This non-fiction look at history is amazing. D’Souza discusses parts of history that have been hidden by our progressive school systems and media: FDR and the Democrats’ complicity with fascism and white supremacy; there is actually no “Big Switch” of democrats becoming Republicans in the 1960s (blacks switched in the 1930s for New Deal benefits; the South became Republican in the 1980s due to Reagan’s policies); pro-slavery Democrats of the civil war days are not so distant in ideology from the Democrats of today (the slave plantation was a kind of infant welfare state); Democratic bosses (such as the corrupt Tammany “machine” which operated for decades) helped immigrants vote multiple times with multiple names; FDR crushed Tammany but then sought to legalize the same type of corruption nationally instead of locally; the role of the northern Democrats (not “the south” only) in upholding slavery and then keeping blacks oppressed after the Civil War; the democrats’ KKK has close parallels to the Nazi brownshirts (both were extensions of a political party practicing racial terrorism); FDR refused to support antilynching legislation; FDR and Hitler used the same strategy of appealing to peoples’ envy by calling it social justice; survey data show that as the South became LESS racist in the last century, it became MORE Republican; LBJ never underwent an enlightened “conversion” when it came to racism but he remained a vile bigoted Democrat who said horrid things about blacks; proportionately more Republicans than Democrats voted (in congress) for the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, and the Fair Housing Bill; and the most prominent white supremacists today (including Obama supporter Jason Kessler, organizer of the Charlottesville rally) have a left-wing background.
Progressives still believe in the Southern Strategy and the big switch, even though any “evidence” for those two ideas collapses once one looks at actual history (without the progressive slant shown in movies, textbooks, and journalism). As democrats today pull down statues of their pro-slavery leaders, most of them haven’t even acknowledged their party’s history of oppression and racism. D’Souza shows how democrats (of the north and south) were responsible for promoting slavery, performing racial terrorism (KKK), fighting Reconstruction and trying to block the 13, 14, and 15 Amendments. Crazy to read about W.E.B. Du Bois supporting one of the USA’s most racist presidents, Woodrow Wilson: Wilson revived the KKK, segregated the federal government, and promoted forced sterilization of minorities. As an immigrant who left India at age 17 to come to the USA, Dinesh points out that the multicultural premise (“no culture is better or worse than any other”) is silly; immigration is proof of that! Highly recommended and eye-opening to fans of history and America.
“America is not to blame, and the South is not exclusively to blame. Some Americans perpetrated these crimes and other Americans stopped them. So it is essential to distinguish good Americans from bad ones. Moreover, while the secession debate was a North-South debate, I will show that the slavery debate was not. The slavery debate was between the pro-slavery Democratic party and the antislavery Republican party.” -p. 13
“Progressive Democrats are in fact the inventors of racism and white supremacy, and the Republican Party fought them all the way. Progressives and Democrats were also the groups that were in bed with fascism and Nazism in the 1920s and 1930s, while Republicans opposed this cozy alliance...So we have the remarkable spectacle today of the party of racism, fascism, and white supremacy blaming the party of antiracism and resistance to fascism and white supremacy for being racist, fascist, and white supremacist.” -p. 14
“The plantation- viewed as a complete ecology involving exploited inhabitants, rented overseers and the plantation boss or ‘Massa’ running things from the Big House- defines the Democrats not merely in the past but also in the present...Long before me, Lincoln accused the Democrats of his day of seeking to turn all of America into a plantation.” -pp. 14-15
Democrats and Republicans have not switched platforms; that is just a made-up idea of progressives who are embarrassed about their history. “Lincoln defined slavery as ‘you work, I eat,’ and that is the core philosophy of today’s Democratic Party, no less than the Democratic Party of Lincoln’s day. By contrast, the core philosophy of today’s GOP is identical with that of Lincoln: ‘I always thought the man who made the corn should eat the corn.’” -pp. 24-25
“Progressive Democrats benefit themselves and live high on the hog- like the Clintons and Obamas, who went from nothing to multimillionaires, from minor overseers to plantation big bosses- all the while declaring as their motive the tireless pursuit of social justice. These Democrats proclaim themselves the benevolent supervisors of needy, impoverished minorities whom in fact they keep needy and impoverished. These minorities, deprived of education and the skills for advancement, rely on the Democrats to provide for them, thus reducing themselves to dependent subordination and sustaining the progressives in power.” -pp. 25-26
Wow! This is eerily similar to the inner-cities where some blacks live today under Democrat mayors, with Democrats promoting broken families and no chance to attend better schools: “Historian Kenneth Stampp identified the five distinctive features of the old slave plantation: dilapidated housing...; broken families…; a high degree of violence to police the plantation…; no opportunity for decent education or advancement…; and finally the plantation’s pervasive atmosphere of hopelessness, despair, and nihilism.” -p. 26
“There is a continuity between the Democrats of the mid-nineteenth century and the Democrats now, and a system of enforced dependency is the precise way in which Democrats today maintain their ethnic plantations.” -p. 61
“Choice, Lincoln suggested... can never be unequivocally affirmed without regard to the content of the choice. Lincoln’s argument applies equally to slavery and abortion… choice is invoked in order to cancel out the choices of others. In both cases, self-government is a pretext for the denial of self-government. In both cases, persons who have the same rights as everyone else are being sacrificed to the convenience and welfare of others.” -p. 70
