July 18, 2020

"Representative John Lewis, a son of sharecroppers and an apostle of nonviolence who was bloodied at Selma and across the Jim Crow South in the historic struggle for racial equality..."

"... and who then carried a mantle of moral authority into Congress, died on Friday. He was 80.... He was among the original 13 Freedom Riders, the Black and white activists who challenged segregated interstate travel in the South in 1961. He was a founder and early leader of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, which coordinated lunch-counter sit-ins. He helped organize the March on Washington, where Dr. King was the main speaker, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Mr. Lewis led demonstrations against racially segregated restrooms, hotels, restaurants, public parks and swimming pools, and he rose up against other indignities of second-class citizenship. At nearly every turn he was beaten, spat upon or burned with cigarettes. He was tormented by white mobs and absorbed body blows from law enforcement. On March 7, 1965, he led one of the most famous marches in American history. In the vanguard of 600 people demanding the voting rights they had been denied, Mr. Lewis marched partway across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., into a waiting phalanx of state troopers in riot gear. Ordered to disperse, the protesters silently stood their ground. The troopers responded with tear gas and bullwhips and rubber tubing wrapped in barbed wire. In the melee, known as Bloody Sunday, a trooper cracked Mr. Lewis’s skull with a billy club, knocking him to the ground, then hit him again when he tried to get up."

The NYT reports.

85 comments:

Tina Trent said...

I knew John Lewis. Lived in his district for 20 years and did projects with him. The citizens of his district experienced 20 Pettis Bridges or worse every single day and he never gave a shit. He wandered around collecting awards for being persecuted fifty-plus years ago as little old lady constituents were mowed down in the streets, cowered behind barred windows and doors, put their babies in bathtubs in case bullets came in the windows, and buried their children and grandchildren to black-on-black crime while Lewis cashed in. Every vote he cast was pro-criminal and anti-crime victim as people's blood ran in his district's streets. He also betrayed the black working class -- the backbone of that district -- by supporting rampant illegal immigration. I once watched a bunch of black hardhats run him off a construction site after they were replaced with Mexican illegals, this on a federally funded project. And in later years he accused his white constituents of being klansmen on several occasions.

He was a fraud.

Big Mike said...

All that is true, but the problem is that he spent the rest of his life guilt-tripping whites over what had happened to him 60 years ago, and pretending that a country that had moved on was still somehow enmeshed in Jim Crow.

gspencer said...

An Old Guard grifter passes on. Plenty more to take his place.

rwnutjob said...

I Respect Rep. Lewis' marching for equality 54 years ago, but i don't think I'll be able to stomach his Canonization by virtue signaling woke leftists in 2020.

Marcus Bressler said...

Too bad he became a racist in his later years. His Tea Party lie was pure evil

THEOLDMAN

mezzrow said...

The message I anticipate hearing: Nothing has changed in the interim since Selma and the Freedom Rider days, which is why John Lewis spent decades being honored by America as a member of Congress from the state of Georgia, which is known by all as a a cesspool of racism and prejudice. The lesson of all this is that white supremacy must be wiped out once and for all, to honor John Lewis.

Rest In Peace, John Lewis.

I hope he was honored by the non-violent torching of the police station in Minneapolis and the hamburger joint in Atlanta. Will we look up in another hundred years and see this nation still fighting over our seemingly unhealable racial wound? I think we had more hope in the Sixties than we hold today.

Clyde said...

Rep. Lewis was heroic 57 years ago in peacefully protesting for racial justice at a time when America actually was systemically racist. Nowadays, people violently protest against an America that hasn’t been systemically racist for a long time. Go figure. Rep. Lewis has been dining out on his reputation for decades, though. May he rest in more peace as an “icon” than other American icons have received during the current iconoclasm.

The Crack Emcee said...

See what you can be when you let people almost kill you.

James K said...

