesday, August 4, 2004)

    16. On January 2005, the notoriously unstable Ted Turner was at it

    again, comparing the Fox News Channel to Hitler. Addressing the

    National Association for Television Programming Executives in

    Las Vegas, Turner acknowledged that Fox News had overtaken

    CNN to become the top-rated cable news network, but noted that

    Hitler got the most votes when he was elected to run Germany.

    Turner showed his ignorance of history of course because Hitler

    never won a majority of votes. He won a plurality and was

    appointed Chancellor of Germany by Von Hindenberg.

    A Fox News spokesperson responded:Ted is understandably

    bitter having lost his ratings, his network and now his mind

    we wish him well.

    17. Shrivled-up calypso singer and Communist

    agitator Harry Bongos Belafonte went on

    whiny rant against Homeland Security on

    January 21, 2006, when he said the

    department employed gestapo-like tactics.

    In a speech to the annual meeting of the Arts

    Presenters Members Conference, Bongos

    said:

    Weve come to this dark time in which the

    new Gestapo of Homeland Security lurks

    here, where citizens are having their rights

    suspended [....]You can be arrested and

    not charged. You can be arrested and have

    no right to counsel.

    Two weeks prior to making this statement, Bongos traveled to Venezuela, where hecalled President Bush the greatest terrorist in the world.

    Well give him a pass on this one since we re focusing on nazis here.

    Then, in August 2005, when during an interview with Cybercast News Service reporter

    Marc Morano, Bongos went three-for-three when he said the following:

    [If] a black is a tyrant, he is first and foremost a tyrant, then he incidentally is

    black. Bush is a tyrant and if he gathers around him black tyrants, they all have to

    be treated as they are being treated.

    When asked specifically who was a black tyrantin the Bush administration,

    Belafonte responded to this reporter, You.When this reporter noted that he was a

    Caucasian and attempted to ask another question, Belafonte abruptly ended theinterview by saying, Thats it.

    18. One of the biggest abusers of the Republicans are

    Nazis comparison is NAACP director Julian Bond. In

    February 2006, Bond, said that the

    Republican flag and the Nazi flag fly side by side.

    19. Earlier, at the NAACPs 94th annual convention in

    Miami in July 2003, Bond accused conservative

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    Republicans of being a more sophisticated version

    of the Ku Klux Klan and Nazis. He told the group:

    The average KKK member may be stupid, but the

    well-financed forces of the radical right are not.

    The head of the allegedly nonpartisan civil rights group continued the attack, claiming

    that Republicans appeal

    to the dark underside of American culture, to that minority of Americans who

    reject democracy and equality. They preach racial neutrality and practice racial

    division. Their idea of reparations is to give war criminal Jefferson Davis a pardon.

    Their idea of equal rights is the American flag and Confederate Swastika flying side

    by side.

    Of course, racial fraud and hypocrite Julian Bond failed to

    note that the only genuine ex-Klansman in Congress

    happens to be Democrat Senator Robert Byrd of West

    Virginia. The NAACP quietly accepted an apology from

    Byrd for using the N-word twice during a nationally-

    televised interview in 2001. That incident was never

    mentioned again. (NewsMax Wires, Monday, July 14,

    2003)

    20. Whi le were on the subject of Senator Byrd, in March 2005 he gave a speech on the

    Senate floor where he compared Republican efforts to end a Democrat filibuster of

    President Bushs court nominees to Adolph Hitlers manipulations of the law.This

    provoked a response from Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation

    League (and no GOP partisan):

    It is hideous, outrageous and offensive for Sen. Byrd to suggest that theRepublican Partys tactics could in any way resemble those of Adolph Hitler and

    the Nazi Party.

    (Shut em Down Harry, The New York Post, Thursday, April 28, 2005, page 35, by

    Maggie Gallagher)

    Share this post:

    Related posts:

    1. Ted Saved Part of JFKs Brain, Nazi Letters

    2. Tea Party Candidate In Nazi Re-enactment

    3. NAACP Whines About Racist Greeting Card

    4. Liberals are like Slinkies

    5. You liberals must be proud of your creations!

    Posted in Leftist Losers, Republicans.

    Tagged with Al Gore, Alec Baldwin, CBS This Morning, Cindy Sheehan, Democrats, Denny Farrell,

    Donald Rumsfeld, Donald Smaltz, George Miller, George Pataki, George Soros, George W. Bush,

    Gerald Nadler, Jesse Jackson, John Kerry, John Ravitz, Joy Behar, Julian Bond, KKK, liberals,

    Moveon.org, NAACP, Nancy Pelosi, Nazi, Republicans, Rich Lowry, Robert Byrd, Robert F. Kennedy

    Jr, Sam Gibbons, Swiftboat, Tom Lantos.

    Byjohnofsi May 1, 2010 9 comments

    nik from brooklyn. says

    the lefts love affair with smearing the right as racist did not start with the tea party.its roots

    can be traced back to nixon if not further.the left constantly likes to remind us of nixons

    southern strategy as supposed grab at the southern white racist vote at the time. but what

    is the truth? are we to trust these people to tell US what the true narrative of historical

    events are?why should we take their word for it?

    the left has been lying for so long about the right that they forget which lies go with which

    bastardization of the conservative position and which victim group they belong to at any

    one specific time.

    here is a video of howard dean babbling incoherently about the southern strategy,claiming

    that it was used against the ant viet nam protesters.i thought it was a race thing? to them

    victimhood just bounces from one group to other be it blacks,hispanics,homosexuals,anti

    war protestors or whomever.theyve been lying for so long they forget which group is the

    victim for which lie..

