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August 14, 2004

Prejudice

Victor Davis Hanson speculates at the hatred directed toward President Bush and points out how rare it is to find a conversative southerner on a presidential ticket.

In fact, we have not seen a twanged president or vice president who was conservative in over a half-century. The previous rule? A Lyndon Johnson, Jimmy Carter, Lloyd Bentsen, Bill Clinton, Al Gore, or John Edwards could serve or run for executive national office only on a simple triangulating premise — they offered moderate and regional balance to Yankee liberalism and yet did not in the slightest scare the rest of the country with images of a redneck South.

Any unrepentant conservatives from the south — former Democrats like a John Connolly or a Phil Graham — who sought the presidency quickly faded. Mr. Bush is unusual — an adopted Texan who reflects the attitudes and beliefs of most Southerners, and who counts on real political affinity rather than mere regional loyalty for support south of the Mason-Dixon Line. Nixon-Lodge, Goldwater-Miller, Nixon-Agnew, Ford-Dole, Reagan-Bush, Bush-Quayle, Dole-Kemp, Bush-Cheney — not a Southern conservative Republican to be found on any ticket, a trend that surely keeps Karl Rove's wheels spinning each night.

Canada has its own geographical prejudices and conservative politicians who are "automatically under a cloud of suspicion"... I am looking at you Alberta! It seems odd given the lack of a Canadian Mason-Dixon line or brutal civil war. So where does the prejudice come from?

Cross-posted to The Shotgun.

Posted by the Flea at August 14, 2004 10:02 AM | TrackBack
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