Not to speak ill of the dead, but what the hell. He squandered whatever "moral authority" he had when he slandered Tea Party rally participants, claiming they were shouting racial epithets when the late Andrew Breitbart's videos subsequently proved (as much as a negative can be proved) that they had not.

Unknown said...

A mee too guy

Tear down his statues

Swede said...

Wasn't he that guy who wandered through a Tea Party event and heard them call him racist names?

But then none of the 60 video cams following him picked up a single thing? That guy?

Yeah, thanks for your service and God speed.

MayBee said...

He was a very brave man, and I'm glad he got to lead a long successful life.

donald said...

Ms Trent absolutely nails Lewis. Nails him.
I’ve lived in Georgia most of my life. I don’t recognize the place Mezzrow is describing.

Browndog said...

As a member of the black elites that have kept his people dependent, uneducated, angry and violent for two generations, we now have to live with the fruits of his labor.

He can kiss my ass.

Doug said...

Does his family receive his congressional pension benefits?

Doug said...

I would just as soon he had retired, got indicted, or got beaten in an election by a conservative - but hey, gone is gone.

gilbar said...

serious question
as we all Correctly know Racism equals Prejudice plus Power

so, WHO was the Bigger racist?
obviously we were Both Prejudiced (who the hell ain't?). But who had More POWER?
ME? a poor retired fisherman?
or Rep John Lewis?
who created both President Jo Biden AND The National Museum of African American History and Culture

A Voice of Reason said...

Unfortunately, he did the very opposite of "sticking the landing" in his final years. He was a scowling, bitter, ignorant, mean, and nasty man. Much like McCain.

mezzrow said...

I don’t recognize the place Mezzrow is describing.

I'm just forwarding the narrative. I'm not in Georgia, but I might as well be here in Duval.

Append the /sarc/ where you will.

MadisonMan said...

A brave man who did what was right way back when.

RNB said...

donald: Mezzrow was being sarcastic in his first paragraph.

traditionalguy said...

John Lewis occupied a unique position in Atlanta. No matter how much race fight forever BS he churned out for the Dems he was always admired and respected here. He really did wear MLK’s mantle and he wore it well. And that too took courage. Good job, John.

Sebastian said...

I don't think I have ever read a story about Lewis in which Selma wasn't mentioned.

PB said...

Just because a person does a good or brave thing, even many, that person is still not entitled to a pass on bad or cowardly things. Eventually the cow can be milked dry.

PB said...

Just because a person does a good or brave thing, even many, that person is still not entitled to a pass on bad or cowardly things. Eventually the cow can be milked dry.

daskol said...

He had greatness in him, and he earned tremendous moral authority for his Civil Rights Era exploits, but what exactly did he do with it in the intervening decades in Congress? Whatever he was as a young man, he became the establishment, the elite, and he pissed all over the people protesting his establishment, including lying about his treatment at the hands of Tea Party protesters. From a brilliant early life to a corrupt swamp creature--he's a cautionary tale about people who trade on their past to gain entry into the halls of power and lucre.

Gunner said...

It's pretty gross looking at Meghan McCains twitter praising this old jerk when he accused McCain of racism in 2008. You would think the woman who never shuts up about her dad would remember that.

RichAndSceptical said...

Has a Republican ever "carried a mantle of moral authority into Congress"?

Lyle Smith said...

I have to agree with Tina. He done good in his youth, but the power and wealth he obtained ultimately corrupted him. It's totally believable MLK has already done a drive by on him up in heaven.

BudBrown said...

Lester Maddox unavailable for comment.

Howard said...

Being a Black conservative, Crack must be a Gemini near the Taurus cusp with Mercury in retrograde.

Francisco D said...

Who ya gonna believe - Tina Trent or the MSM?

Easy choice. I am going with Tina.

wendybar said...

So are we going to have another whole week of funerals with Reverend Al at the helm telling us how racist we are, and then blaming us for spreading Covid, whilst they are congregating in huge numbers for the 50 funerals that will be televised?? (at least that many to keep up with George Floyds numerous funerals)

wendybar said...