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    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=09MLUVVg6D8

    let us go back and look at the southern strategy with new eyes. in the opening of the

    book :The Strong Man: John Mitchell and the Secrets of Watergate author james rosen

    quotes John lukacs who wrote in 1998.

    History means the endless rethinkingand reviewing and revisitingof the past. History, in

    the broad sense of the word, is revisionist. History involves multiple jeopardy that the law

    eschews: People and events are retried and retried again.

    from the book:

    Richard M. Nixon: Politician, President, Administrator

    (rosens book the strong man about mitchel led me this)

    Richard Nixon: The Southern Strategy and the 1968 Presidential Election

    GLEN MOORE

    Some critics of Richard M. Nixon have vigorously attacked his 1968 presidential campaign

    in the South. The 1968 Democratic party nominee Hubert H. Humphrey said that, unlike

    Nixon, He went to the South and refused to play the cheap politics of saying we would

    slow down desegregation. 1 Two Atlanta Constitution writers, Reg Murphy and Hal

    Gulliver, in The Southern Strategy, say Nixons dealings with the South in the 1968

    election were based on a calculated appeal to white segregationists sentiment. 2 In fact,

    the term itself, Southern Strategy, as Nixons former senior speech writer William Safire

    writes, implies deviousness and discrimination. 3

    However,

    Nixons 1968 campaign in the South is too complex a subject to be so simply dismissed

    as is done in such criticism. This paper will more carefully examine this topic as outlined

    here. First, in the campaign for the Republican nomination, Nixon s primary victories and

    his weak opposition gave him strong bargaining power with the South. And as a result,

    Nixon at times clearly veered from a Southern Strategy. Third, the South had a limited role

    in the general election. Last, Nixons meetings and agreements with Southern leaders,

    and the specific attacks by Humphrey and by Gulliver and Murphy on desegregation will be

    analyzed.

    Nixon says that he had met with most southern leaders by the fall of 1967. After the great

    defeat of the 1964 GOP presidential candidate Barry Goldwater, Nixon believed that many

    Goldwater supporters now wanted a candidate who could win, and these conservatives

    would back him if he won in the primaries. 4

    Nixon won with huge majorities in almost all of the Republican primaries he entered

    often outdrawing winners of the Democratic primary. Then New York Governor Nelson A.

    Rockefellers write-in candidacy, with the exception of Massachusetts, drew poorly. In the

    New Hampshire primary Nixon won over 84,000 votes, 79 percent of the vote, while

    Rockefeller received only 11,691 votes, or 11 percent of the vote. 5 Although not then a

    candidate, Rockefeller said

    he would accept a draft. The governor of Michigan at the time, George Romney, trailed

    Nixon so far in polls on the New Hampshire primary that he withdrew his candidacy about

    two weeks before the election.

    Nixon drubbed Rockefeller in the Wisconsin primary on April 2, as he won 358,052 votes

    to his opponents 7,296 write-in votes. 6 Just after the Wisconsin primary, Nixon

    supported an important open housing bill. Nixon talked with congressmen, including John

    Anderson (R-Ill.). 7 Representative Clark MacGregor said at his suggestion -

    Nixon had called Republican members of the House Rules Committee and asked them

    to drop opposition to a swift vote on the bill, which had already passed in the Senate. Oneof the members changed his position on the bill and supported it, after talking with Nixon.

    8 The open housing bill, which outlawed most discrimination in housing, was passed on

    April 10, with all of Georgias ten congressmen voting against it, and only ten southern

    congressmen in the South supporting it. 9

    When Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated, Nixon had only praise for the civil rights

    leaders career and goals. 10 Nixon flew to Atlanta on April 7 to see Mrs. Coretta Scott

    King, Dr. Kings widow, and pay his respects to her. Nixon also canceled all of his political

    campaigning for two weeks. 11 These are several examples of Nixon s not adhering to a

    Southern Strategy.

    On May 7, Nixon won over 500,000 votes in the Indiana primary, which set a record primary

    popular vote total in the state. 12 Rockefeller was an announced candidate, and

    supporters of him and Californias then Governor Ronald W. Reagan campaigned in the

    next primary in Nebraska. Rockefeller received only 5 percent of the vote. Nixon won 70percent of the vote, while modest television campaigning helped Reagan win 22 percent

    of the vote. 13

    In the May 28 Oregon primary, Nixon completed his string of primary wins with a

    particularly convincing finish, getting 73 percent of the vote. Rockefeller and Reagan

    supporters made a strong effort in Oregon. Reagans campaign used fairly substantial

    newspaper and television advertising, as well as distribution of his 1965 autobiography.

    14 Rockefeller backers spent possibly as much as $200,000, sent out over 200,000

    letters, and had Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York speak for their candidate. 15 They

    also provided 247 television commercials and 564 newspaper ads. 16 Despite these

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=09MLUVVg6D8
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    efforts, Rockefeller again drew poorly with only 5 percent of the vote. 17 Nixon now talked

    confidently about winning the GOP nomination, saying The chances of my being derailed

    are pretty well eliminated. This big win will help in making some of the fencesitters move

    over. 18

    As Nixon swept the primaries, southern delegations began supporting him. In late April it

    was announced that most of the recently elected Kentucky delegation leaned heavily

    toward Nixon. The delegates wanted some room to maneuver, but most personally

    favored Nixon, and the article cited here placed quotation marks around the word

    uncommitted in its title, and every time the word was used in the story. 19 About a week

    later Republican gubernatorial candidate A. Linwood Holton of Virginia said Nixon was

    the obvious favorite of the party faithful here 20 and would win all of Virginias twenty-two

    delegates. Then on May 25 the entire Tennessee delegation gave its support to Nixon.

