Michael Paul Williams

1.4K posts

Michael Paul Williams banner
Michael Paul Williams

Michael Paul Williams

@RTDMPW

Columnist @RTDNEWS. @RNPA_union. @VAUnion1865 @NorthwesternU @MedillSchool. 2000 Harvard University Nieman Fellow. 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Commentary.

Richmond, VA Katılım Ağustos 2009
1.2K Takip Edilen3.7K Takipçiler
Michael Paul Williams
Michael Paul Williams@RTDMPW·
@KCarpent1 Deflection and whataboutisms. Abraham Lincoln did not violate the 14th amendment - it didn’t exist when he was president. VDH managed to write that bit of obfuscation without even mentioning the constitution and Trump’s incitement of insurrection. It’s an unserious response.
English
3
0
0
91
KC
KC@KCarpent1·
@RTDMPW in light of your Dec 23 column: "There's no reconciling Donald Trump on a presidential ballot?", suggest you read this from VDH.
Victor Davis Hanson@VDHanson

Ballot Banishing And Our New Leftwing Confederates In the election of 1860, southern Democrats in 10 states of the soon-to-be formalized Confederacy made it almost impossible for their own voters to cast ballots for Abraham Lincoln for President. In that sense, the Left in Colorado would have felt right at home in the ante-bellum South—erasing the name of a presidential candidate whom they loathed and by whom they were similarly terrified. In eerie fashion, and also similar to the old ethos of the Confederacy, the Democratic Left now believes in state nullification of federal statutes. So like the would-be secessionist states of 1860-1, over 550 jurisdictions, almost all in blue states, claim that federal immigration laws no longer apply to them. Thus they brag that they can breezily be defied. (Not so easily or willfully are federal gun laws, or EPA mandates, or federal endangered species lists, ignored in red-state jurisdictions.) The essence of sanctuary cities is an arrogant sense that federal law means nothing to morally superior local and state governments. So they nullify federal immigration laws in the manner of defying tariffs by South Carolina in 1832, or racial integration by Alabama Governor George Wallace in 1963. Wallace tried to block integration by opposing federal implementation of the Supreme Court’s ruling against segregation of students by race in public schools and universities, as well as President Kennedy’s federalization of the Alabama national guard. This Confederatization of Leftist values and protocols is uncanny. And I wrote about the phenomenon in a recent New Criterion article” The Old South Shall Rise Again”. The echoes keep popping up periodically and predictably in the news, as we saw with the Colorado erasure of Donald Trump from Colorado’s primary and likely general election ballot. Take also racial fixations and obsessions. Is the current diversity/inclusion/equity—woke movement based on similar racial essentialism? Or in Confederate terms, are we back to certifying one’s particular DNA (now by blood tests, but then by genealogists)? Does the South’s old one-sixteenth/one-drop rule (ask Elizabeth Warren) still determine racial status and privilege? Do our DEI/woke racially segregated campus dorms, segregated safe spaces, segregated graduations, and segregated events echo Wallace’s 1963 Inauguration Address chant—“Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever!”? Are blue-states becoming like one-dimensional “King Cotton” economies of the past? Just as a “King Cotton” economy ran the politics of the Old South through its unprecedented wealth, so too our modern leftist magnates are often one-industry “Big Tech” titans—of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google—who more or less by their PAC and foundation “donations” (Mark Zuckerberg alone accounted for $419 million ) warped the work of registrars in many of the key 2020 counties. One mark of Confederates was the strangling of the southern middle class. A tiny plantationists elite sat atop a vast caste of black slaves and a poor hireling white population. Yet in terms of aggregate state income and wealth, by 1860 five of the wealthiest ten states in America were slave states and about to secede—given the unquenchable global appetite of the growing Industrial Revolution for southern cotton. (Was the desire for and power of Cotton then like iPhones and Google searches?) So the sheer power, wealth, and influence of the plantationists remind one of clout and superciliousness of California’s Silicon Valley and its $9-trillion dollars in market capitalization. Indeed, it is eerie in debates and declarations how California Governor Gavin Newsom brags about California mega-Big Tech success and wealth. Often Newsom talks grandly of his Bay Area, Silicon Valley sector, as if he was Sen. James Hammond, a southern plantation owner, and U.S. Senator from South Carolina, who boasted defiantly in 1858 that “Cotton is King!” But like Hammond, Newsom then predictably grows silent about the state’s one-fifth of the resident population below the poverty line, one third of all US welfare recipients, the crumbling infrastructure, the dismal schools, the huge multibillion-dollar state deficits, the shrinking and fleeing middle class, the exploding homeless, and the retribalization of the state’s society by race. Just as King Cotton seemed to ensure palatial homes amid an impoverished general population, poor roads, anemic industry and manufacturing, few rails, and bad public schools, so too does blue-state wealth reside disproportionally in the hands of the few atop a growing class of poor and a vanishing middle class. In the years before the Civil War and in the ante-bellum Jim Crow South, southern states bled populations fleeing to the new territories in the West or to the manufacturing and industrial boomtowns of the North. They were escaping a fossilized society of have and have nots—eerily representative of the current ethos of the blue-state paradigm. California has the richest zip codes and greatest number of billionaires, and near highest poverty rate. New York is close; both have largest number of residents escaping their states—ironically to a new South that is becoming as dynamic as the old bygone North. So the recent ballot erasing of Colorado fits this larger picture of blue-states emulating the values of ante-bellum southern states—erasing ballots, defying federal laws, fixating on race and racial privileges, and catering to a one-dimensional medieval economy and caste, amid a growing underclass struggling with neglected infrastructure, poor schools, and growing poverty. So what will be the new/old Democratic 2024 election mantra? "Vote for us—and ballot deletion, states’ rights, federal nullification, racial essentialism and segregation, and a one-party, one-economy plantationist nation”?

