Birth of a Nation

Hobbit

Senior Member
Mar 25, 2004
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Near Atlanta, GA
I saw this movie just recently, and I must say, it's quite fascinating. For those who have never heard of it, it's a silent film from 1914, based on the book "The Klansman," that caused the 20th century resurgance of the KKK as a racist organization, rather than a purely political shadow power. The movie is about the War Between the States and the subsequent political stuggle during Reconstruction. It's called "Birth of a Nation" since many historians state that America was not a singular nation until the war and was instead a federation of independant states.

Now, while this movie is indeed racist, it does cover one of the untold stories of that war, and the one which caused such a big stink about the KKK. That story is the one of political manipulation. After the war, speaker of the house wanted all of the Southern leaders executed and our lands to be oppressively treated as conquored territory, but Lincoln announced that he would treat the South 'as if they had never left.' John Wilkes Booth, however, ensured that the South's only friend on Capitol Hill was ten feet under. Those who took over still couldn't do what they originally wanted, but they did quite a bit to destroy the South. First, they forbid anyone who supported the Confederacy to vote, leaving mostly uneducated former slaves as voters. Then, the carpetbaggers found some easily manipulated free slaves that these new voters would support, and for years, all states in the South lost their right to govern themselves, as their politicians were being held up by Northern strings. This led to the birth of a shadow organisation called the Ku Klux Klan. The purpose was to protect Southern political interests.

It's quite sad that this led to the mass violence that the KKK is now famous for, but the movie is probably the most influential silent movie in history, and I thought it was quite good. It's a good film, especially if you want to see a good chunk of history.
 
Whatever its purpose, the KKK is an evil hateful group. I've never seen this, but I'm curious to. it's not banned, is it?

This movie also reminds me of the Disney movie Song of the South which is, as of right now, banned indefinitely. part of me really wants to see it, even though I know it's probably nowhere near as controversial as most people think it is.
 
I saw this movie just recently, and I must say, it's quite fascinating. For those who have never heard of it, it's a silent film from 1914, based on the book "The Klansman," that caused the 20th century resurgance of the KKK as a racist organization, rather than a purely political shadow power. The movie is about the War Between the States and the subsequent political stuggle during Reconstruction. It's called "Birth of a Nation" since many historians state that America was not a singular nation until the war and was instead a federation of independant states.

Now, while this movie is indeed racist, it does cover one of the untold stories of that war, and the one which caused such a big stink about the KKK. That story is the one of political manipulation. After the war, speaker of the house wanted all of the Southern leaders executed and our lands to be oppressively treated as conquored territory, but Lincoln announced that he would treat the South 'as if they had never left.' John Wilkes Booth, however, ensured that the South's only friend on Capitol Hill was ten feet under. Those who took over still couldn't do what they originally wanted, but they did quite a bit to destroy the South. First, they forbid anyone who supported the Confederacy to vote, leaving mostly uneducated former slaves as voters. Then, the carpetbaggers found some easily manipulated free slaves that these new voters would support, and for years, all states in the South lost their right to govern themselves, as their politicians were being held up by Northern strings. This led to the birth of a shadow organisation called the Ku Klux Klan. The purpose was to protect Southern political interests.

It's quite sad that this led to the mass violence that the KKK is now famous for, but the movie is probably the most influential silent movie in history, and I thought it was quite good. It's a good film, especially if you want to see a good chunk of history.

Re-construction is an interesting period of U.S. history. I tend to agree more with Lincoln than the rest of the republican party. The U.S. is just better off if North and South can work together, while many of the republicans just wished General Sherman had wiped the south off the map. (Though he did an admirable job of turning the South's icons into piles of rubble)

At the same time, I agree with the Republicans that the prejudice southern democrats had to be rid from U.S. politics. Unfortunately it did not really happen for another 100 years.

The disappointment of re-construction is that it failed to offer enough to the newly freed slaves. Don't let the early success in attaining politcal office fool you, in the long run: grand-father laws, literacy tests, intimidation and things of that sort were used by whites to regain control of the balloting (by the way, the movie horribly portrays the black politicians as monkeys in a state-house). Black codes worked to limit the potential for blacks to ever make modest progress in education and orginization.

Birth of a Nation also has a disgusting scene in which whites appear as helpless victims of black hooligans, until the clan can come to the rescue.

A sick, twisted, and vile movie. It will be remembered in history because its filming techniques were pretty innovative for the time and its views show the resentment associated with re-construction..
 
Yawn. This movie was KKK glorification. Propoganda at its finest.

It was, techincally, however, quite groundbreaking for it's time. Definitely check it out for that alone, Dan.
 
It was, techincally, however, quite groundbreaking for it's time. Definitely check it out for that alone, Dan.

I definitely will.

