Jesse Helms, John McCain and the Mark of the White Hands
Jesse Helms was a segregationist, and a nasty one at that.
Long after his contemporaries abandoned old "Jim Crow," Helms kept playing the race card when it served him politically. And when he was not picking on African-Americans, he picked on ethnic minorities, immigrants, trade unionists and gays and lesbians.
While Helms served thirty years in the Senate, his tenure on Capitol Hill was never so historically significant as his crude pursuit of power and the unsettling lengths to which he went to retain it. "He'll be remembered, in part, for the strong racist streak that articulated his politics and almost all of his political campaigns - they were racialized in the most negative ways," recalled Kerry Haynie, a political science professor at Duke University.
Helms' death Friday, at age 86, brings America a small step closer to the end of the antebellum era in our politics that saw the men who had battled to deny the franchise to millions of Americans because of the color of their skin -- and who fought even more aggressively to deny adequate education, nutrition and health care to African-American children -- make the easy transition to leadership positions in the "modern" Republican Party.
Helms was not always a Republican. As a young man of the Old South, he had no interest in joining an organization that, well into the 20th century, proudly referred to itself as "the party of Lincoln."
Only when the Grand Old Party adopted a southern accent and replaced references to the Great Emancipator with grumping about "racial quotas" did Helms make the switch to the party of Ronald Reagan, George Bush and John McCain. He brought along the symbols and sounds of the "Jim Crow" Democrats, insisting that Republican events celebrate the memory of Robert E. Lee and encouraging the singing of "Dixie" at party rallies.
Helms was not just any Republican, however. He was an essential player in the remaking of the party. With his National Congressional Club, a money-raising machine that helped forge what came to be called "the New Right" within the GOP, Helms aide Carter Wrenn says the senator forced "the realignment of the Republican party."
"You can't really separate the growth of the Republican party from Jesse's career," explained Wrenn.
The wily Richard Nixon was one of the first Republicans to recognize Helms' utility.
The North Carolinian was welcomed into the GOP by then President Nixon and his southern strategists of the late 1960s and early 1970s because they understood that Helms was skilled at working the fault lines that could turn white fears into Republican votes.
The Republicans are still working those fault-lines. Indeed, some of the people who worked most closely with Helms as he transformed what began as an anti-slavery party into a comfortable retreat for white-backlash voters are now key players in the campaign of John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee for president.
"Let us remember a life dedicated to serving this nation," McCain declared in a statement on the death of Helms, to whom he was compared favorably by former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole earlier this year. (Actually, Dole suggested that McCain was somewhat more conservative than Helms.)
Those who battled hardest against Helms and his racial politics are quite certain that the 2008 campaign of Republican McCain against Democrat Barack Obama, who in August will become the first African-American nominee of a major party for president, will take a Helmsian turn.
"There's no question appeals will be made by McCain's campaign on racial lines," says North Carolina Congressman Mel Watt, who felt the full brunt of that racial politics when he managed the campaign of Harvey Gantt, an African-American Democrat who challenged Helms in 1990 and 1996.
Jesse Alexander Helms Jr. got his start in national politics as a campaign strategist for Willis Smith, who mounted a race-baiting challenge to U.S. Senator Frank Porter Graham in the 1950 North Carolina Democratic primary.
Graham, a former president of the University of North Carolina, served in the Senate as a national Democrat, who supported President Harry Truman and accepted the party's emerging commitment to civil rights.
Smith, who was backed by the segregationist dead-enders who that had supported the 1948 States' Rights Party ("Dixiecrat") campaign of segregationist Strom Thurmond, hired Helms to help him win by exploiting racist sentiment in the state.
One advertisement that Helms and his team created screamed: "White people, wake up before it is too late. Do you want Negroes working beside you, your wife and your daughters, in your mills and factories? Frank Graham favors mingling of the races."
Another advertisement allegedly worked up by Helms highlighted a doctored photograph that purported to illustrate the penchant of Graham's wife for dancing with African-American men.
The Smith campaign was, according to the Raleigh News & Observer, a publication for which Helms once worked, "called the most overtly racist campaign since the turn of the century."
Unfortunately, it was also successful -- a lesson that was not lost on the 29-year-old Helms.
Smith beat Graham, won the general election, went to Washington and brought the campaign along as his administrative assistant.
