
The
Soft Bigotry of Historical Amnesia
Democrats
abandoned segregation but never entirely abandoned paternalism.
Brian C.
Joondeph | June 1, 2026 www.americanthinker.com
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/06/the_soft_bigotry_of_historical_amnesia.html
For decades, Democrats and their media allies have aggressively branded
Republicans as the party of racism.
Support voter ID? Racist.
Oppose affirmative action? Racist.
Criticize DEI programs? Racist.
Advocate merit over quotas? Racist.
The accusation is so persistent that many Americans simply accept it as fact
without asking a simple question:
Which political party actually built the system of racial segregation in
America?
The answer is remarkably clear.
Image generated by ChatGPT
Jim Crow laws were Democrat initiatives.
Poll taxes were enacted by Democrats. Segregation was defended by Democrat
governors, mayors, sheriffs, and legislators throughout the South.
The Ku Klux Klan was founded
by Democrats and operated for decades as the violent enforcement arm of
Democrat political power in the post-Civil War South.
Bull Connor, the Birmingham official who unleashed police dogs and fire
hoses on civil rights protesters, was
a Democrat.
George Wallace, who famously declared “segregation now, segregation
tomorrow, segregation forever,” was
a Democrat.
Robert Byrd, a former KKK recruiter
who later became one of the Senate’s most influential Democrats, served until
2010 and was praised by many Democrat leaders upon his death. His career is a
reminder that the historical links between the Democratic Party and racial
politics are not ancient history from the nineteenth century.
It was a Republican president, Abraham Lincoln, who fought a war to end
slavery.
These are not disputed facts. They are history.
The question is not whether these things happened. The question is why so
many Americans have forgotten them.
Modern Democrats speak as though Republicans created segregation while
Democrats spent the last two centuries marching beside Martin Luther
King, Jr., the latter of whom, by the way, was a lifelong registered
Republican.
Even the Civil Rights Act of 1964 tells a more complicated story than the
modern political narrative allows. Republicans cast a higher percentage of
votes for the legislation than Democrats did, while Southern Democrats mounted
the fiercest opposition,
including a lengthy Senate filibuster.
None of this means Republicans were historically perfect or that racism
existed only within a single political party. History is rarely that simple.
But the modern caricature, Democrats as racial liberators and Republicans as
racial oppressors, collapses under scrutiny.
More importantly, it ignores an uncomfortable truth:
The Democratic Party may have abandoned overt segregation, but it never
fully abandoned paternalism.
It simply modernized it.
In 2000, President George W. Bush famously warned
against “the soft bigotry of low expectations.”
He was speaking primarily about education, but the phrase captures a broader
problem. The assumption that certain groups cannot succeed without special
accommodations, reduced standards, or government intervention is still a form
of condescension, even when wrapped in the language of compassion.
Consider voter ID laws.
Democrats routinely argue that requiring identification to vote is somehow
discriminatory because minorities — particularly black Americans — supposedly
face unusual difficulty obtaining identification.
The implication is strikingly condescending.
Black Americans can obtain driver’s licenses. They board airplanes. They cash
checks. They open bank accounts. They purchase alcohol. They check into hotels.
They enter government buildings and office complexes requiring identification.
Yet we are expected to believe they are uniquely incapable of obtaining an
ID to vote.
That is not respect. It is paternalism. And condescension.
And it is remarkably similar to the underlying assumptions that drove
earlier eras of Democrat racial politics — the belief that minorities require
special treatment because they cannot compete or function under ordinary
societal standards.
The rhetoric has changed. The assumptions remain.
Today’s progressives rarely express overt racial prejudice. Instead, they
promote a gentler, more socially acceptable form of condescension.
Minorities, we are told, cannot succeed without racial preferences.
Students cannot compete without lowered standards and DEI bureaucracies.
Economic disparities must always be attributed to systemic oppression rather
than the complex interplay of culture, family structure, education, economics,
and personal choices.
Government must permanently intervene because equal rules supposedly lead to
unequal outcomes.
This worldview traps minorities in perpetual victimhood while casting
progressive elites as enlightened protectors.
It is less overt than Bull Connor standing in a schoolhouse door.
But it still rests on diminished expectations.
Ironically, many minority voters themselves reject these assumptions.
Polling repeatedly showsstrong
support among black and Hispanic voters for voter ID requirements. Many
immigrant families strongly support
merit-based education and oppose race-conscious admissions policies that
disadvantage their children.
But progressive activists insist they know better.
That is because modern racial politics is not fundamentally about
empowerment. It is about political dependency.
A population encouraged to see itself primarily through the lens of
grievance is easier to mobilize politically. Identity politics keeps Americans
divided into categories of oppressor and oppressed while allowing political
elites to position themselves as moral saviors.
And maintaining that narrative requires historical revisionism.
If Americans fully understood which party defended segregation, imposed Jim
Crow, opposed civil rights legislation, and built much of the racist
infrastructure of the old South, the simplistic modern narrative would
collapse.
So history must be rewritten.
Democrats must become the eternal heroes of civil rights while Republicans
are cast as permanent villains.
The media, academia, and progressive activists have spent decades
reinforcing this inversion.
But facts still matter.
The party of slavery was the Democratic Party.
The party of Jim Crow was the Democratic Party.
The party of Bull Connor was the Democratic Party.
And many of the paternalistic assumptions embedded in modern progressive
politics bear an uncomfortable resemblance to the “soft bigotry of low
expectations” that George W. Bush warned about more than two decades ago.
Why has this history been forgotten, and what modern political purpose does
that forgetting serve?
Bull Connor’s fire hoses are gone.
Jim Crow’s poll taxes are gone.
But the assumption that minorities cannot compete without special treatment
remains very much alive.
The language changed.
The politics changed.
Yet the soft bigotry of low expectations endures.