Haley Barbour: Civil Rights Era In Mississippi Not Something I Recall Well

Would You Vote For A Politician That Could Care Less About US Civil Rights History?

  • No, They Will Not Govern Fairly

    Votes: 1 100.0%
  • Yes, The Past Is Unimportant

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • A Voting Issue That Is Not Important To Me Either Way

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I Don't Vote, I"m Clueless

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    1
  • Poll closed .

thoughtone

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source: Huffington Post

JACKSON, Miss. — Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour says he has little personal recollection of Freedom Summer activities in his state in 1964, when the slayings of three civil rights workers outraged the nation.

Asked by The Associated Press on Thursday how much he remembers about the summer, the potential 2012 Republican presidential candidate said: "Not much."

Barbour said he was a 16-year-old high school student in Yazoo City that summer and didn't pay attention to news coverage. Barbour, who graduated as valedictorian of his high school class in 1965, also said he has no memory of discussions about civil-rights activities at the time.

The governor's remarks came three days after he gave a speech on the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday in which he condemned violence against civil rights workers in Mississippi in the early 1960s: "Deplorable actions including the murder of innocent people, young men in service to a cause that was right, will always be a stain on our history."

Civil rights workers converged on the state in the summer of 1964 to challenge the state's brutal system of segregation.

James Chaney, who was a black Mississippian, and Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman, who were white New Yorkers, were slain by Ku Klux Klansman in Philadelphia, Miss., on June 21, 1964. Their bodies were found weeks later in an earthen dam following a massive search led by the FBI.

State Sen. David Jordan of Greenwood, a black Democrat, said Thursday that 1964 was a tumultuous year in Mississippi.

"I think the governor's much too alert to say that he doesn't remember," said Jordan, who was teaching at all-black schools in the Mississippi Delta in 1964. "It was everywhere, an everyday part of life – the resistance and persistence in trying to change it and make it better for those of us who were victimized by it."

Barbour has been criticized in recent months for his take on the civil rights era. He recently called on lawmakers to move forward with stalled plans for a civil rights museum, and said that Freedom Riders coming to the state this spring to mark the 50th anniversary of their challenge to segregation "will find Mississippi an enormously changed state as to race relations."
 
With the poll worded as is, my answer is "Yes, I would vote for a politician that could care less about US Civil Rights history."


Now, I would not vote for one who couldn't care less.
 
Let me be clearer: I wouldn't vote for Haley Barbour, regardless of his Civil Rights record or lack thereof. I wonder how this guy stacks up among the so-called and self-described conservatives on this board ???

QueEx
 

Apparently Haley Barbour can't recall this thread either: Pardon Unlikely for Civil Rights Advocate ? ? ?

I guess the family of Clyde Kennard didn't have a kidney to offer. :(

QueEx



It would be very interesting if Barbour won the GOP nomination for President in 2012. How would the birthers, Beck claiming Obama is a racist and others design the campaign? This would would truly put the republican loyalists in a "either you are for me or against me" telling moment.

Would our resident "anit-Obama" finally admit what he would dare to admit?
 
Neither can but Newt's past would haunt him.

Just Newt's past? I think Barbour's comments are far more damaging.


source: Huffington Post


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Haley Barbour Has 'Fuzzy Memory' Of MLK Speech, Says Historian

r-HALEY-BARBOUR-MLK-SPEECH-large570.jpg


Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour's memory of a 1962 event in which he claimed he and some friends had gone to hear Martin Luther King Jr. speak in his hometown of Yazoo City, Miss., was called into question this weekend, in a report by the Clarion Ledger.


"We wanted to hear him speak," Barbour told the Weekly Standard of King in a December interview that stirred controversy due to his claim that the civil rights era wasn't "that bad" in Mississippi. "The truth is, we couldn't hear very well. We were sort of out there on the periphery. We just sat on our cars, watching the girls, talking, doing what boys do. We paid more attention to the girls than to King."

The new examination by the Clarion Ledger, however, raises questions about the veracity of Barbour's account:
A search of the King Papers at the Martin Luther King Jr. Research and Education Institute and the papers of David Garrow, author of the definitive biography on King, Bearing the Cross, failed to find evidence King spoke in Yazoo City in 1962.​
Despite David Garrow's inability to find any evidence of King speaking in Yazoo City, he was unwilling to charge the governor with intentionally misstating history.

"It's fundamentally unfair of people to gang up on Barbour because he's got some fuzzy memory of an event from 40-plus years ago that he didn't particularly focus on at the time," Garrow told the Ledger.

Barbour's campaign has maintained to the Ledger that the governor indeed "saw Dr. King in Yazoo City," but the best evidence the newspaper could find of a King appearance in the town was from the Yazoo Herald on June 23, 1966:

"Martin Luther King was expected in Yazoo City Tuesday and Wednesday, but made no public appearance," the paper reported at the time. "It was learned later that he did meet in secret with some of the marchers, presumably to plan strategy."
 
Are you waiting on me, or Gunner?

Fuck it I'll bite.

If Barbour have policies that I agree with *lower taxes/unnecessary spending, strong military* I could put that flaw to the side. I won't say that I would fully support him like I did Bush.
 
Are you waiting on me, or Gunner?

Fuck it I'll bite.

If Barbour have policies that I agree with *lower taxes/unnecessary spending, strong military* I could put that flaw to the side. I won't say that I would fully support him like I did Bush.

Funny that Bush was for that either.
 
Are you waiting on me, or Gunner?

Fuck it I'll bite.

If Barbour have policies that I agree with *lower taxes/unnecessary spending, strong military* I could put that flaw to the side. I won't say that I would fully support him like I did Bush.


uncle_ruckus_1.jpg
 
Translation:

I seen so much evil shit go down during the civil rights era and I am still loyal at being sworn to secrecy to my kkk roots.
 
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