"Most accusations of Tea Party racism are based on John Lewis’s accusation—dutifully repeated by most of the media without any skepticism—that someone had called him ugly names and spit on him when he and Nancy Pelosi strolled through protesters in front of the Capitol. Although there were cameras everywhere that historic day, no one was ever able to find any evidence to back up his claim." https://thefederalist.com/2019/08/28/left-cant-stop-lying-tea-party/

Ray - SoCal said...

Is Mr. Lewis going to get three funerals as John McCain and George Floyd did?

n.n said...

Wasn't he that guy who wandered through a Tea Party event and heard them call him racist names?

But then none of the 60 video cams following him picked up a single thing? That guy?


Yes, the diversity racket, in progress.

Racism equals Prejudice plus Power

Racism is a subset of diversity dogma that denies individual dignity, denies individual conscience, practices affirmative discrimination, establishes color quotas, and judges people in color blocs.

As a member of the black elites that have kept his people dependent

An elite son of Swaziland, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Somalia, etc., maybe. Or a freshly indoctrinated Marxist protege with hopes and dreams to establish minority capital and control by any means necessary.

Ken B said...

I didn’t like a lot of his politics but he did a great thing. What do we do with imperfect people who do a great thing when we want to commemorate that great thing? Sometimes we build a statue.

mockturtle said...

"The NYT reports." Sorry, but that last sentence negates any credibility the story might have had.

sunsong said...

a truly great and good man. rest in power John Lewis

wbfjrr2 said...

Given that it’s the NYT, I assume what they say about his participation in the Selma event has been inflated. Even if true, so an angry young black man got smacked in the head by a racist cop.

That’s it. That’s his sole, lifelong contribution to blacks. Just like all the other blood sucking “black leaders”, he got rich while doing nothing to solve the problems, both external and self made, in the black population, including especially those in his own district.

Good riddance.

madAsHell said...

Why is the Congressional Black Congress not a racist organization?

Paco Wové said...

For some people, it's been 1965 for 55 years now.

William said...

I'm sure that he was a decent man and deserving of most of the praise that will be heaped upon him....Here's something I don't understand: Why is white oppression so ennobling? In Liberia, they marched the members of the deposed government naked through the streets and then publicly executed them. Why didn't these murdered government ministers achieve the beatific status of American civil rights protesters?....There's no shortage of oppressed people in Africa. Why don't any of them attain the status of Nelson Mandela? What super power do whites possess that make them so capable of elevating the struggles of Black people into holy crusades? Conversely, what is so lacking in Black people that diminishes their struggles against Black despots into such futile, endless riots.

Bilwick said...

It would be difficult to choose the stupidest member of congress, but Lewis was certainly the stupidest-looking member of Congress. If you think that's unfair, take a look at some photos taken of him in, say, the past ten years, and the guy looks barely sentient.

I'm also not that impressed with his "non-violence." If you're a statist, you're simply delegating the State to be your goon, your "enforcer," your hit man.

bagoh20 said...

You got to admit that it would be great if for the rest of your life people would constantly acknowledge the one brave good thing you did in your youth, regardless of what bad you had done since. That's an awesome gig, and it seems to be a kind of another part of Black privilege.

Nichevo said...

Clyde said...
Rep. Lewis was heroic 57 years ago in peacefully protesting for racial justice at a time when America actually was systemically racist.



Nothing heroic about him, really. Heroism is not when you save yourself, heroism is when you save others. Black people can really only be heroic by defending white people (or Hispanics, Asians, etc).

It is white people who aspire to heroism by defending blacks. It was not Chaney, but Goodman and Schwerner, who were the heroes in Mississippi.

Lewis and MLK and all the others were really merely self-interested special pleaders.

Oh Yea said...

"Does his family receive his congressional pension benefits?"

