Black and White - Land, Labor, and Politics in the South by Timothy Thomas Fortune
page 81 of 280 (28%)
page 81 of 280 (28%)
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of the French Commune and the derringer of J. Wilkes Booth, were they
not inspired by Liberty--the People? The innocent blood which has been spilt in the name of liberty and the people, which has served the purposes of tyranny and riveted upon the people most galling chains, "would float a navy." By the side of the robbery, the embezzlement, the depletion of the treasury of South Carolina, and the imposition of ruinous and unnecessary taxation upon the people of that state by the Carpet-Bag harpies, aided and abetted by the ignorant negroes whom our government had not given time to shake the dust of the cornfield from their feet before it invited them to seats in the chambers of legislature, we must place the heartless butcheries of Hamburgh and Ellenton. By the side of the misgovernment, the honeycomb of corruption in which the Carpet-Bag government of Louisiana reveled, we must place the universal lawlessness which that state witnessed from 1867 to 1876. The whole gamut of states could be run with the same deplorable, the same sickening conclusion. The Federal authority had created the wildest confusion and retired to watch the fire-brand. The "wise men" of the nation had made possible a system of government in which robbery and murder were to contend for the mastery, in which organized ignorance and organized brigandage were to contend for the right to rule _and_ to ruin. It is not complimentary to the white men of the South that their organized brigandage proved to be more stubborn, more far-sighted than |
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