    The head of the delegation, Senator Howard Baker, stressed that Nixon was a candidate

    who could win. He said that all of Tennessees delegates without a doubt would be

    firmly for Nixon. 21

    Rockefellers poor showing in the primaries as well as his liberal political philosophy hurt

    him greatly with southern delegates. Nelson Rockefeller met with ten GOP state chairmen

    in New Orleans and won no support from his trip there. Although some of the southern

    leaders were impressed, they remained unchanged. 22 Also meeting with the

    Republican leaders, in a separate and apparently not coordinated visit, was Ronald

    Reagan. Texas state Republican Chairman Peter O Donnell said Rockefeller had only

    scattered support among southern delegates and that Nixon had more support than

    Reagan or Rockefeller. 23 A few southern leaders, such as Louisiana state Republican

    Chairman Charles Degravelles, expressed interest in Reagan, but little concrete backing.

    Mississippi GOP Chairman Clark Reed said, We hope to keep the delegations open, 24

    hardly an indication that Reagan had a strong following.

    Rockefellers own statements reflect his lack of delegate strength. After going to Florida,

    he said that he found flexibility among the delegates and that the delegate count was

    more fluid than most people thought, 25 but mentioned no specific support. AtTallahassee, Governor Claude Kirk of Florida was the only major officeholder to meet with

    Rockefeller. 26 And even Kirk did not say that he would help Rockefeller with the Florida

    delegation. 27

    Reagan, unlike Nelson Rockefeller, did have potential strength in the South. Richard

    Nixon acknowledged this point in saying that On the Republican side, it was Ronald

    Reagan, who set the hearts of many Southern Republicans aflutter. 28 One very detailed

    volume on the 1968 presidential election discussed Reagans meeting with the southern

    Republican chairmen and their guests in New Orleans. These authors believe that

    Reagans failure to even hint or suggest he might run lost him support from most of the

    southerners at the meeting. While he may not have wanted to directly say he was a

    candidate, Reagan should have at least indirectly given the chairmen some type of hint

    that he would run. Instead, Reagan rigidly adhered to noncandidacy. 29

    Nixons trip to Atlanta on May 31, for his meeting with the 12 southern Republican party

    chairmen there, was his first campaign swing in the South. Thus, at that time Nixonseemed to be neglecting the region. He could not afford to take for granted a region

    whose state chairmen in Atlanta represented states with about 330 national convention

    votes, or about half of the 667 votes the Republican nomination required. 30 Nixon himself

    said, I was doing serious courting and hard counting. 31 However, he also held other

    regional meetings in Denver and Minneapolis, with a fourth one scheduled for New

    England in July, 32 so the importance of the meeting in the South should be kept in

    perspective.

    Nixon came to the Atlanta session with the advantage of being the front runner and

    received two endorsements before he even arrived. At the time Nixon said he was not

    dangling plums to the chairmen. 33 On May 30, just before Nixon came, two Republican

    party chairmen, James E. Holshouser, Jr., of North Carolina and Sam Carpenter of

    Virginia, endorsed Nixon. 34 At a June I press conference, two GOP party chairmen, Bud

    Stewart of Oklahoma and Claude Robertson of Tennessee, made enthusiastic

    endorsements of Nixon. 35 The Republican party chairman from Georgia, G. Paul Jones,

    all but gave official support to Nixon, saying that he was a man who speaks our

    language and who has demonstrated his winning credentials. 36

    During the time of the Atlanta meeting, Nixon showed strength in Florida. It was

    announced that the state Republican Chairman William J. Murfin was elected over

    Governor Claude J. Kirk as chairman of the Florida delegation to the GOP convention.

    Murfin leaned strongly to Nixon, while Kirk supported Rockefeller. 37

    Texas state Republican Chairman Peter ODonnell presided over the Atlanta sessions.

    Senator J. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina was one of the most important participants,

    and he flew into Atlanta for the second and last days session on Saturday. After attending

    the meeting, the South Carolina senator said, Ive been highly pleased with the

    statements the former Vice-President made today. I think hes a great man, a great

    American, and I think he would be a great president. 38

    Nixon said the main issues they discussed were national defense, protections against

    textile imports (the textile industry is very important in South Carolina), and civil rights.

    Nixon points out that Thurmond knew that he supported the 1964 Civil Rights Act and

    would not compromise this position. Nixon only promised on desegregation not to make

    the South a whipping boy. 39 Nixon strongly supported civil rights. When he had

    campaigned for president in 1960, he issued a statement with Nelson Rockefeller that

    included a strong civil rights stand. Their statement said:

    Our program for civil rights must assure aggressive action to remove the remaining

    vestiges of segregation or discrimination in all areas of national lifevoting and housing,

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    schools and jobs. It will express support for the objectives of the sit-in demonstrations

    and will commend the action of those businessmen who have abandoned the practice of

    refusing to serve food at their lunch counters to their Negro customers and will urge all

    others to follow their example. 40

    A 1968 biography of Nixon said that it was revealed in the 1960 presidential campaign that

    Nixon had been a member and contributor to the National Association for the

    Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) for ten years. 41 Wallace for President