But Helms was soon back in North Carolina, encouraging massive resistance to integration, as a Raleigh city councilman and a television commentator who referred to the University of North Carolina as the "University of Negroes and Communists" and suggested that walls be erected around the UNC campus to prevent enlightened thinking from "infecting" the rest of North Carolina.
Though he was genteel in person -- so much so that this reporter would sometimes describe him favorably when compared to less gracious members of the Senate -- Helms went wide-eyed and brutal when the cameras went on.
Helms warned that, "Crime rates and irresponsibility among Negroes are a fact of life which must be faced."
He suggested that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was a communist dupe and refused, even decades after King's death, to honor the Nobel Peace Prize winner.
He dismissed the civil rights movement as a cabal of communists and "moral degenerates.
As the movement gathered strength -- and as murderous violence against activists in particular and African-Americans in general increased -- Helms menacingly suggested to non-violent civil rights activists that, "The Negro cannot count forever on the kind of restraint that's thus far left him free to clog the streets, disrupt traffic, and interfere with other men's rights."
When his fellow Democrats began to reject his brand of race-baiting politics in a series of primaries that saw moderates such as former North Carolina Governor Terry Sanford beat segregationists, Helms followed Thurmond into the Republican Party.
In 1972, he determined to follow Thurmond into the Senate.
Helms got a couple of lucky political breaks. First, President Nixon was running his "southern strategy" reelection campaign to attract segregationist Democrats to the GOP. Second, the Democratic nominee for the Senate that year was North Carolina Congressman Nick Galifianakis.
Galifianakis was a Greek-American, which to Helms and his supporters meant the congressman was a bit too "ethnic" to represent North Carolina. The newly-minted Republican, who could always be counted on to exploit any difference that might benefit his candidacy, campaigned on the slogan: "Vote for Helms --- He's One of Us!"
That was mild compared with the 1990 and 1996 campaigns Helms ran against Gantt, the former Charlotte mayor who was the first African-American to compete seriously for a southern Senate seat in the modern era.
In 1990, after Helms fell behind in the race, his campaign began running television advertisements that showed a white man's hands crumpling up a rejection notice from a corporation that had refused to hire him because affirmative action policies had supposedly required that the job go to a "less qualified minority." After those words were uttered, an image of Gantt flashed on the screen.
Helms won a narrow victory that year, as he did in 1996.
Helms did not leave his sentiments on the campaign trail.
Unlike George Wallace and a number of other southern pols, who made racist noises at election time but then quietly funded roads, schools and other projects in African-American communities, the former North Carolina senator's hometown newspaper noted delicately in an obituary that, "Although Helms denied he was a racist, his work in the Senate seemed at odds with the interests of blacks."
In addition to waging a filibuster in an attempt to block the Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday, Helms opposed extension of the Voting Rights Act and championed the apartheid regime in South Africa.
Even as he rose in stature in the Senate, where he eventually served as chair of the powerful Foreign Relations Committee, Helms remained the son of the south that he had always been.
When Carol Moseley-Braun of Illinois became the first African-American woman to sit in the Senate, Helms followed Moseley-Braun into an elevator, announcing to Utah Senator Orrin Hatch: "Watch me make her cry. I'm going to make her cry. I'm going to sing 'Dixie' until she cries."
Then, emphasizing the lines about how "good" things were before the Civil War ended slavery, Helms sang "Dixie."
In one way or another, that's all he ever did. As the Rev. Jesse Jackson recalled, "At the height of his power, he fought for the values of the old confederacy. He resisted the new South. He resisted the opportunity to fight for a more perfect union."
Despite the best efforts of the senator and his spin doctors to rehabilitate the old man by hiring a few conservative staffers who happened to be people of color or by posing him for pictures with U2's Bono, Helms finished his career without the apologies that came from George Wallace, Orval Faubus and his fellow segregationists.
Even Strom Thurmond admitted his defenses of segregation were wrong, but not Helms. Nor did the North Carolinian ever make serious efforts to appeal to African-American voters -- as Wallace, Thurmond and "Jim Crow" politicians began to do late in their careers.
"He was sort of unrepentant until the end," said Duke's Kerry Haynie.
A biographer of Helms, Ernest Furgurson, put it more bluntly when he wrote: "All his public life, (Helms) has done and said things offensive to blacks, and to anyone sensitive to racial nuance."
Jesse Helms may have started as a Democrat and finished as a Republican. But he always sang "Dixie."