His spouse would. Assume his his children are adults and will not receive anything unless they are disabled.

M Alazon said...

"rubber tubes wrapped with barbed wire"

Anyone got a picture of such a thing?

Gojuplyr831@gmail.com said...

You'll notice that nowhere in the obit does it mention that all the violence and racism he was the victim of 57 years ago came from Democrats.

Readering said...

AA should just stay away for posting about racial politics for a while. Comments too depressing.

gspencer said...

Common theme among the comments - they have hit upon the truth = John Lewis was a POS who accomplished nothing for blacks but who accomplished alot for John Lewis.

Another Democrat who would leave Congress the Democrat way - feet first.

Gahrie said...

You'll notice that nowhere in the obit does it mention that all the violence and racism he was the victim of 57 years ago came from Democrats.

That's the part I have never understood. It's like the Black population of the US developed Stockholm Syndrome in the 1930's and have never recovered.

Gahrie said...

AA should just stay away for posting about racial politics for a while. Comments too depressing.

Funny, I've found the actual events of the last two months more depressing.

wendybar said...

Readering said...
AA should just stay away for posting about racial politics for a while. Comments too depressing.

7/18/20, 10:27 AM

But just HOW did we get here?? Because of people like John Lewis calling Americans who wanted Government oversight, and less taxes RACISTS because there was a black president. THEY started this war, and it is not going to end pretty for any of us.....

Browndog said...

He really did wear MLK’s mantle and he wore it well. And that too took courage. Good job, John.

Tea Party spit on me and called me a n*gger. In public, in front of everyone.

-John "Courage" Lewis

Temujin said...

John Lewis took his important place in the history of racial justice and used it for the last 3 decades of his life to bludgeon people who simply had policy differences with him. And he would not just disagree with them. He'd spit the moniker of 'racist' on them. Racist. White supremacist. Dog Whistles. He had a whole bag of sticky phrases he'd throw out at people to stick on them.

He would use is large voice, his loud pastor cadence to denounce people who had policy or idea differences with him. He'd call them racist. Bigoted. White supremacists. As he got older, he got looser with it, calling entire large groups of people nothinng but white supremacists, simply for the crime of not agreeing with Barack Obama.

There was much to admire about the young John Lewis. But the old politician who was John Lewis used his place in race to divide and hurt many, many people. I don't like to speak ill of the dead, so I'll stop here. I wish him peace, wherever it is that we all end up. And I do hope it's not as an audience member of a cable news show.

Dude1394 said...

Tina Trent and yet your friends and neighbors sent him back to congress for decades. Sooner or later you have to realize he wasn’t the problem, you and your fellow neighbors were.

steve uhr said...

Talk about renaming the bridge after Lewis. Pettus was a confederate general and a KKK Grand Dragon following the war. Lynchings were quite popular during Reconstruction and no doubt he took part in his share.

I’m sure there will be lots of hand-wringing in Alabama, The White House, and on this blog about taking his name down.

Joe Smith said...

Fuck him and the horse he rode in on.

He dined out his entire life on stories of what Democrats did to him and other blacks in the South decades ago, and then he turns around and becomes one of them.

This was a man who falsely claimed that Tea Party members shouted the N-word at him at a rally in 2010. Andrew Breitbart offered a $100,000 donation to the United Negro College Fund if anyone could prove it (it was widely covered by news and others). That reward, of course, went unpaid.

He spent his entire career shouting 'racist!' to anyone he disagreed with.

He spent three decades suckling the government teat. The only positive thing I can say about him is, unlike Maxine Waters, he didn't turn his office into piles of cash. But that's what you're expected to do, so no points given.

tsquared said...

But on a positive note, maybe we will get a Representative that wants to help the community.

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

I guess he wont be declining Trump's 2nd term inauguration ceremony.

#TooSoon?

JAORE said...