    Chairman Frank Best expressed a view held by some southerners in saying that Nixon

    was up to his ears in the civil rights movement. 42

    Later on June 22, Strom Thurmond endorsed Nixon and announced that all of South

    Carolinas twenty-two delegate votes would be cast for him. He gave his reasons for

    supporting Nixon and listed the issues he was concerned about in the presidential race,

    which included domestic lawlessness, Vietnam, the rise in the cost of living, a too

    powerful Supreme Court, and the need for the United States to maintain its military

    strength. Thurmond said that he did not agree with Nixon on every single issue, but

    added, He is the most acceptable and electable candidate. 43 Nixons belief in a

    nonactivist Supreme Court was probably a major reason Thurmond endorsed him. Just

    the day before his announcement for Nixon, Thurmond had said that he was delighted

    Chief Justice Earl Warren was retiring and that Warren has done more harm to the

    American way of life than any other man holding public office in the history of our country.

    44

    Many southern Republicans first choice would have been Ronald Reagan, or even

    George C. Wallace, the former Alabama governor and American Independent party

    candidate. Thurmond said he had no harsh words for Wallace. 45 However, Reagan

    and Wallace stood little chance of being elected president, and so many conservatives

    turned to the more electable candidate, Nixon.

    Thurmonds endorsement helped Nixon, and one South Carolina newspaper predicted

    that Nixon would win on the first ballot, with almost total support from the South. 46 In amore conservative estimate, United Press International said Nixon had over 600

    delegates and was close to winning the nomination. 47 Nixon himself was certain

    enough of victory that he said he was no longer campaigning for delegates on a full-time

    basis. 48

    [b]The biggest fallacy in the Southern Strategy viewpoint is that it ignores the fact that

    Nixon had to win in other regions in order to get the 270 electoral votes necessary for

    winning the presidency. If Nixon emphasized winning southern votes, then he risked

    losing support in the major industrial states, which would be committing political suicide.

    In fact, his emphasis had to be with the industrial states. Some papers even in very early

    June said that Nixon was looking beyond the Republican convention to November. 49

    Nixon needed to consider the general election early because he could not afford a

    preconvention strategy that would destroy him in November.

    Nixon said, There were going to be seven key states in the 1968 presidential campaign:

    New York, California, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Michigan. Of these I had wononly California and Ohio in 1960. This time I had to win at least three in order to have a

    chance of winning the election. 50 These key states listed by Nixon had 210 out of the

    270 electoral votes needed to be elected president. 51 The South was not central to

    Nixons campaign, as William Safire noted when he quoted from an article by Don Irwin of

    The Los Angeles Times: Richard M. Nixons avowed determination to concentrate on

    voters in large industrial states if he wins the Republican presidential nomination tells

    much about the election campaign he has in mind. It appears to bar revival of the all-out

    Southern strategy that proved so disastrous for the GOP in 1964. 52

    Two statements by Nixon before the convention showed him deviating from a Southern

    Strategy. In New York, Nixon told newsmen that he did not want the support of George

    Wallace and that it appeared Wallaces appeal was in the direction of the racist element.

    53 [/b] A few days later, an article said that Nixon would select a moderate to liberal

    running mate and that Reagan and Texas Senator John G. Tower were not being

    seriously considered. The article said that one of the two would be selected only if Nixon

    pursued a Southern Strategy, which he said he would not do. The story stressed that

    Nixon was hoping to win some votes in the cities and among blacks; Reagan and Tower

    would hurt the ticket with these groups. 54

    While far ahead of his opponents, Nixon still did not have the nomination absolutely nailed

    down. On the day before the convention opened, one comprehensive survey showed that

    Nixon was about 50 votes short of the 667 needed to win. 55 As the convention opened,

    Nixon had to hold on to southern delegates, who leaned heavily toward him, but who

    could switch to Reagan. Reagan still could have taken enough delegates in the South to

    deny Nixon a majority. However, he and Rockefeller did not coordinate their efforts, which

    limited their effectiveness. 56 Also, Reagan did not announce and officially begin his

    campaign until August 5, which was, as a political editor and John Tower said, too little,

    too late. 57

    When Reagan began actively campaigning, he appeared to be gaining support among

    southern delegates. He was helped by articles published at this time that said Nixon was

    considering selecting a liberal running mate, such as John Lindsay or Illinois Senator

    Charles Percy. 58 Regardless of whether the Nixon spokesmen mentioned in the articles

    correctly represented their candidates position, southern delegates read or heard about

    the articles, and this produced a rebellion of sorts in at least several southern states. The

    Florida delegation was especially worried about Nixons selecting Percy, Lindsay, or

    Edward Brooke, senator from Massachusetts. 59 In order to check a Reagan surge with

    Dixie delegates, Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater canceled a fishing trip to meet with

    them, and Thurmond talked with some of the delegations. 60 Clark Reed and Fred Larue

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    had earlier said that they would be able to hold their Mississippi delegates for Nixon, but

    Reed now said, The delegation was loose and could go either way. 61 Goldwaters and

    Thurmonds visits helped placate some wavering delegates from the South, but probably

    even more important was

    a meeting between Nixon and southern delegates at the Hilton Plaza, where the

    candidate was staying.

