Colbert I. King, a columnist for the Washington Post, wrote recently about the acknowledgement by various institutions about their role in perpetuating slavery. Harvard University was the most recent example. King says that not enough attention has been paid to the sexual exploitation of slave women. As we reflect on the current Republican obsession with banning teaching about racism and accusing teachers of pedophilia, think of the following story. Who were the most dangerous pedophiles in American history?
King writes:
This soul-searching may well help the nation come to terms with its past. But an examination of racist cruelty in 18th and 19th-century America cannot stop with the failings of public and private institutions.
No probe into the corrosive effects of racial bondage can be complete without coming to grips with, besides slavery itself, the single most heinous crime against humanity committed in the annals of U.S. history: the centuries-long sexual exploitation and subjugation of Black women and girls….
How many black women and girls were sexually exploited?
The 1860 federal census provides a clue. In Southern or slaveholding states, and in Northern states respectively, 518,360 and 69,885 people were classified as “mulattoes.”
Then King refers to a relationship that was revealed almost a decade ago. I did not read about it then.
A 22-year-old White South Carolinian who impregnated a 16-year-old Black maid in his father’s house also comes to mind. He, Strom Thurmond, avowed segregationist, Dixiecrat presidential candidate and staunch opponent of civil rights legislation, went to his grave without saying a word about what he did to that teenager. As did hundreds if not thousands of White men before him.
King links to an article that tells the story of Thurmond’s never-acknowledged black daughter. It was written by journalist Mary C. Curtis and published in the Washington Post in 2013.
Essie Mae Washington-Williams lived for 87 years. But, in her own words, she was never “completely free” until she could stand before the world and say out loud that Strom Thurmond, the one-time segregationist South Carolina senator, was her father. That was in 2003, after she had spent more than 70 years being denied what we all deserve – her true name and birthright. “In a way, my life began at 78, at least my life as who I really was,” Washington-Williams wrote in her life story. She has died.
Thurmond’s oldest child — born when he was a 22-year-old man and her mother, Carrie Butler, a 16-year-old black maid in his father’s house – had kept the senator’s secret, an open one rumored about but never revealed when he was alive because, she had said, “He trusted me, and I respected him.” As in the case of Thomas Jefferson, another successful southern politician who was father to black children, stories shared among African Americans were long disbelieved until they turned out to be true….
She remained silent even as he did his best to block civil rights legislation and uphold white supremacy. She and her mother occasionally visited Thurmond’s law office. He sometimes gave her money. But he never gave her his name.
In 2003, she could finally stop holding her breath and tell her truth. The Thurmond family didn’t dispute her, and her name was added to the list of children on a monument for the senator on the grounds of the South Carolina state house, joining the Confederate flag, a monument to the contributions of African Americans and statues honoring segregationists who did their worst but could not stop Washington-Williams from achieving.
Wanda Bailey, Washington-Williams’ daughter, said in The State newspaper that her mother was an inspiration. “She was there for us,” Bailey said. “She was a very giving person. She did everything she could not only for her children, but her grandchildren and great-grandchildren.”
In that, she proved a better person than the man who spent his own life denying her. I wonder if she was smiling a few years ago when she said she would become a member of the United Daughters of the Confederacy through Thurmond’s ancestral lines.
Facing internal conflicts most could only imagine, she became a mother, wife, teacher, and a daughter that Strom Thurmond or any father could be proud of.
South Carolina journalist Marilyn Thompson was credited with breaking the story of Strom Thurmond’s biracial daughter.

I remember reading about this years ago. It sounds as if old Strom didn’t change much—he always had an eye for the girls. (I lived in South Carolina as a child.) While the story didn’t surprise me at all, the national reaction did. It was overwhelmingly “Look at how the Thurmonds put Mrs. Williams’s name on the monument. Isn’t that nice? Such a lovely family.” There was almost no criticism of a racist, hypocritical molester who served in the United States Senate for decades.
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My initial processing of stories like Thurmond’s led me to conclude that men who thought black people were 3/5ths human and then slept with them, would self-describe as revolting- admonitions against that practice are in the Bible. Then, I realized that the White, male bigots think all women are less than human. Peter Thiel thinks women voting in a capitalistic democracy is an oxymoron. Old prejudice is the same as new. In what is simultaneously difficult to process is Thiel’s expectation of acceptancancee for the sexual path he takes
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The exact quotation from Thiel’s infamous Cato essay:
“The 1920s were the last decade in American history during which one could be genuinely optimistic about politics. Since 1920, the vast increase in welfare beneficiaries and the extension of the franchise to women—two constituencies that are notoriously tough for libertarians—have rendered the notion of “capitalist democracy” into an oxymoron.”