"In the melee, known as Bloody Sunday, a trooper cracked Mr. Lewis’s skull with a billy club, knocking him to the ground, then hit him again when he tried to get up."

Horrifying. And the hatred of that and similar acts helped lead to a sea change in the country.

Today we see protestors whacking cops in the head with clubs. The get free w/o bail and little to no condemnation from the left.

JPS said...

I met Rep. Lewis briefly. I told him it was an honor, which I'm sure he heard all the time, but I meant it and he was gracious. I have a friend and colleague who, when he needed a congressman's help, found Lewis' staff responsive and effective, which is something.

I couldn't support him politically. Others mention the Tea Party story. And of course he said his friend John McCain reminded him, in late 2008, of George Wallace, but why should I hold a grudge when McCain didn't? No, for me it was the ad he cut in 2006 on behalf of the Democrat in the race for a seat on the county commission:

“On Nov. 7 we face the most dangerous situation we ever have,” Mr. Lewis said in the advertisement. “If you think fighting off dogs and water hoses in the ’60s was bad, imagine if we sit idly by and let the right-wing Republicans take control of the Fulton County Commission.”

“Your very life,” Mr. Lewis said in the advertisement’s conclusion, “may depend on it.”

On the composition of the Fulton County Commission.

I don't understand him cheapening his very real heroism this way. Sure, he got his skull cracked by officers of a state determined to keep denying him rights that were always his, but I guess that pales next to the prospect of one more Republican on a county commission.

Still, he was very brave where and when it mattered most. For that he will always have my admiration, and gratitude. RIP.

donald said...

Gotcha Mezzrow.

Also, nope it was Lewis. He was the bad guy. A truly sniveling evil little man.

Josephbleau said...

“Tea Party spit on me and called me a n*gger. In public, in front of everyone.“

Honestly, when you find something that works, you do tend to go back to it often.

Bilwick said...

I'd like to walk back, a little, my statement that Lewis was the stupidest-looking member of Congress. After reading about his skull getting cracked, I think that might explain his barely-sentient look. I'm sure if I perused an anthology of his statements and opinions, I would find nothing but erudition, accuracy, and Aristotelian logic.

CharlieL said...

Wellstone funeral, anyone?

gadfly said...

"Try this. If a lot of African-Americans back in the sixties had guns and the legal right to use them for self-defense, do you think they woulda needed Selma? I don't know. I'm just asking. If John Lewis, who says he was beat upside the head, if John Lewis had had a gun, would he have been beat upside the head on the bridge." Rush Limbaugh, 01/22/2013.

John Lewis responded that the civil rights movement was non-violent, thanks to Martin Luther King - but the congressman obviously forgot that MLK told a national audience that "a riot is the language of the unheard."

Tina Trent said...

Hey Unknown: I'm impressed that you know how I voted. Who am I going to vote for in the next election, I wonder.

OTOH the alternative to John Lewis was always this nutcase Al Sharpton acolyte who literally welded himself to the doors of the SCLC in an impotent and hilarious effort to seize control of that group of mostly extremely elderly civil rights icons.

They left him there a good bit before cutting him loose.

Drago said...

Steve Uhr: "I’m sure there will be lots of hand-wringing in Alabama, The White House, and on this blog about taking his name down."

So what's your reason for supporting the decapitation of Virgin Mary statues and burning churches again?

steve uhr said...

Drago. My reason is I don’t support any unlawful destruction of public or private property. You have a terrible habit of assuming the worst about everyone who disagrees with you about anything. The world and people are more complicated than that.

wbfjrr2 said...

He got hit on the head once long ago and hasn't done anything since, yet he's a hero.

My Marine colleagues fought in many battles, lost limbs, sight, even their lives, yet this bottom feeder who did absolutely nothing to progress race relations or improve the lives of his constituency was a moral compass?

Good riddance. Someone else will have to lead the next racist boycott of Trump's re-inauguration.

Inga said...

“AA should just stay away for posting about racial politics for a while. Comments too depressing.”