    The Miami Herald persuaded one of the Florida delegates to conceal a tape recorder and

    tape Nixons brief speech and discussion with the delegates. The following quotes from

    Nixon are taken from the transcript of the meeting. Nixon met with two groups of delegates

    from the South on Tuesday morning, August 6. The delegates from Kentucky, Tennessee,

    Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Arkansas, Florida, and the District of Columbia

    were in the session that was taped. 62 Nixon squarely addressed the stories that said he

    was going to pick a liberal running mate, saying There have been some cockeyed stories

    that Nixon has made a deal with this one or that one. 63 He then discussed his

    qualifications for a vice presidential candidate and concluded with I am not going to take,

    I can assure you, anybody that is going to divide this party. 64

    In his talk, Nixon stressed points that would appeal to conservatives, but was cautious

    enough not to make any kind of blatant regional, much less racist, appeals. On busing he

    said, My feeling is this: I think that busing the child-a child that is two or three grades

    behind another childinto a strange community . . . I think that you destroy that child. . . .

    We have got to educate them, and I dont believe in that manner of approach. 65 On the

    Supreme Court and judges, Nixon denounced judges for running school boards and said,

    I think it is the job of the courts to interpret the law, and not make the law. 66

    If there was an embarrassment for Nixon, it was probably in the area of open housing.

    Nixons role in the passage of an open housing bill in April 1968 was mentioned earlier in

    this paper. A delegate asked Nixon about his stance on the issue, and he explained: So I

    had a hard decision to make . . . and I talked to Gerry Ford about itvote for it and get it outof the way. . . . In my view-and I think it vitally importantto get the civil rights and open

    housing issues out of our sight so we didnt have a split party over the platform when we

    came down here to Miami Beach. 67 Nixon concluded on the subject by saying I would

    have preferred that it be handled at the state and local level. 68 As one source

    recognized, Nixon made it appear that he opposed open housing in principle, but not in

    this case on practicalities. 69 Even so, he had been deft enough to not say this directly.

    Reactions to his speech differed. For example, there was some criticism from Florida

    delegates who did not think Nixon was conservative enough. 70 But these delegates were

    in the minority.

    For those who claimed Nixon appeased the southerners, this belief is countered by his

    refusal to give any specific names of whom he was considering for a running mate. Also,

    as one newspaper noted about the Nixon meeting with delegates from the South, Most of

    what he said was consistent with what Mr. Nixon has been saying publicly. 71 ByWednesday August 6, the Reagan drive had faltered. Nixon and his workers had well

    checked the drive by Reagan, who won 182 delegates at the convention, which was 10

    votes less than a New York Times survey two days before the convention opened. Nixon

    won the nomination with 692 delegates on the first ballot.

    The foundation for Nixons winning the South had been laid long before. Nixon won the

    support of key Goldwater Republicans, such as Peter ODonnell of Texas, James Martin of

    Alabama, Clark Reed of Mississippi, and Strom Thurmond of South Carolina. By getting

    financial and organizational help early, Nixon made it difficult for the less-organized

    Reagan to be able to overtake him. Nixon, according to one story, sewed up backing from

    these key leaders in the Atlanta meeting by promising that he would not have a

    philosophically split ticket. 72

    Nixons choice of Spiro T. Agnew as his running mate aroused some liberal opposition at

    the convention, and his selection was seen by some as a concession to the South. 73

    However, Agnew actually did not have solid conservative credentials. In March 1968,

    Agnew was recognized as being a longtime Rockefeller supporter and was a leader of a

    Draft Rockefeller Committee. 74 When Rockefeller announced he was not running on

    March 21, he did not tell Agnew in advance. Rockefellers failure to tell Agnew he was not

    going to run caused his supporter embarrassment with newsmen. 75 Agnew had invited

    newsmen into the governors mansion to watch Rockefellers speech on television. Much

    to Agnews surprise, the New York governor announced he was not a candidate. When

    Rockefeller reversed himself on April 30 and declared his candidacy, Agnew was then

    neutral. 76

    Agnew had strong black support when he ran for governor in 1966. 77 He ran against

    George P. Mahoney, a Democrat, who strongly opposed open housing. 78 In 1963, when

    Agnew was elected executive of Baltimore County, he passed the first local public

    accommodations law in the South. 79 As governor, he passed an open housing bill, hired

    many blacks, passed fair hiring bills, and helped enact other progressive legislation,

    including a tough antipollution bill and a large tax increase, which one author thought was

    necessary to pay for neglected programs. 80 Agnew, after being nominated, told reporters

    that he had not changed and that he never felt more liberal in my life. 81

    After rioting took place in Maryland when Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated, Agnew

    began taking a strong stand against rioting and seemed less sympathetic and more

    critical of black leaders. But even after this change, liberal black columnist Carl Rowan

    said Agnewis a moderate and clearly no racist. 82

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    Agnew was not an archconservative. He was not one of Strom Thurmonds own choices;

    Thurmond had preferred Tower or Reagan. Thurmonds response to Agnew was mixed,

    telling southerners he talked to that he believed Agnew will not add to the ticket, but is not

    especially objectionable. From all I hear about him he is a fine man, who is strong for law

    and order. 83

    The ideology of Agnew and the Souths influence on Nixon were distorted to some extent.

    The Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate in South Carolina stated the inaccurate, but

    widely held, view that Agnews nomination was a victory for the South, and Senator Strom

    Thurmond played a key role in shaping that ticket. 84 Agnews liberal stands in the past

    were mostly forgotten and probably did little more than help to limit the Republican lefts

    rebellion against him.

    Nixon himself was partly responsible for the distorted view of Agnew, as he was not

    emphasizing Agnews liberal acts as governor.

    The thrust of Nixons general election campaign has been described earlier.

