LawTalkers
Forums
User Name
Remember Me?
Password
Register
FAQ
Calendar
Go to Page...
» Site Navigation
»
Homepage
»
Forums
»
Forum
>
User CP
>
FAQ
»
Online Users: 876
0 members and 876 guests
No Members online
Most users ever online was 6,698, 04-04-2025 at 04:12 AM.
»
Search Forums
»
Advanced Search
Thread
:
Politics As Usual
View Single Post
06-10-2004, 10:31 AM
#
1975
Hank Chinaski
Proud Holder-Post 200,000
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Corner Office
Posts: 86,140
more evidence of Reagan's cunning and determination
Quote:
Originally posted by baltassoc
Hank: you're not making any sense.
First of all, I was using the past tense. We're talking about the 60s here, Hank, stretching into the 80s. I grew up in the South. I live in the South. I have taken classes on the South. I have researched and written multiple papers on voting patterns in the South.
When I say the problem was that the Republicans were the party of Lincoln, I do not mean to imply (although I suppose one could infer) that now the Republican party is full of racists. I mean that people were Democrats because of tradition and inertia.
Up until the late sixties, and really until the early 80s, people in the South were Democrats because if you wanted to win an election, you were a Democrat.
This lead to an odd discomfort within the Democratic party: an increasingly large portion of the Democratic party was seriously out of step with the national Democratic platform, and was feeling increasingly alienated from the national party. Finally, something snapped, and people decided to switch to the party that best represented their political beliefs (if not there best interests), no matter whether granddad was spinning in his grave or not.
When Phil Gramm became a Republican, it wasn't because he suddenly found God. Or supply side economics. It was Reagan's magnetism, and his electoral success in Southern states, that finally allowed Southern conservatives to align with the party that was the best fit.
And of course, it was not universal that Democrats from the South were conservative. LBJ created the War on Poverty and pushed through the Civil Rights Act of 1964. So it wasn't the Yankee liberals the Southerners were rebelling against; it was one of their own.
What, do you have a problem with your coach? Did your coach do this to you? Come on, they got you coming out here to guard me; you got no chance. disrespect.
__________________
I will not suffer a fool- but I do seem to read a lot of their posts
Hank Chinaski
View Public Profile
Find More Posts by Hank Chinaski
Powered by
vBadvanced
CMPS v3.0.1
All times are GMT -4. The time now is
06:56 PM
.
-- LawTalk Forums vBulletin 3 Style
-- vBulletin 2 Default
-- Ravio_Blue
-- Ravio_Orange
Contact Us
-
Lawtalkers
-
Top
Powered by:
vBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.
Hosted By:
URLJet.com