Comments too revealing.

traditionalguy said...

When Judging John Lewis and MLK for their Civil Rights struggle, we White southerners honor them for starting the fight that set us free from the insanity of Segregation that we all knew was evil. But we needed a teacher like King and his brave young men to arouse In us the courage to act and end it.

The KKK terrorist cult first attacked the Southern whites who opposed the Segregation and its evils. Second they attacked Catholics and Jews. Last on their list were the blacks we were told to fear. So Lewis’s greatness was showing us what courage to fight Segregation looked like.

Narayanan said...

USA Today slips in the Truth

Rep. John R. Lewis, the civil rights icon whose fight for racial justice began in the Jim Crow south and ended [I wonder how many will catch the nuance between "ended" and "continued'] in the halls of Congress, died Friday night.

Narayanan said...

CharlieL said...
Wellstone funeral, anyone?
------------=========
So another funeral? will Trump be asked to stay away?

walter said...

“I don’t see this president-elect as a legitimate president,” he said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” in January 2017
--
Sad!
We still have John Kasich.
His dad was...you know the thing!

Josephbleau said...

I think the biggest problem in politics is that old old farts can't just retire. They have to keep the sweet sweet cash coming in for their families. Polosi was a descendant of Baltimore politico crime royalty and can't let go. Biden's family still needs the money. At least buy a young guy like Clinton or Obama to be your young proxy. Both parties need to develop young people and not kill them in the cradle as threats like Hillary did. There is something to be said for a Trump who has enough money he can't be corrupted, at least by cash or sex,(Milena cured him), like the Kennedy's being rich enough so that cash corruption is not necessary (but for Teddy's sex not so much).

America's bluebloods don't follow the same rules as the upper class. What do elites call a Harvard grad? The help.

roesch/voltaire said...

Who is Tina Trent, I have a hard time finding any profile that fits her claims, just asking.

Josephbleau said...

"85 shot, 24 fatally, over Chicago’s most violent weekend of 2020, May 29, 2020" this is the most violent day since 1990." Murders up 50% this year.

If black lives matter then why are black people killing black people all over the place Is the fact that in almost all murders of black people the killer is black relevant? Mayor Lightfoot is not going to defund police.

Etienne said...

You have to wonder why, a man who was so beaten down by the Democratic Party, would want to become one.

You have to wonder...

I once got into a fight with two Protestants. I can tell you that I never once considered becoming one. No sir. I have my pride.

Nichevo said...


roesch/voltaire said...
Who is Tina Trent, I have a hard time finding any profile that fits her claims, just asking.

7/18/20, 7:21 PM


Now don't be jealous, Howie, looks like Tina has her own stalker too. This one looks serious.

effinayright said...

“Read the Republican contract,” Lewis said on the House floor on March 21, 1995. “They’re coming for our children. They’re coming for the poor. They’re coming for the sick, the elderly and the disabled.” Lewis’s comment paraphrased a famous passage by Rev. Martin Niemöller, who was in the resistance against the Nazis.

*******Benedict Arnold mattered a lot, at Ticonderoga.

Then he became a traitor.

John Lewis just dined out an enriched himself over the years.

He didn't do a
THINGT for "his peo

Big Mike said...

Drago. My reason is I don’t support any unlawful destruction of public or private property.

@steve uhr, you support the people who do support those actions; it makes . you are as guilty as they are. Now go back to defaming the kids from Covington Catholic.

Bilwick said...

"You have to wonder why, a man who was so beaten down by the Democratic Party, would want to become one."

Indeed; but then that opens up a much broader question why the groups who historically have been the greatest victims of statism (Jews, Blacks, Gays, artists and writers) have become the most loyal spear-carriers for the State and will almost always fall in lockstep to back the more statist candidate in any political race. I see it as a kind of delayed Stockholm Syndrome, but that seems more of a description than a root-cause explanation.