    More specifically regarding the South, Nixon said, The Deep South had to be virtually

    conceded to George Wallace. I could not match him there without compromising on the

    civil rights issue, which I would not do. 85

    As one of Nixons leading political strategists wrote, Nixon would focus his southern

    campaign in the Outer South, including Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina,

    Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia. 86

    Nixons campaign in the South ignored Wallace for the most part, saying only that a vote

    for the third-party candidate was wasted since he could not win.

    In Atlanta, Nixon directly attacked Wallace, saying he was not fit to be president because of

    his statement that he would have his driver run over any protesters who blocked his way,

    but such attacks were rare. 87 Nixon did not soften his stand on civil rights.

    He did strongly support law and order, but so did many other candidates in 1968. The

    more liberal Humphrey, for example, during one campaign stop told a group of blacks

    about the need for law and order. 88

    The Southern Strategy was more complex than has been recognized. In fact, there was no

    Southern Strategy, but rather an Outer South Strategy. Victories in the primaries, combined

    with Rockefellers and Reagans belated and uncoordinated campaigns, never put Nixon

    in a position in which he had to desperately bid for southern delegates. During the

    meeting with the Republican state chairmen in Atlanta and with the delegates in Miami,

    Nixon made no unreasonable commitments. While he emphasized issues likely to be

    popular with southerners, even the transcript of his private meeting with southern

    delegates is consistent with his public statements of the time.

    One key test of the Nixon strategy is on the issue of desegregation. The Southern Strategyclaims that Nixon told Strom Thurmond he would slow down desegregation if elected

    president. 89 Exactly the opposite happened, as Nixon describes in his memoirs:

    Schools in the South and all across the country opened in the fall of 1970 without violence

    and in compliance with the Supreme Courts order. The dramatic success of our Southern

    desegregation program is eloquently told by the statistics. By 1974 only 8 percent of black

    children in the South were attending all-black schools, down from 68 percent in the fall of

    1968. 90

    Daniel Patrick Moynihan recognized the success of desegregation under Nixon, as he

    said in 1970, There has been more change in the structure of American public school

    education in the past month than in the past 100 years. 91

    There was nothing inherently wrong with Nixons bringing southerners into the electoral

    process; in fact, it probably made desegregation easier. And in 1970, there was no

    violence, as when John F. Kennedy was president, for example, and over 375 people

    were injured and 2 persons were killed at the University of Mississippi when it integrated.

    92 Nixons desegregation followed his general policy of dealing with the South, which one

    of his main domestic advisers, John Ehrlichman, said was done his way, with

    conciliation and understanding and not in a fashion that would abrade the political

    sensibilities of Southerners and conservatives. 93 The true test of the Southern Strategy

    was shown in the 1972 presidential election when Nixon carried the region with 70.5

    percent of the vote. 94

    Nixons campaign in the 1968 presidential election in the South has not deserved its

    scathing attacks. Its great success was well shown by the fact that the South underwent

    its most massive school integration in history peacefully, while President Nixon s

    popularity in the region increased. These positive fruits were largely the results of Nixon s

    1968 presidential campaign and his Southern Strategy.

    http://www.amazon.com/Richard-Nixon-Politician-Administrator-

    Contributions/dp/0313276536

    the notes to follow will be turned into a pdf at some point and if allowed posted here.if you

    would like to help by purchasing any of the after mentioned articles posted here to help in

    this effort feel free to contact me.

    thank you jon and frank for your wonderful program,

    NOTES

    1. Hubert H. Humphrey, The Education of a Public Man: My Life and Politics ( Garden City,

    N.Y.: Doubleday, 1976).

    http://www.amazon.com/Richard-Nixon-Politician-Administrator-Contributions/dp/0313276536
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    2. Reg Murphy and Hal Gulliver, The Southern Strategy ( New York: Charles Scribners

    Sons, 1971), p. 249.

    3. William Safire, Safires Political Dictionary ( New York: Ballantine Books, 1978), p. 671.

    4. Richard M. Nixon, RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon ( New York: Grosset & Dunlap,

    1978), p. 287.

    5. Warren Weaver Jr., Total Vote for McCarthy May Exceed Johnsons, The New York

    Times, March 14, 1968, p. A31.

    6. Richard Witkin, Rockefeller Urged by GOP to Get into Race, The New York Times,

    March 11, 1968, p. A32.

    7. William Safire, Before the Fall: An Inside View of the Pre-Watergate White House ( New

    York: Doubleday, 1975), p. 49.

    8. Nixon Reportedly Aids Open Housing Plan, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, April 7, 1968,

    p. 2A.

    9. Wayne Kelley, Open-Housing Bill Sent to President, Atlanta Journal, April 11, 1968, p.

    1.

    10. Paul Hofman, National Political, Labor, and Religious Leaders Mourn Dr. King, The

    New York Times, April 6, 1968, p. A27.

    11. Safire, Before the Fall, p. 49; Nixon, RN, p. 301; World Whos Who Attending Rites,

    Atlanta Journal, April 9, 1968, p. 6A.

    12. Tom Wicker, The Impact of Indiana, The New York Times, May 8, 1968, p. A26.

    13. Warren Weaver Jr., Nebraska Gives 53% to Kennedy; Nixon Far Ahead, The New

    York Times, May 15, 1968, p. A1.

    14. Lawrence E. Davis, McCarthy Beats Kennedy in Oregon Primary; Nixon Is a Strong

    Winner, The New York Times, May 29, 1968, p. A1, A18.

