Celebrating a Media Maverick
(Page 4 of 9)
November / December 2006
Karl Weber from the book The Best of I.F. Stone
As the South stands on the verge of integration, Stone
scolds the moderate majority for failing to take on an extremist
few.
September 16, 1957
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What we are seeing in the South is something which resembles a
revolution. The government is trying to bring about a deeply
unpopular change. The moderates have been counseling peaceful
resistance, and undermining respect for the agencies of government.
The moment has now come when leadership passes to the extremists,
who advocate force and violence. The street mobs have begun to take
control.
The mobs are only a handful, and those who would resort to
violence are still a minority. But that minority has so much power
because its aims are the wishes of the majority-to block
integration. The power of the mob may be measured by the silence of
the South's normal leadership. Except for the mayor of Little Rock,
no public figure has spoken up for obedience to law. No senator
from the South, no governor, no member of Congress, no leader of
the bar, has dared publicly utter a restraining word. This dead
silence may prove to be the inner 'eye' of a hurricane.
It is whispered in Washington that unless something is done soon
by the federal government the moderates will be destroyed
politically. The southern senators only a few weeks ago looked like
shrewd and skillful statesmen. Now they appear to be appeasers and
quislings. How can they compete with a governor who calls out the
National Guard to prevent integration? The niceties of senatorial
footwork would look ludicrous if explained to a southern audience
which has just seen action.
The best the moderates offered was a long, slow, delaying
action. To the extremists this was only a gradual form of
surrender. They have taken the offensive in the border states of
Arkansas and Tennessee where integration had already begun. They
can claim to be pushing integration back, instead of retreating
slowly before it. The extremists have outbid the moderates.
The moderates prepared their own downfall. In the state
legislatures, the moderates enacted nullification. In Congress all
last spring during the civil rights debate, the moderates helped to
intensify in the South a pathological state of mind: suspicion of
the Supreme Court, distrust of all federal judges, a feeling that
alien and esoteric forces were plotting against the South and its
'way of life.' The moderates, when a little integrity and courage
might still have counted, pandered to the view that resistance to
law was an almost sacred duty for white southerners, a pious
obligation they owed their past. [Arkansas governor Orval] Faubus,
the mobs, and the dynamiters are only acting out what the moderates
taught them.
The mob itself is what mobs usually are, unstable fringe
elements, eager for any occasion to vent long pent-up hatreds,
hatred of their own ugly selves they spew outward on whatever their
social conditioning makes the target. The South has more than the
normal quota of such sick souls, as it has more than the normal
quota of poverty, ignorance, and shiftlessness plus a frontier
habit of violence. The average southern white is probably more
afraid of the mob than the average southern Negro, since the former
fears his own good instincts, which might betray him into 'nigger
loving' opposition. The latter may regard the mob as an almost
normal recurrence of white bestiality which one may avoid without
loss of self-respect.
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