And those who sang it with him are now working for John McCain. Alex Castellanos, the veteran Republican media consultant who produced the so-called "White Hands" commercial that Helms used against Gantt, has according to the Washington Post been advising McCain's campaign on media strategy.
Castellanos bluntly refers to his work with Helms as "The Cause." And That cause has attracted other key players from the late senator's campaigns.
Republican strategist Charlie Black, perhaps the most prominent member of McCain's political inner circle (especially since he suggested that a terrorist attack on the U.S. would benefit the Republican's prospects this fall), advised Helms throughout much of the senator's career and played a particularly central role in the 1990 campaign, according to contemporary media accounts.
When the "White Hands" ad stirred a national controversy, Black appeared on the PBS's Newshour to defend it. Democratic National Committee chairman Ron Brown, who was also on the show, said to Black: "You are a principal adviser of Jesse Helms. Would you advise him to run that kind of ad, Charlie? Do you approve of that ad, Charlie?"
Black replied, "I advised Jesse Helms to do what he's always done."
The question now is whether Black will advise McCain, another Republican who is trailing an attractive African-American Democrat, to do what Helms always did?
The answer is: Not exactly.
McCain's presidential campaign will not be a precise homage to Helms?
Black his fellow strategists will, undoubtedly, be a bit subtler.
But Mel Watt suggested in a recent interview that we might still hear the faint strains of "Dixie."
"Clearly, times have changed, and people aren't going to be able to get away with those kind of direct racial appeals," said Watt, recalling the 1990 anti-Gantt campaigning by Helms and his associates. "But they will make them more subtle, and call them something else. They'll call them economic appeals, like they did with the 'White Hands' ad."
John Nichols' new book is The Genius of Impeachment: The Founders' Cure for Royalism. Rolling Stone's Tim Dickinson hails it as a "nervy, acerbic, passionately argued history-cum-polemic [that] combines a rich examination of the parliamentary roots and past use of the 'heroic medicine' that is impeachment with a call for Democratic leaders to 'reclaim and reuse the most vital tool handed to us by the founders for the defense of our most basic liberties.'"
Copyright © 2008 The Nation
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35 Comments so far
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MikeBinSC [July 7th, 2008 2:09 pm], I could never understand why SC voters would return a senile old man to office who, in his last campaign, practically needed a drool cup and couldn't speak a coherent sentence. I don't have any problem understanding the southern dialect -- I lived in the south for awhile -- but Strom, in his last bid for reelection, was babbling, "Muh friens, mahgooboo de gumbo whapadoodah in de bagagooboo, an' y'all vote Repub'can, yuh hear?" In one speech, he went on like this for about twenty minutes and I could tell from the crowd reaction -- thanks to C-Span -- that the audience didn't know what the hell he was talking about either.
Pat Pather [July 7th, 2008 5:12 pm], you're, sadly, absolutely right. Yep, these things do go on is some supposedly-enlightened parts of the world, but many of my black blues and jazz musician friends have moved to France, Germany or Scandanavia where they and their music are treated with respect and they can earn a living playing it. Not even in the various 'homes' of blues and jazz in this country -- New York, Kansas City, Chicago, New Orleans, etc. -- can the majority of blues and jazz players earn a living.
Actually, John Edwards ran in 1998 and defeated incumbent Senator Lauch Faircloth, who was one of the Clinton Administration's biggest foes as well as being one of the major pushers of impeachment. It was a sweet victory for the young trial lawyer to win in that crazy year when Republicans tried to make it a referendum on Clinton's sex scandal. Edwards served with Senator Helms for four years until Helms retired in 2002. His seat in the Senate has been occupied by Elizabeth Dole since 2003, who is up for reelection this year.
Whether you liked him or hated him, at least George Wallace saw the error of his ways and died a changed man. What did he see that these other arrogant bigots didn't?
Good ol' Jesse died too soon - would have loved to have seen the look on his face when Obama is inaugrated. That, my friends, is my definition of hell - :)!!!
To my southern friends, please throw off your thin skins. Fact, the South is still the bastion of racism, and other forms of bigotry. Yes, these things do exist in the North, as well as in more-enlightened, parts of the world; how-ever, there is a lot more of it going on in the South. Hey, the Charlotte Observer pointed out in February that the Klan was actually growing in NC!!!!
It's hard to believe, but John Edwards actually occupied the the Jesse Helms Senate seat for one term!
Maybe the space left by the Helms departure from this earth, can actually be filled by a caring human being.
