You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Culture Wars
The Radical Republicans: The ANTIFA of 1865
2017-09-09
[Mercer at WND] "Anybody who would trash Lee and laud Lincoln is either stupid as a post or just plain evil," said a sage reader. This applies in spades to anyone who would laud the Radical Republicans of 1865, as one TV GOP blonde has recently, and asininely, done.

The Radical Republicans, if you can believe it, considered Abraham Lincoln a moderate (a bad thing, in their book). Lincoln successor Andrew Johnson these fanatics branded a reactionary (punishable by obstruction and impeachment).

Praised these days by the blonde-ambition faction of the Republican Party, the Radicals were stars of America’s own Reign of Terror over the South, at the end of the War Between the States.

If the French Reign of Terror was led by the terrifying Robespierre and his Jacobins; its American equivalent was infused with the spirit of lunatics like John Brown. (His abolitionist activists snatched five pro-slavery settlers near Pottawatomie Creek, in 1856, and split the captives’ skulls with broadswords, in an act of biblical retribution gone mad.)

Thaddeus Stevens was another of their "inspirational" madmen, lauded in the annals of the Party of Reconstruction. In his biography of Stevens, "Thaddeus Stevens: Nineteenth Century Egalitarian," historian Hans Trefousse even makes a brief reference to the Jacobin Club, a term reserved for the most extreme Republicans in Congress (p. 168). Other club members: Henry Winter Davis, Benjamin Butler, Charles Sumner, Benjamin Wade, Zachariah Chandler.

Although Republicans shared "the drive toward revolution and national unification" (the words of historian Clyde Wilson, in "The Yankee Problem," 2016), the Radicals distinguished themselves in their support for sadistic military occupation of the vanquished Rebel States, following the War Between the States.
Posted by:Besoeker

#3  Which would make Preston Brooks the Based Stickman of 1856. Right.
Posted by: Zenobia Floger6220   2017-09-09 23:53  

#2  Has Reitz statue in the village been found.?
Posted by: Shipman    2017-09-09 14:53  

#1  America’s own Reign of Terror over the South,

Really. IIRC the only one executed after the surrender was the commandant of the Andersonville prison camp. The French Reign of Terror involved 16,594 official death sentences. Can we say exaggerated beyond the pale.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2017-09-09 09:36  

00:00