“...A principle that has defined the Democratic Party since its founding: the principle of dependency. While the slave plantation was based on the dependency of helpless black slaves, the urban plantation was based on the dependency of helpless white immigrants. Both became fodder for the exploitative machinations of the Democratic Party. The man who figured this out was Martin Van Buren.” -p. 79
“Tammany remains the backbone of the Democrats. The old Tammany regime is gone, but what Tammany represents- the dehumanizing system of Democratic ethnic exploitation that Van Buren created- is still very much with us today.” -p. 94
Some progressives consider Lincoln a racist. But, “Lincoln had the choice, as the founders did, of going down in flames or taking the strongest antislavery stance that was viable to secure the consent of the governed. This stance would involve accommodating racist sentiment- while not encouraging it- just as the founders accommodated slavery- while not encouraging it- and thus achieving a result that would help create the conditions for the ultimate defeat of both racism and slavery.” -p 102
“As he jumped onto the stage in the theater where the assassination took place, Booth shouted out,
‘Sic semper tyrannis.’ Thus be the fate of tyrants. But of course it was a lie in the classic Democratic fashion. The supreme irony is that Booth's was the cause of tyranny and human bondage. So deluded was Booth that he regarded the right to enslave other humans as a form of liberty worth killing - and in the end dying - for.” -p. 111
“While state-sponsored segregation was a Southern phenomenon - giving some support to the progressive campaign to blame racial evils on the South - it should also be noted that every Southern segregation law was passed by a Democratic legislature, signed by a Democratic governor and enforced by Democratic officials. There are no exceptions to this rule. So segregation was the work of the Democratic party in that region.” -p. 142
“Three of the schemes of the progressive plantation - race-based immigration restriction, racial segregation and forced sterilization - provided models for the Nazi Party in the early 1930s.” -p. 145
“FDR himself is one of the earliest inventors of the progressive big lie about fascism. Fascism is not about the growth of private power; it is about the unchecked growth of government power. Fascism is not about the private sector taking over the government; it is about the government taking over the private sector. FDR redefines fascism to make it look like he is saving American democracy from a fascist takeover by big business. He converts the meaning of fascism to portray his Republican opponents as fascist while presenting himself as, well, the anti-fascist.” -p. 164
“Fascism in its essence is the centralization of power in the national state.’ - p. 165
“No wonder...Germans stuck with their man. They were Hitler’s ‘satisfied thieves.’ Other socialists merely made extravagant promises, but the Nazi welfare state delivered the goods…there would be a valuable lesson for FDR in this Nazi principle of building popular loyalty by using the government for the purpose of confiscation and wealth distribution.” -p. 169
“Now it is tempting to believe that racism declined in America because of the moral suasion of the civil rights movement, but to believe this is to put the cart before the horse, as most progressive accounts predictably do...In reality, however, the steep decline in racism preceded the civil rights movement. The civil rights movement didn’t cause it; it caused the civil rights movement...So what caused the shift? The obvious answer is: Adolf Hitler. In the end, the horrific crimes of Hitler overthrew the doctrine of white supremacy… LBJ watched with horror the decline of racism in America, not simply because he was a nasty bigot himself...but also because white supremacy had been the central political doctrine of the Democratic Party for at least a century. Once the Republicans ended slavery the Democrats turned swiftly to white supremacy, which became the glue, both in the North and the South, that held the party together.” -pp. 189-90 As a result, LBJ went after the black vote. He offered this bargain: “”Essentially we will provide you with lifetime support, just as in the days of slavery. Your job is simply to keep voting us in power so that we can continue to be your caretakers and providers.” -p. 193
“For Lincoln the most appalling feature of slavery was that it was a form of theft, theft of a man’s labor...Lincoln told a delegation of workingmen during the Civil War, ‘Let not him who is houseless pull down the house of another, but let him labor diligently and build one for himself.’ Failure to succeed, Lincoln said, is ‘not the fault of the system, but because of either a dependent nature which prefers it, or improvidence, folly or singular misfortune.’...Lincoln’s basic ideology- that people have a right to the fruits of their labor, and that government, if it gets involved at all, should merely provide idlers and indigents with the means to become self-supporting- is even today the basic ideology of Republicans. And it is equally clear that the confiscatory principle “You work, I eat’ is even today the basic ideology of Democrats. The entire welfare state, from the New Deal through the Great Society to contemporary Democratic schemes, is rooted in the same plantation philosophy of legally sanctioned theft that Lincoln identified more than a century and a half ago.” -p. 199-200
“Imagine the catastrophe that would face the Democratic Party if African Americans...stopped thinking of themselves as hyphenated Americans and thought of themselves simply as Americans! Democrats cannot afford for these groups to lose the collective solidarity that is the basis for the pact that the Democrats seek to make with them: ‘We will take care of you if you agree collectively to vote for us.’... Far from being an ideology of empowerment, multiculturalism is in fact an ideology of ethnic resentment toward whites that is, in the end, aimed at reconciling minority groups to their own enslavement and dependency on the Democratic plantation.” -pp. 238-39