Here in South Carolina, we had our own Jesse in Strom, and these idiots here allowed him to pickle in office as well.
Siouxrose [July 6th, 2008 9:01 am], or, in Jesse's case, perhaps 'reintarnation.' ;)
sporter17 [July 6th, 2008 9:56 am], you really have to take a break from the drugs.
Uh, gotov [July 6th, 2008 10:00 am] your argument is as weak as the meringue on a lemon pie. Obama was not born when the nuclear bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki; McCain served in the Senate with Helms and yet never condemned him, although he should have known full well what a racist he was. (Then again, McCain voted against a Martin Luther King holiday, so maybe he agreed with Jesse.) If you consider someone a bigot for speaking out about the boneheaded bigotry of others to be as bad as Jesse's racial bigotry, then you need a refresher course on the Constitution and what ideals we are supposed to stand for as a nation.
AD [July 6th, 2008 10:34 am], what in the hell are you talking about? Where does Nichols show an 'anti-Southern bias'? And what is all of this quotes in 'lower case' letters nonsense? Did you actually read this article, or are the bees buzzing in your head too loud for you to concentrate? There are many fine Southerners -- Jesse Helms was not one of them, and that's the only point Nichols made.
As far as the poor whites who owned no slaves fighting on the Confederate side, that's true. As today, they were gulled by the wealthy landowning aristocracy to fight a war from which they derived no personal benefit and their only expectation, should they survive the war, was to return to being treated like lowly white trash, exploited by the very men who had cajoled them to go off to war in a 'noble' cause. Just as much as the black slaves in the fields, they were fighting solely to keep the 'Massah' prosperous. All of the other reasons the Confederacy cited for the Civil War were just window-dressing to make the act of enslaving black people for profit, and the submission of ignorant whites to the Southern aristocracy, palatable. There was, indeed, segregation in parts of the north, but if your skin were black, you were not likely to be lynched or your family beaten or burned out of its home if you happened to look the 'wrong way' at a white woman or refused to properly bow and scrape to a white man.
Glad to read, AD [July 6th, 2008 12:00 pm], you're not among those who worship the Stars and Bars so prominently displayed in many parts of the former Dixieland. It is a flag of shame that thinking Southerners reject soundly.
Jesse Helms was just a reflection of his time, which he outlived.
Applying current standards to a different time seems to me to be an exercise in futility. Is there any real purpose to it, doers it generate any change. Of course not.
Better to look forward to a world we can change than to look backward to one we can't.
Reflecting on past ills, past injustice and intolerance can be entertaining I guess bot "it won't butter any parsnips" as the old saying goes.
I'd rather address obtainable goals that would benefit people now and in the future. Like Wind Power thats already coming under attack by the power companies. Thats someting worth talking about.
Poor Jesse Helms and his life are now between Helms and God.
skippyagogo41 July 5th, 2008 1:36 pm
I don't know how you became so misinformed. God as we all know is a bi sexual transvestite lady mulatto from New York that is a bigot about doing the right thing.
I believe in reincarnation, and hope that Helms comes back as a poor black person here in NC so he could reap the harvest that he sowed.
Here in NC, all the papers were filled with his life and times, front page in the Winston-Salem Journal, and continued for several pages. When I saw his photo on the front page, I almost barfed, then I read the headlines and noticed that he was dead, and thought good, another racist pig gone. Too bad that he couldn't see the error of his ways before he died.
It appears that in NC they still think of Helms as a good person.
This author often says some good things, make good points, and I'll certainly concede that, but let's stop fighting that damn civil war. Hell, I got sick of it growing up in the US South with all those people with their Confederate flags on their bumper stickers saying,
"Forget, hell." But that was just about being sore losers, but a winner who can't be magnanimous in victory as were the Sandinistas in Nicaragua needs to stop fighting a war his side already won over a century ago. It's not about North vs South or black against white or Hispanic or others, it's about class as John Edwards was aptly pointing out before our "free press" did it's hatchet job on him.
Our prime purpose in this life is to help others. And if you can't help them, at least don't hurt them.
-- The Dalai Lama
When you go to meet your maker, and you are asked, Quote…What have you done for my people? Unquote. You had better have a damn good answer.
Rest in peace Jesse.
GOP TV, now don't get me started defending this author or you might be sorry, 'cause I don't mince words on taking on damn fascists and racists my damn self.