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Explains Thiel’s choice for Az. Senate, Blake Masters, who is in the news for comments about gun violence. Thiel and Masters should give their non-PC answers about Uvalde and Buffalo.
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In 2012, the Texas Tribune described Thiel as Ted Cruz’ largest, long time contributor.
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Why does this not surprise me?
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Thiel, as is a matter of public knowledge, is gay. His longing for the 1920s is bizarre.
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!!!!
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You’d think Thiel and other billionaires would long for an even earlier time, The Gilded Age, when Robber Barron’s ruled supreme with nothing and no one to stand in their way.
Teddy Roosevelt put a damper on at least some of the worst of their abuses.
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We haven’t had real antitrust regulation in this country for a long time now. Our national motto seems to be, “One ring to rule them all.”
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One trillionaire to rule them all
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In the Land of More-n-more, where the billionaires lie
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Haaaa!!!!
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Thiel is a mystery, a bigot and a bundle of contradictions.
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My theory is that he is a nihilist. Hates himself and hates the world and since he can’t take his riches with him, would rather get his jollies trying to make everyone else feel as miserable as he does.
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“Why is ‘do not rape’, not part of the 10 commandments?”
“Rape was less an assault against a woman and more of a property crime against her husband or father.”
People who promote mainstream American religion do no favors for women’s rights.
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Because the people who wrote these texts, at that time, believed that men’s power over women was absolute. Consider the story of the men who gathered outside Lot’s home. Lot has absolute authority to offer his daughters to the mob rather than violate the taboo against doing a discourtesy to guests. Utterly bizarre and revolting from a modern perspective. Unfortunately, we have a lot of Repugnicans in this country who don’t have anything remotely approaching a modern perspective.
“Before they had gone to bed, all the men from every part of the city of Sodom—both young and old—surrounded the house. They called to Lot, ‘Where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us so that we can have sex with them.’
“Lot went outside to meet them and shut the door behind him and said, ‘No, my friends. Don’t do this wicked thing. Look, I have two daughters who have never slept with a man. Let me bring them out to you, and you can do what you like with them. But don’t do anything to these men, for they have come under the protection of my roof.’” –Genesis 19:4-8, NIV
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Thanks, Bob.
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Note that in this story from Genesis, Lot is the good guy–the one whom the Lord finds worthy of saving.
Revolting
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This is really, really, really primitive stuff,
you know, a primitive as is, say, a speech by Donald Trump or Ted Cruz
and 55 percent of the U.S. population believes that that library of primitive superstition and mythology known as the Bible is inerrant and infallible.
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The Ten Commandments do not allow rape in all cases. There are restrictions — albeit very limited.
If we are to believe that the Commandments were handed down by God, then according to God ,a man may rape any woman he wishes as long as HE is single.
Once he is married, the Commandment forbidding “coveting thy neighbors wife” would presumably kick in — and forbid rape of a married woman, although rape of a single woman would still be allowed.
And since adultery only covers voluntary sex, that commandment would presumably not forbid rape.
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But I do not pretend to be an expert on God’s Original Intent.
So maybe we should ask the Pope about this.
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I guess “thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s wife” would also forbid a single man from raping a married woman, at least if the rape was done out of lust.
But as I said, I am no expert.
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So, I guess what God really said is a man is free to rape a woman as long as SHE is single.
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Religious rapists need decision flowcharts?
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I watch ‘Finding Your Roots’ on PBS with Dr. Henry Louis Gates. The show is fascinating as it is both a lesson in history and genealogy. Gates examines the family history of celebrity guests, some of whom are black. When the ancestry of black guests goes back to slave times, it is often difficult to trace the results as slave names are not on the census records. Sometimes, Gates uses a DNA detective who can figure out paternity by comparing a guest’s DNA to the results in the DNA data bank, and some of the results lead to white ancestry. Some of the black celebrities go to meet and get to know their white ancestors. In the US most of our black population is about 20% white according to Dr. Gates. Any nation with a history of colonialism will find similar results. History is fact, even the parts we would like to forget. Some of the white guests are highly embarrassed when Gates traces the family back to being slave holders. Slavery is part of the shameful legacy of this country. We should not repress this fact. Even post slavery there are numerous examples of wealthy white men like Thurmond that take advantage of black household help. We should learn from the mistakes of the past and work to be better.
