A reader responds to my VDARE article:
This is a  really superb piece of commentary on Thomas Sowell, who is also one of my  heroes--as Grady McWhiney [author of Cracker Culture] is one of my old  friends and was once a colleague here at U of Alabama. I think you make a very  important point about the residue of African culture in the behavior of present  day blacks. I hope Sowell sees your argument, which seems to me to be correct  and compelling.
I also think you are right to distinguish between redneck and what I call  hillbilly culture in southern whites. Here in Alabama, the hillbillies (mostly  Scots Irish in ancestry living in the northern part of the state) did not own  slaves and in some cases refused to join the Confederacy to fight for the  institution. A couple of hillbilly counties even seceded from the state when it  seceded from the Union. The rednecks from the southern part of the state, where  land is flatter and richer, are more often English in ancestry and became  shareholders after the civil war, raising cotton formerly raised by slaves. The  difference was typified in the last half of the twentieth century by the  contrast and conflict between federal judge Frank M. Johnson, an enforcer of  civil rights law, and redneck rabble rouser George Wallace, both Alabamians and  both graduates the same year from the UA school of law. Johnson was from  northern, Wallace from southern, Alabama.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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