I have no use for Jesse Helms nor the rest of his evil kind. But this article should have dealt with the real deal racism and fascism today and how they are linked, not on some non sense about somebody's damn dialect, which is just plain narrrow minded, as in bigoted. I know personally just how damn racist white US Northerners can damn be, and am more than sick and tired hearing the look down the nose BS coming from same. Pennsylvania with its literal racist attacks on Barak Obama's various offices in that state showing how "wonderfully" racist these bastards can damn be by actually breaking the glass at these headquarters and making real threats against lives and safety of Obama's campaign people, then throw in huge numbers of threats on his life, and I'll bet many them were "wonderful" white Northerners. Oh, and how about that "good old boy" from Philadelphia, Frank Rizzo, and how's about his above the Mason Dixon line racism. The last time I checked Philadelphia was north of that line. Now have I enlightened you? Yes, I am making fun of Northern damn hypocrisy and damn BS and pretentiousness.
Oh, do have a "nice day," now.
I have no use for any form of bigotry including this author's anti Southern bigotry with his whining and dissing of the Southern accent relegating to lower case letters. Would the author have dissed his own Midland, likely upscale white dialect with lower case letters?
This author needs to get off his own damn anti Southern bigotry, talking about the GOP's southern accent, even spelling it with lower case letters. He has engaged in this anti Southern bigoted garbage before, talking about the Confederate side being "Southern scoundrel," even though clearly the overwhelming majority who fought on that side neither owned nor gave a damn about slavery. Nor for that matter was the US side fighting against slavery at least not until Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863.
Furthermore, after you drop your silly anti Southern bigotry, which is no damn better than any other form of bigotry, take a look at Arthur M Schlesinger Jr's explanation in "Age of Jackson" of Wall Street hijacking the Republican Party after Lincoln's death, thus the party hasn't been the party Lincoln since that time with maybe the exception of when Dwight D Eisenhower sat in the White House. Stop living in your fantasy world.
Also Northern damn ships brought the slaves over from Africa, as the South wasn't noted for having much of a shipping industry. Do consult "Roots," a documentary on much of US black history by a black man. Also do check with US blacks to ask them why they keep saying "North aint' nothing but upSouth, and the Mason Dixon line begins at the Canadian border."
Helms proves that the good die young.
My first 'contact' with Jesse came when we moved to NC in 68, and he was given editorial time on WRAL TV. I don't remember much of what he said back then but that my father, always a hardcore republican loved him, much like he now adores rush. Unfortunately, we do not get to choose our parents, but I have to wonder about a heart that resonates with such characters. My dad was, for the most part, callous, cruel, and stingy with us. I do not know if this is reflective of all of those with his attitudes, but I suspect it is with many. Goodbye Jesse: I, for one, will not miss you.
"Jesse Helms was a segregationist, and a nasty one at that."
And John Nichols is every much a bigot as Jesse Helms was. Pathetic reporting. His approach seems to be to tie any evil deed of the past to today's presidential candidate you don't like, no matter how weak the tie, and then masquerade under the banner of "objective" journalism. If the tables were turned and a right wing nut job had linked Barack Obama to the murder of hundreds of thousands of Japanese citizens from the 2 atomic bombs in 1945 (after all, that was the decision of a Democratic Party administration) there would be an outcry on this board as to the intolerance and idiocy of the author. But since it's the other way around, all is relatively quiet.
This "reporter" is not only an embarrassment to his profession, but to his country. I am going to nominate him to be the poster boy for why we can no longer have an adult discussion on any issue of importance in America any more.
Sad, sad little man.
You people here are so moronic it makes me laugh. You are as hateful as Helms himself. Ignorant & hypocritical is no way to go thorugh life!!!
RSJ: I'm glad to see someone else is talking about reincarnation! Imagine all the lifetimes of good works it'll take for the likes of Cheney, Bush, Rice, etc to earn back any semblance of the humanity they viciously robbed from others... presuming they get that chance. In cases such as theirs I have to muse about the possibility of species migration.
This Day in Hell: New arrival Jesse Helms of North Carolina, who shucked off his mortal coil July 4th at the age of 86, is slated to be reincarnated as a black man with syphilis in 1948 under treatment by the Tuskegee 'Experiment' physicians. Once word gets out that he contracted the disease from a white woman, however, syphilis may be the least of his problems. The former Republican racist pathetically protesting to the Klan, "Ah know ah look black on the outside, but ah'm really white inside – ah'm gawdamn Senatuh Jesse Helms, fuh crissakes!" to try and save himself from a lynching? Priceless!