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At auctions of enslaved persons, the auctioneers would hold the bidding on the girls and young women until the end of the day. These commanded the highest prices, and waiting until the end of the day kept interest in the ongoing auction keen. Such were the predatory “morals” of the “honorable Christian gentlemen” of the antebellum South.
There’s your noble lost cause for you.
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Many Republicans would rather forget slavery and way this country treated indigenous people. Instead, we should learn and vow to not repeat these same mistakes in the future.
Years ago we visited Charleston. When we were on our way to dinner, we walked past Strom Thurmand’s office in a fancy town home. He was one of the biggest racists in office, and it seemed incongruous that he could serve in the Senate.
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When my stepdaughter was getting ready to graduate from high school, she participated in one of those school trips to Washington, DC, and her group was invited to visit Strom Thurmand’s office. She told me that the office was filled with very young female interns wearing very short skirts. Thurman was, at the time–I don’t know–about 140 years old.
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In addition to the desire for concubines, the reason women brought high prices was that they were a perpetual source of more slaves which could then be sold.
Jefferson called it the “4% rule” whereby his human capital increased in value every year by 4% based purely on the children produced by his female slaves.
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A brief overview of ancient Hebrew law and custom re marriage and adultery: http://www.womenintheancientworld.com/women%20and%20the%20law%20in%20ancient%20israel.htm
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I would like for Kindred by Octavia Butler to be taught in every school at some grade. I have taught it in Upward Bound classes to young high schoolers and in an African-American Lit class in college. I had to repeatedly warn not to let out any spoilers because the students could not help reading ahead. This book I think does better than history books to tell what it must have been like for a black girl/woman growing up in the South. If there are others, I would like to know.
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Click to access hartman-2008.pdf
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Major trigger warnings here. This essay is not for the faint of heart or stomach. But it’s the truth.
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Not necessarily disagreeing with you, Chuck, although on second thought, I guess I am. It’s the “to be taught in every school as some grade” part. I get it. But in my conception of good teaching, the teacher would make the final decision about what his or her class would read. I have come to the conclusion that any bill/legislation requiring this or that to be taught are just another attack on the professionalism of teachers.
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But Mr. Jordan is right that one could do much, much worse than to choose this GREAT book for his or her high-school kids to read. Ofc, the Republican racists (sorry about the redundancy) would then respond by burning down the next school board meeting.
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You are right. Every teacher should have that decision.
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There is a subtlety here: Chuck said “I would like for Kindred …to be taught in every school”, not that it should be mandated.
I would like for every person who opposes an assault weapons ban to look at the images of the bloodsoaked children and teachers blown apart by the AR15 in Uvalde, but that does not necessarily mean I think it should be mandated (although I think it should)
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The following is not intended to distract from good motives and good book choices.
There are warnings about a genre of slave narrative that has “prudent details to generate an initial interest.” There is an audience of “white readers (including some white supremacists) for whom stories are titillating and sensation-alistic.”
A woman teaching the subject may find herself less under a microscope?
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I think that you meant prurient; I make this mistake all the time.
Hollywood directors do this a lot, Linda, but Ms. Butler can hardly be accused of it.
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I make the mistake, all the time, of typing one word when I mean another–However instead of whoever, for example.
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Octopuses have separate brains in each of their tentacles. I sometimes think that I have separate ones in each of my fingers. lol
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Thanks for the correction. Too bad you aren’t the intermediary between the keyboard and autocorrect
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I make the mistake, all the time, of typing one word when I mean another–However instead of whoever, for example.”
I make the opposite mistake, all the time, of typing another word when I mean one — whoever instead of however, for example.
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Colbert King has been writing insightful and important columns for many decades, with far too little notice. Thank you for linking to this one.
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In other news, the DOJ just charged The Proud Boys with seditious conspiracy, a charge also leveled against the Oath Keepers. Meanwhile, the former president of the United States, who violated his oath of office and committed treason by running MULTIPLE SIMULTANOUS ATTEMPTS TO INTERFERE WITH AND OVERTHROW THE RESULTS OF THE 2020 ELECTION is living like a raja, a free man.
This fact makes a mockery of the fundamental principle of Equal Justice Under Law.
The Teflon Don 2.0.
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Thurmond is a very strom argument for term limits. And for Terminix, too.
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Another Senator, Jesse Helms, is described at Mother Jones, May/June 1995. The article says, “To hear conservatives tell it…Helms is a personal friend of Jesus Christ”. Carl Anderson, former head of the Knights of Columbus, was a legislative aide to Helms.
The Knights of Columbus shrine in D.C. welcomed Trump for a photo op on the day after
the infamous walk about in which Trump brandished an upside down Bible.
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