    15. Ibid.; Morse Appears Narrow Winner, The New York Times, May 30, 1968, p. A14.

    16. Nixon, RN, p. 303.

    17. Morse Appears Narrow Winner, p. A14.

    18. Davis, McCarthy Beats Kennedy, p. A1, A18.

    19. Kenneth Looms, State GOP Delegation Is Left Uncommitted, Louisville Courier

    Journal and Times, April 21, 1968, p. 1.

    20. Nixon Seen As Favorite of Virginia GOP, The Washington Post, May 5, 1968, p. A7.

    21. William Bennett, GOP Endorses Race by Nixon, Memphis Commercial Appeal, May

    26, 1968, p. 11.

    22. Rockefeller Woos Dixie After Meet with Reagan in New Orleans, Mobile Register, May

    21, 1968, p. 2A.

    23. Ibid.24. Ibid.

    25. Jovial Rockefeller Fields Questions from UF Students, Florida Times-Union, May 21,

    1968, p. 1.

    26. Ibid.; Rockefeller Woos Dixie, p. A2.

    27. Jovial Rockefeller Fields Questions, p. 1.

    28. Nixon, RN, p. 304.

    29. Lewis Chester, Godfrey Hodgson, and Bruce Page, An American Melodrama: The

    Presidential Campaign of 1968 ( New York: Dell, 1969), p. 497.

    30. Atlanta Journal, June 2, 1968, p. 1; Florida Times-Union and Journal, June 2, 1968, p.

    D6.

    31. Nixon, RN, p. 304.

    32. Thurmond Praises Nixon, Florida Times-Union and Journal, June 2, 1968, p. D5.

    33. Nixon Campaigns for Votes in South, Charleston News and Courier, June 1, 1968, p.

    7.

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    34. Nixons Swing South Viewed as Profitable, Florida Times-Union and Journal, June 2,

    1968, p. D5.

    35. Charles Pou and Hugh Nations, Nixon Nearing Magic Number, Atlanta Journal-

    Constitution, June 2, 1968, p. 1.

    36. Charles Pou, Nixon Nearing Dixie Lockup, Atlanta Journal, June 1, 1968, P. 1.

    37. Hank Drane, Murfin Picked over Kirk, Florida Times-Union and Journal, June 2, 1968,

    p. D5.

    38. Thurmond Praises Nixon, p. D5.

    39. Nixon, RN, pp. 304-305.

    40. Theodore H. White, The Making of the President 1960 ( New York: Pocket Books,

    1961), p. 466.

    41. Earl Mazo and Stephen Hess, Nixon: A Political Portrait ( New York: Harper & Row,

    1968), p. 238.

    42. Hugh E. Gibson, Thurmonds Endorsement Brings Blast from Best, Charleston

    News and Courier, June 25, 1968, p. A6.

    43. Thurmond Throws Support to Nixon, Says He Offers Americas Best Hope, Charlotte

    Observer, June 23, 1968, p. A10.

    44. Thurmond Urges Johnson Not to Fill Court Vacancy, Charleston News and Courier,June 22, 1968, p. A6.

    45. Thurmond Throws Support to Nixon, p. A10.

    46. Frank van der Linden, Nixon Nomination on First Ballot Predicted, Charleston News

    and Courier, June 23, 1968, p. 13.

    47. Nixon Within Short Grasp of Clinching Nomination, Charleston News and Courier,

    June 25, 1968, p. B4.

    48. Robert B. Semple, Nixon Preparing to Court 7 or 8 Industrial States, The New York

    Times, June 21, 1968, p. A20.

    49. Atlanta Journal, June 1, 1968, p. A4; Florida Times-Union and Journal, June 2, 1968,pp. D1, D5.

    50. Nixon, RN, p. 316; Semple, Nixon Preparing to Court 7 or 8 Industrial States, p. A20.

    51. Relman Morin, The Associated Press Story of Election 1968 ( New York: Pocket

    Books, 1969), p. 182.

    __________________

    52. Los Angeles Times, July 14, 1968, quoted in Safires Political Dictionary, p. 672.

    53. Wallaces Aid Not Wanted, Florida Times-Union, June 27, 1968, p. A2.

    54. Robert B. Semple, Nixon Considering Moderate on Ticket, The New York Times,

    June 30, 1968, pp. A1, A40.

    55. Warren Weaver Jr., Survey Finds Nixon Close to a First Ballot Victory, The New York

    Times, August 4, 1968, p. A1.

    56. Tom Wicker, GOP Convention Will Open Today, The New York Times, August 5,

    1968, p. A1.

    57. Hank Drane, Florida Times-Union and Journal, August 6, 1968, p. B2; Gladwin Hill ,

    Reagan Officially in Race; Acts to Bar Nixon Sweep, The New York Times, August 6,

    1968, p. A1.

    58. Warren Weaver Jr., Nixon Said to Want Rockefeller, Lindsay, or Percy for 2nd Place,

    The New York Times, August 5, 1968, p. A1.

    59. Hank Drane, State Delegation Debates Choice of Nixon, Reagan, Florida Times-

    Union and Journal, August 7, 1968, p. 1.

    60. The Washington Post, August 6, 1968, p. A7; The Washington Post, August 7, 1968, p.

    A11.

    61. The Washington Post, August 6, 1968, p. A7.

    62. Chester Hodgson, and Page, An American Melodrama, p. 515; The Washington Post,

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    August 7, 1968, p. A8.

