Is the Russell Senate
Building, immune to racial outrage?
E. Ablorh-Odjidja
June 18, 2014
So it seems, because of all the targets that deserve Black outrage,
the Russell name on this Senate building should be among
the top on this list.
But it seems to have escaped opprobrium.
For some 43 years, the name has remained on the august Senate
building, though a strong case can be made that its
presence on this building is insensitive and insulting
to the Black experience.
Senator Russell, the man whose name serves as the brand name for
this building, had a racist past.
Thus, the building should be a prime target for
civil rights indignation.
The building, the oldest of the Senate office buildings, was named
in 1971 after Senator Richard Brevard Russell, a Georgia
senator, and an avowed segregationist, described by most
as the "leader of Southern opposition to the civil
rights movement".
Senator Russell was a Democrat and remained so for his entire
active political life. He died in 1971.
His stand against racial integration was widely
known. What is yet to be known is why the building’s
name is not a rich target for the Black leadership; a
group known to be vocally active, especially when the
target happens to be any conservative Republican.
The silence on this matter and other past insults to the Black
community from the Democrat ranks is deafening and does
damage to Black righteous angst.
As protests against the Russell brand stands shamelessly muted
today, those directed against lesser targets and emblems
known to have racist connotations have increased.
And these targets when attacked got hurriedly dismantled
as a result of Black angst.
There is yet to be the mildest whisper of force against the brand
on the Russell building.
Our Civil rights warriors, the Al Sharpton types,
are mute.
And not a single low-key flag-waving protest has been
seen in the area of this building.
But this is no surprise.
Black leaders never cry racism against Democrats.
They seem to have developed an amnesia about the
Democrats of the Jim Crow era, of which Russell was one.
The late Dick Gregory was the only exception. He railed
against Senator Russell, asking why his name should be
on the Senate building.
"Once people realize who
this man (Russell) was and what he represented, I don't
think there will be any problem at all in changing that
name,'' Gregory said.
Yet, some 11 years later since Gregory's passing, the silence
continues.
Recently, Chris Plant, a white conservative radio show host, also
raised the issue against the Russell name.
But to no surprise, not a whimper of support came from those in the
WOKE black community.
They may not have heard Plant because they
shouldn’t.
They shouldn’t wait for a white conservative radio talk
show host on this matter.
But even if they did,
the response would rather have been an accusation
of Plant as a bigot who had strayed outside his lane on
race issues.
The brand Russell on the Senate Office building reveals who has
control over the Black angst. And this is shocking in
the historic realms of the Civil Rights
movement. Plainly, it offends.
Meanwhile, Confederate flags and monuments of Southern rebels have
gone down and deservingly so.
The film "Birth of a Nation" has been fittingly condemned because
it had a racist portrayal of Blacks.
One Thomas Cripps, a historian characterized "Birth of a Nation" as
at once a major stride for cinema and a sacrifice of
Black humanity to the cause of racism."
Yet the brand Russell Building waits to be described as a
"deliberate sacrifice of Black humanity" to the
Democratic party's causes.
The refusal to remove the name may be indicative
of the treachery the Democrat party and its liberal
subsidiaries have managed to inflict on Blacks.
The fact that Senator Russell was a Democrat and racist is known.
That about 90% of Blacks regularly vote Democrat is also known.
The overwhelming Black vote besides, Russell's racist reputation is
yet to be whispered among the Black Congressional
Caucus. This
is an absurd condition that must remain a baffling point
for all reasonable Blacks.
Had Russell been a Republican, the Black Congressional Caucus would
have already asked for the entire building to be torn
down!
A case in point was the fate of Senator Trent Lott, the
then-Republican Senate Majority leader.
After his eulogy (probably ten minutes long) for
Senator Strom Thurmond at the latter's 100th-year
birthday celebration in 2005, he was forced to resign
solely on the ire of the Congressional Black Caucus.
Lott's ten-minute eulogy for Thurmond was considered atrocious and
insensitive to Blacks. The fact that he made his
speech in a building, that for decades has honored a
racist senator, and a known segregationist, went
unnoticed by the same Black Congressional Black Caucus!
For the cause of Black angst, Senator Lott, a Republican, was
booted out of his post as majority leader of the
Senate.
Senator Lott had said that Strom "came to understand the evil of
segregation and the wrongness of his views..... he had
long since renounced many of the views of the past, the
repugnant views he had had."
The passage, by any interpretation, was an apology.
However, this moment of repentance for Senator
Thurmond went toxic. But the eternal glorification
of the unrepentant racist Russell remained!
One Timothy Noah wrote
in a piece for The Slate publication titled "The
Legend of Strom's Remorse," which promptly denounced
Trent Lott after his speech.
"Thurmond has never publicly repudiated his segregationist past,
and with his 100th birthday and a Senate career behind
him, it's doubtful he ever will. The legend of Strom's
Remorse was invented, by common unspoken consent within
the Beltway culture, to provide a plausible explanation
for why Thurmond should continue to hold power and
command at least marginal respectability well past the
time when history had condemned Thurmond's most
significant political contribution."
Noah wrote.
To "command at least marginal respectability" for Thurmond, was
Noah's epithet for Loft's speech. How to describe
an entire monument of a building that stood for
Russell's eternal glory, without condemnation, he didn't
say.
Thurmond and Russell were both historically known segregationists.
The New York Times was to write a piece titled "Strom Thurmond, Foe
of Integration, Dies at 100."
But, when Robert Byrd, a Democrat, and a known Ku Klux Klan leader,
died seven years later, the New York Times banner was
"Robert Byrd, Respected Voice of the Senate, Dies at
92."
The difference was Thurmond was Republican and Byrd was a Democrat.
But there was another.
Both senators started as Democrats.
They co-sponsored a segregationist screed known
as "The Southern Manifesto".
But it was Thurmond who became a Republican. Byrd
remained a Democrat for life, thus his racist past was
forgiven.
In case the disparity in the perception given the two senators
wasn’t obvious, know that riding with the Ku Klux
wouldn’t matter either.
Robert Byrd, mentioned by the New York Times as the “Respected
Voice” of the Senate, was a
Ku Klux Klan
leader. This
accolade by the New York Times should have sounded like
a mockery of the segregation and civil rights
experience.
But it didn’t to the Black Congressional Caucus.
Just at the time of writing this piece, the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office announced the cancellation of six
federal trademarks of the Washington Red Skin football
team because its investigation found the name
disparaging to Native Americans.
At the decision, Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic majority leader,
applauded and called the team's Red Skins name a
"racist" brand without any concern that the comfortable
Russell building he spoke from had been named to glorify
a racist Senator. One may want to laugh at this
but still what a shame!
Eugene Robinson, a prominent Black Washington Post columnist
tweeted after the Red Skins name removal "Hail to the
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Hail Victory!"
Eugene has never said a word against the Russell
Senate Building.
The elephant in the room was the hypocrisy of both Senator Reid and
Eugene Robinson.
In short, they lacked the moral courage to attack
the Russell name on the Senate Building.
So, the insult will stand.
For ideological reasons, Democrat racial slurs against Blacks are
always given a pass.
And our Black leadership class is happy to
pretend that all is well when their very silence goes to
undermine the seriousness of our cause, intent,
credibility, humanity, and political maturity.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, June
18, 2014
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