Political 'History'
by
Gail Jarvis
On
Tuesday, LewRockwell.com posted an article by Patrick J. Buchanan
entitled, "Political
correctness at Little Round Top." In this article Buchanan discloses
the National Park Service’s plans to use the Gettysburg battlefield
site to "tell the story of slavery" and he states, "visitors to
Gettysburg are to be indoctrinated in the politically correct history
of the war."
As
I followed the unfolding of this plan to debase Civil War sites,
I continually hoped that Congress would eventually reject it. And
I made my Representative in Washington aware of my opposition. The
fact that it wasn’t rejected tells us a lot about our Congress.
And a review of how it developed demonstrates the modus operandi
of government agencies and their accomplices.
In
1999, Jesse Jackson, Jr., U.S. Representative from Illinois, inserted
language in the Department of Interior’s appropriations bill for
2000 that included this statement. "The Secretary of the Interior
is directed to encourage the National Park Service managers of Civil
War battle sites to recognize and include in all of their public
displays and multimedia educational presentations, the unique role
that the institution of slavery played in causing the Civil War
and its role, if any, at the individual battle sites. The Secretary
is further directed to prepare a report to Congress on Dr. King’s
birthday, January 15, 2000, on the status of the educational information
currently included at Civil War sites that are consistent with and
reflect this concern."
Apparently
none of the 435 members of the House of Representatives and none
of the 100 members of the Senate objected to this directive, nor
did they inquire about the cost to the taxpayers for its implementation.
The men and women in Congress, who were elected to represent their
constituents and prudently spend their tax dollars, blissfully enacted
this bill into law without any qualms.
In
May of 2000, a two-day conference was held at Ford’s Theatre in
Washington, DC, a national historic site preserving the location
where President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated. The symposium
was entitled; "Rallying on the High Ground: Strengthening Interpretation
of the Civil War Era." Speakers included Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr.
(D. Ill), Eric Foner, of Columbia University and James McPherson,
of Princeton University, as well as other establishment "authorities"
on the Civil War.
Eric
Foner, James McPherson and the other Marxist historians were carefully
chosen as speakers because government officials know that these
professors will give them the opinions they want to hear. Speaking
for this school of historians, Foner said: "In the course of the
past twenty years, American history has been remade. Inspired initially
by the social movements of the 1960s and 1970s – which shattered
the ‘consensus’ vision that had dominated historical writing – and
influenced by new methods borrowed from other disciplines, American
historians redefined the very nature of historical study."
News
releases explained that the symposium "will explore new historical
currents in linking the battlefield experience to such issues as
the historical, social, economic, legal, cultural, and political
forces and events that led to the Civil War" and "Sessions will
focus on the institution of slavery."
Translation:
A Civil Rights activist and Marxist historians will justify the
need to reorient interpretations of Civil War battlefield sites
away from military data to the "horrors of slavery."
These
"experts" will insist that, like other government-funded agencies,
the National Park Service must also be politicized and pressed into
service to advance one of the Left’s current social agendas.
After
the symposium, a book was issued, "Rally on the High Ground,"
with each speaker contributing a chapter. In the chapter written
by Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr. (D. Ill), we find this interesting comment
regarding the mandating of a standard interpretation of the cause
of the Civil War: "From the African Americans’ perspective, it would
be perceived and considered a down payment on reparations."
In
preparation for refashioning the interpretation of the cause of
the Civil War to conform to current political trends, a questionnaire
was sent to all National Park Service battlefield sites. Two questions
were asked concerning the park’s exhibits, waysides, film and Web
media, publications, and personal services:
To what extent
do the park’s (exhibits, etc.) address the overall causes of the
Civil War and the broader social, economic, cultural and political
context of your site’s military story?
To what extent
do the park’s (exhibits, etc.) address slavery as a cause of the
Civil War?
Results
of the survey convinced the National Park Service that, of the 28
battlefield sites it operates, only nine "adequately" addressed
slavery in their exhibits, etc. So, in order to comply with the
government’s mandate, the exhibits, etc. at all battlefield sites
had to be revised.
As
Buchanan stated in his column, it will cost the taxpayers $ 95 million
dollars to make the Gettysburg site politically correct. The conversion
of each of the other 27 battlefield sites might cost less than Gettysburg
but I think we can safely assume that the total cost to the taxpayers
will be between three hundred million and five hundred million dollars.
Quite a substantial down payment on reparations.
Next,
the National Park Service turned its attention to the Reconstruction
Era. In December of 2000, the Secretary of Interior, members of
the National Park Service, state leaders and, of course, Professor
Eric Foner, traveled to the Beaufort area of South Carolina to find
examples of the achievements of the Reconstruction Era that could
be converted into historic sites. Senator Fritz Hollings (D. SC)
sponsored a bill requesting $ 150,000 for a study to determine the
best way to commemorate Reconstruction activity in the Beaufort
area.
Hollings
told members of the press; "While often recognized as a painful,
divisive and controversial period in our nation’s history, the Reconstruction
Era was, in my mind, the foundation of unification, not only the
unification of North and South, but the unification of black and
white, and the vision for equality, unity and hope." A similar claim
was made by Brenda Barrett, the NPS’s Coordinator for Heritage Areas:
"The term "Reconstruction" reflects both the literal rebuilding
of the war-ravaged South and the more metaphorical rebuilding of
the Union following the divisive and destructive conflict."
The
opinions of Hollings and Barrett accord with those of the Marxist
historians, opinions which are best exemplified in Eric Foner’s
book, "Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution." The word
"unfinished" provides a clue to Foner’s political views; i.e., Reconstruction
efforts were beneficial to the nation and should never have been
ended.
We
know that the new Beaufort area project will be just the beginning.
The NPS will next develop long-range plans to commemorate Reconstruction
sites throughout the entire South. This endeavor will involve discovering
and renovating sites, constructing visitor centers and museums,
printing exhibits and pamphlets, and providing full-time staffing
for each site. At this point, it would be impossible to guess either
the magnitude or the ultimate cost to the taxpayers. But an estimate
of several hundred million dollars seems reasonable.
The
taxpayers know that these costly renovations and revisions have
nothing to do with history. They are purely political. Requiring
that slavery be designated as the cause of the Civil War enhances
the government’s current Civil Rights initiative. Likewise, portraying
the Reconstruction Era as beneficial to the nation promotes the
idea that central planners in Washington are better qualified to
manage the social and economic activity of local communities.
These
proposed projects prove that political correctness has too great
an influence on Congress. Also, the estimated cost helps us understand
why the 2003 budget deficit is expected to exceed $200 billion dollars.
January
8, 2003
Gail
Jarvis [send
him mail], a CPA living in
Beaufort, SC, is an advocate of the voluntary union of states enumerated
by the founders.
Gail
Jarvis Archives
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