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TheBlackAdder

(29,979 posts)
13. I finished a paper on Antebellum Southern Paternalism last year. I won't paste it--identity reasons.
Sun May 14, 2017, 04:31 PM
May 2017

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I'll try and give a quick memory summation, without writing it in a too revealing manner:


1) 1800s-10s: Christian Revivalist tours shook down Southern Slaveholders for thousands to get their blessings. The majority of Southerns despised the slaveholders. Baptists, Methodists and Presbyterians are the ones who mainly will end up promoting slavery in the coming decades and onward.


2) 1820s-30s: Northern abolitionists tried to use the Bible as justification that slavery was immoral. This backfired, as the Bible is rife with verses that Southern clergy perverted to their own gain. Northern clergy were invited to tour southern plantations and were either offered property or marriage to daughters and part of estates if they relocated and formed churches. They were showcased plantation areas that portrayed the slaveholder in a good light. Many of these church pastors had slaves of their own. Slave riots occurred, which panicked the whole community. The idea of Southern Paternalism is hatched, saying that slaveholders are rescuing those held by slave merchants and offer the slaves an opportunity to be exposed to Christianity, and eternal salvation.

A partnership between slaveholders and clergy forms. Slaveholders want to control the slaves, the clergy wants to expand their church, their tithings, and spread the gospel. The clergy become wealthy members of the community. However, there are two variations of this:

White church services: Promote the Christian tenets of slavery, how the slaveholders are effectively doing God's work by saving the captives of the slave traders. The slaveholders gain legitimacy.

Slave church services: They are told to be good Christians, they must be good servants to their masters. That, no matter what happens to them in life, they will reap rewards in the afterlife.


3) 1840s-50s: Southern Paternalism, with the help of the churches expands rank of congregants, this generation is the one who now embraces slavery as an institutional norm, feeding into the Civil War.



It only took one generation to convert the Southerners over to accepting slavery. While the elders had to be swayed or convinced, the young adults just sold on the idea, the youngsters would grow up in this new institution and view it as a societal normalcy.


I'm a bit older, and I witnessed the conversion of many Reagan Republicans and even the Sarah Palin types of just a couple of years ago. They were against Putin, they were against Russia and any foreign interference of our government. They were saying how Putin would make Obama his bitch. Now, in less than a decade, we are seeing the complete reversal of those positions and acceptance of them, just to get some political and short-term hopes of financial gains. The protection of country is no longer paramount--it is just a talking point to them. I worry, that if this is not addressed quick, fast, and in a hurry--this might become an institutional norm and it will be difficult to ensure national security, on a wide range of topics, in the future.

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Recommendations

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Excellent read malaise May 2017 #1
It's a very good essay. Lies not stomped will fester. . . nt Bernardo de La Paz May 2017 #2
It's a fundamental mistake to assume that American society was built on "democratic values" Spider Jerusalem May 2017 #3
The Founding Fathers feared democracy because they feared that "the mob" would take their PROPERTY. YoungDemCA May 2017 #4
That was one of the motivations for the Revolution, in fact Spider Jerusalem May 2017 #6
I remember the reaction of the kids at Colonial Williamsburg, as more and more people karynnj May 2017 #24
. . . and what about: marybourg May 2017 #5
Easy. When the wealthy siphon off more and more to fulfill their lust to own as much cstanleytech May 2017 #28
Trump is cautionary tale of all great falls into the dark. gordianot May 2017 #7
Their revisionist history is still strong in the South regarding slavery and the Civil War. GBizzle May 2017 #8
Welcome to DU. n/t rzemanfl May 2017 #9
Plain and simple...they were traitors, and what we're dealing with now are traitors. brush May 2017 #11
Welcome to DU. Aristus May 2017 #14
Welcome and thanks blueseas May 2017 #20
Maybe I had a sheltered unbringing.. Mercurian May 2017 #22
Cognitive Dissonance Juliusseizure May 2017 #27
Many of these poor white ancestors fought Duppers May 2017 #30
Human nature doesn't seem to change. dawg May 2017 #10
Samuel Johnson asked much the same question thucythucy May 2017 #12
I finished a paper on Antebellum Southern Paternalism last year. I won't paste it--identity reasons. TheBlackAdder May 2017 #13
Thank you for sharing...a good read. sheshe2 May 2017 #15
Would LOVE to read more of this, I had a sKrong notion that the church had a hand in beliefs that uponit7771 May 2017 #29
a very good read . Thank you luvMIdog May 2017 #16
Yup, the traitorous Confederates are still with us. SunSeeker May 2017 #17
They never stop, do they? sheshe2 May 2017 #18
I don't think so either. SunSeeker May 2017 #19
You are right, they don't want in. sheshe2 May 2017 #21
Atrocities are easier to commit if you demonize people first IronLionZion May 2017 #23
Fakery and flim-flam at every level. Orsino May 2017 #25
Great article. louis-t May 2017 #26
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