    63. Chester, Hodgson, and Page, An American Melodrama, p. 516.

    64. Ibid.

    65. Ibid.

    66. Ibid.

    67. Ibid., p. 517.

    68. Ibid.; Nixon Housing Stand Reported, The Washington Post, August 7, 1968, p. A8.

    69. Chester, Hodgson, and Page, An American Melodrama, p. 518.

    70. Drane, State Delegation Debates Choice, p. 1.

    71. Nixon Said to Bar Southerners Bid: Shuns Pledge on Choosing Conservative for

    Ticket, The New York Times, August 7, 1968, p. A30.

    72. William Chapman, How Nixon Held Dixie Votes, The Washington Post, August 9,

    1968, p. A10.

    73. Richard Reeves, Lindsay Resists Plea by Liberals, The New York Times, August 9,

    1968, p. A1.

    74. Richard L. Madden, Supporters from 15 States Urge Rockefeller to Enter Race Now,

    The New York Times, March 19, 1968, p. A37.

    75. Richard Homan, Snub Influenced Agnew Shift, The Washington Post, August 7,

    1968, p. A9.

    76. Ibid.

    77. Tom Stuckey, Agnew Seen Law-Order Hard Liner, Florida Times-Union and Journal,

    August 9, 1968, p. A2.

    78. Ibid.; John Woodfield, Agnews Career Called Meteoric, Florida Times-Union and

    Journal, August 9, 1968, p. A3.

    79. The Candidate from Maryland: Spiro Theodore Agnew, The New York Times, August

    9, 1968, p. A18.

    80. Ibid.

    81. Stuckey, Agnew Seen Law-Order Hard Liner, p. A2.

    82. Carl Rowan, Maryland Governor Succumbs to Backlash, Charlotte Observer, June

    24, 1968, p. A2.

    83. Dixie: Agnew Acceptable, Florida Times-Union and Journal, August 9, 1968, p. A2.

    84. Walter R. Mears, Agnew to Steal the Wallace Vote, Florida Times-Union and Journal,

    August 9, 1968, p. A2.

    85. Nixon, RN, p. 316.

    86. Ibid., p. 317 ; Kevin P. Phillips, The Emerging Republican Majority ( New Rochelle,

    N.Y.: Arlington House, 1969), pp. 206-207.

    87. Nixon Calls Wallace Unfit for President, Attacks LeMay, Charlotte Observer, October

    9, 1968, p. A3.

    88. Humphrey Calls for Law, Order, Social Justice, Charleston News and Courier, June

    25, 1968, p. B4.

    89. Murphy and Gulliver, The Southern Strategy, p. 2.

    90. Nixon, RN, p. 443.

    91. Ibid., p. 445.

    92. C. Vann Woodward, The Strange Career of Jim Crow, 3d rev. ed. ( New York: Oxford

    University Press, 1974), p. 163.

    93. John Ehrlichman, Witness to Power: The Nixon Years ( New York: Simon and

    Schuster, 1982), p. 198.

    94. Numan V. Bartley and Hugh D. Graham, Southern Politics and the Second

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    South Africa Opens King Shaka Airport 90% Black Farms Failing In South Africa

    The Right Perspective (c) Peter Goodman 2005.

    Reply

    Reconstruction ( Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1975), p. 173.

    -nik from brooklyn.

    May 1, 2010, 9:03 pm

    Johann says

    Reply

    The "liberal, tolerant, non-racist" left exposed again.

    May 2, 2010, 12:55 am

    Peter Smith says

    Reply

    Everything is Nazism to liberals. I remember back when I was in High School. This liberal

    group of students organized a meeting my class and other classes. What the meetings

    were about may make you laugh to death. The liberal students told us that Dragon Ball Z

    was a racist TV show and that we were bad kids for watching it. They told us that the

    character Mr. Popo was racial stereotype to black people and all the females characters

    were weak unlike male characters of the show. They also say that Dragon Ball Z was

    created by Blond Hair Blue Eyed men who were racist and money hungry. The whole

    class laughed at them and informed them that Dragon Ball Z was created by Akira

    Toriyama a japanese man. Even the teacher who was pretty liberal found them silly. After

    losing the argument they told the whole class we were Neo Nazi Conspiracy Theorists.

    (Note: the liberal students were mostly females and one was jewish girl who had a habit

    of saying non-jewish white boys need to be open on who they want to date and have you

    know what with. I not jewish, but someone who has no love for her own men is a sad sad

    person in my book. I support LOVE not interracial fetishes.)

    May 6, 2010, 3:32 pm

    John linked to this poston May 2, 2010

    RT @TopsyRT: A Short History Of Liberals Using The Nazi Card http://is.gd/bQnvC

    Safari Womanlinked to this poston May 3, 2010

    A Short History Of Liberals Accusing Republicans Of Being "Nazis" http://shar.es/mGWrv

    Safari Womanlinked to this poston May 3, 2010

    A Short History Of Liberals Accusing Republicans Of Being "Nazis" http://shar.es/mGgsM

    The Wild "Nazi Card": A Brief Chronology of Its Tiresome Libtard Overuse - Stormfrontlinked to

    this poston May 4, 2010

    [...] The Wild "Nazi Card": A Brief Chronology of Its Tiresome Libtard Overuse While some of the

    examples are lame, it's a good compilation of the other N-word's trite overuse by libtard mynahs.

    A Short History Of Liberals Accusing Republicans Of Being "Nazis" [...]

    Kiowahlinked to this poston May 4, 2010

    A Shorty History Of Liberals Using The Nazi Card~ http://bit.ly/afm6f7 #tcot #teaparty #patriots

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