Ding, dong the witch is dead!
It was the Wicked Witch of the East. We have one more to go.
From the article: "Let us remember a life dedicated to serving this nation," McCain declared in a statement on the death of Helms. We can see where McCain's sympathies lie.
McCain is the Wicked Witch of the West. We goofed when we left Jesse in power for so many years. Let's not do the same for McCain.
Helms was, like today's GOP, sexist, racist, homophobic --
and probably more evil than we'll ever know.
I've wondered about the voters who supposedly put him in
office and kept him there --- maybe more of the "white"
South was crying to be free of this racism than we knew?
Since the death of Bill Buckley evidently some interesting
documents have come floating out which suggest that the
CIA was FUNDING right-wing politicians in Congress . .
and that it was done by moving money thru Howard Hughes
who company provided "front companies" for the CIA.
Two of the politicians identified were Sen. Strom Thurmond
and Gerald Ford.
Think about it . . .
Pore Jesse's daid,
Pore old Jesse Helms is daid,
All gather 'round his coffin now and cry
And cry!
He had a heart of brass
And a G-O-P pol's ass
And that's why such a feller had to die.
Pore Jesse's daid
Pore old Jesse Helms is daid,
He's lookin' oh so peaceful and serene
And serene!
He's all laid out to rest
With his hands acrost his chest
His fingernails have never been so clean!
Pore Jesse's daid
Pore old Jesse Helms is daid
His racist friends'll weep for miles around
Miles around!
The daisies in the dell
Will give out a different smell
Cause Jesse Helms is underneath the ground.
Pore Jesse's daid
A candle lights his haid
He's layin' in a coffin made of wood
Made of wood!
And some folks are feelin' glad
Cause he used to treat 'em bad
But now they know old Jesse's gone for good
For good!
Pore Jesse's daid
A candle lights his haid!
He's lookin' oh so purty and so nice
He looks like he's asleep,
It's a good thing he won't keep
Cause it's summer and they're running out of ice.
With apologies to Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein
there are very few men indeed who have done more damage than jesse helms to american democracy.
Dear Jesse Helms,
Please keep that seat in Hell reserved for George W. Bush warm.
He will be joining you shortly.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XFGrQMD6Uqc
Jesse Helms is one of those scum bags who when you find out of their passing, one's only reaction is "good riddance" and "enjoy your time in Hell."
Jesse Helms was one reason why I hope there is a hell. Talk about someone who thoroughly deserves eternal torment.
Unfortunately, the racist right-wing can be like a hydra. I just hope another head doesn't grow back in his place.
I'm only sad that he didn't sing Dixie to someone who wouldn't have been above choking him out. What a coward.
People like Helms are one of many reasons why I have demons.
When these bigot pigs, like Trent Lott, etc. brag about belonging to "The Party of Lincoln," perhaps they really mean, Nazi/racist, "Lincoln Rockwell," and NOT "Abraham Lincoln."
As I said in another post it would be nice to be able to wish him a peaceful rest. I just cannot in good conscience when he refused others that same peace.
It would be a supreme irony if he was greeted in Heaven by a gay black angel.
Jesse, The Ronald Reagan phenomenon and it's aftermath, including the neocon revolution, could never have happened without you.
I'm glad you are dead, but I hope you are somehow aware when Obama is elected president.
Jesse, me boy, we never really knew ye. But ye resemble many hundred thousand in our great country. Or is that many millions?
Man he was an ahole. He got a pig heart valve transplant and then stops the Farm Bill from covering fish, fowl, reptiles and rodents in animal care supervision(they would still be tortured but at least they were being regarded as sentient).
Good riddance.
What a thoroughly despicable person. Glad he died on July 4th; we're now free of one less racist vermin.
Read this from a progressive native North Carolinian:
http://reclaimthemedia.org/media_literacy_bias/former_racist_journalist_and_s%3D6071
Hope jesse is enjoying his meeting with god, who's a rather nice black lesbian, or so I'm told.
As pointed as this article is, it seems to me to be a bit restrained.
Helms was a virulent hatemonger who exploited the pernicious racism of not only his homestate but also the entirety of the South to implement his regressive ideals.
His record is the shame of those citizens of North Carolina who kept him in power and of the republican party which abused that power.
jj