English
1
0
0
170
Ovetta Wiggins
Ovetta Wiggins@OvettaWashPost·
Some personal news: I’m leaving The Post at the end of the month. I decided to accept the buyout offer. The decision is bittersweet but I’m excited about what’s ahead. For now, it involves some serious me time.
Ovetta Wiggins tweet media
English
80
25
464
116.1K
Rich Griset
Rich Griset@RichGriset·
MaryAnn Owens died earlier this week. She was a journalist, a mentor and a friend. At VCU, she taught hundreds of college students the craft of journalism. Her brand of journalism was righteous.
Rich Griset tweet media
English
5
12
80
26K
Michael Paul Williams retweetledi
Vanderbilt Sports & Society
Vanderbilt Sports & Society@SportsSocietyVU·
Still time to register for Dec. 11 free virtual seminar w/ an all-star lineup of speakers! Vanderbilt Sports & Society & the Rev. James Lawson Institute for the Study of Nonviolent Movements partner for a discussion of sports, activism, platforms & power eventbrite.com/e/sports-and-s…
Vanderbilt Sports & Society tweet media
English
0
5
5
2.3K
Michael Paul Williams retweetledi
Jeff E. Schapiro
Jeff E. Schapiro@JeffESchapiro·
.⁦@RTDMPW⁩ column: “@GovernorVa’s clearly banking on ‘Parents Matter’ sloganeering to make him a national darling of the GOP. But the entire movement is built on a lie.” #tncms-source=login" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">richmond.com/opinion/column…
English
3
15
25
3.6K
Michael Paul Williams retweetledi
Anne Holton
Anne Holton@AnneHolton·
Important from ⁦@RTDMPW⁩ - and not just because he quotes me🤪 ‘Teachers have always welcomed parents as key in their children’s education…notion that we’re somehow pitting parents against teachers is absolutely antithetical to student success.” richmond.com/opinion/column…
English
2
15
57
3.5K
Michael Paul Williams retweetledi
Activate Virginia
Activate Virginia@ActivateVA·
“I really have a problem with a mayor and City Council that says for developers to get what they need, they can come to the bargaining table and get millions of our money…but for South Side to get child care they have to go to the blackjack table.” richmond.com/opinion/column…
English
6
37
64
14.4K
Michael Paul Williams
Michael Paul Williams@RTDMPW·
@newsollie Two books, one non-fiction and one fiction, based on this history: The Devil’s Half-Acre and Yellow Wife.
English
1
0
1
35