And, hey, what's wrong with blatant KKK propaganda? :huh: :p:
 
1549 said:
Re-construction is an interesting period of U.S. history. I tend to agree more with Lincoln than the rest of the republican party. The U.S. is just better off if North and South can work together, while many of the republicans just wished General Sherman had wiped the south off the map. (Though he did an admirable job of turning the South's icons into piles of rubble)

At the same time, I agree with the Republicans that the prejudice southern democrats had to be rid from U.S. politics. Unfortunately it did not really happen for another 100 years.

The disappointment of re-construction is that it failed to offer enough to the newly freed slaves. Don't let the early success in attaining politcal office fool you, in the long run: grand-father laws, literacy tests, intimidation and things of that sort were used by whites to regain control of the balloting (by the way, the movie horribly portrays the black politicians as monkeys in a state-house). Black codes worked to limit the potential for blacks to ever make modest progress in education and orginization.

Birth of a Nation also has a disgusting scene in which whites appear as helpless victims of black hooligans, until the clan can come to the rescue.

A sick, twisted, and vile movie. It will be remembered in history because its filming techniques were pretty innovative for the time and its views show the resentment associated with re-construction..

I see it as the other side of the story, because I don't buy what you learn in public schools about evil southerners victimizing poor, pacifistic, helpless blacks. Now, I did admit that it was quite racist, and it did turn the KKK from a mildly racist political power (and most were at the time) to a purely racist organization. It does, however, show reconstruction for what it truly was, an attempt to completely subjugate the south with an oppressive occupation. I believe that even the name 'Reconstruction' is a gross misnomer.

As far as eliminating the racist southern Democrats...pretty much everybody, Republicans and Democrats, were racist at the time. The disenfranchisement of southern voters was not a way to prop up blacks but a way to put down southerners. And blacks at that time were uneducated and easily led, as most had become accustomed to slavery, a life that didn't demand education and repressed independant thought. The image painted by most U.S. history books is grossly biased and innaccurate.
 
Hobbit said:
I see it as the other side of the story, because I don't buy what you learn in public schools about evil southerners victimizing poor, pacifistic, helpless blacks. Now, I did admit that it was quite racist, and it did turn the KKK from a mildly racist political power (and most were at the time) to a purely racist organization. It does, however, show reconstruction for what it truly was, an attempt to completely subjugate the south with an oppressive occupation. I believe that even the name 'Reconstruction' is a gross misnomer.

As far as eliminating the racist southern Democrats...pretty much everybody, Republicans and Democrats, were racist at the time. The disenfranchisement of southern voters was not a way to prop up blacks but a way to put down southerners. And blacks at that time were uneducated and easily led, as most had become accustomed to slavery, a life that didn't demand education and repressed independant thought. The image painted by most U.S. history books is grossly biased and innaccurate.
Can you ever really become "accustomed" to slavery?
 
The ClayTaurus said:
Can you ever really become "accustomed" to slavery?

There's a difference between becoming accustomed to something and liking it. No matter how much your life sucks, a life of constant routine is something you will eventually settle into.
 
Hobbit said:
There's a difference between becoming accustomed to something and liking it. No matter how much your life sucks, a life of constant routine is something you will eventually settle into.
So if I kidnapped you into slavery tomorrow, how long until you'd get accustomed to it? I need to know how long I need to hold you at gunpoint...
 
Diuretic said:
I'd say Hobbit's right, broadly speaking. Humans are highly adaptable to various circumstances, including slavery.
Fair enough.

What's your threshold until becoming accustomed? You can be my slave too. I'll put whoever submits to their slave status first in charge of beating the other one into "growing accustomed" to it.

Ready. Set. GO!
 
The ClayTaurus said:
So if I kidnapped you into slavery tomorrow, how long until you'd get accustomed to it? I need to know how long I need to hold you at gunpoint...

The majority of them were born into it.

And once again, acclimated does not mean you have to like it. At the Naval Academy, my body acclimated itself to running on a broken leg in a matter of days, a conditioning that is both blessing and curse to this day, almost 6 years later. It doesn't mean my leg didn't hurt like a bitch the whole time.
 
Hobbit said:
I saw this movie just recently, and I must say, it's quite fascinating. For those who have never heard of it, it's a silent film from 1914, based on the book "The Klansman," that caused the 20th century resurgance of the KKK as a racist organization, rather than a purely political shadow power. The movie is about the War Between the States and the subsequent political stuggle during Reconstruction. It's called "Birth of a Nation" since many historians state that America was not a singular nation until the war and was instead a federation of independant states.

Now, while this movie is indeed racist, it does cover one of the untold stories of that war, and the one which caused such a big stink about the KKK. That story is the one of political manipulation. After the war, speaker of the house wanted all of the Southern leaders executed and our lands to be oppressively treated as conquored territory, but Lincoln announced that he would treat the South 'as if they had never left.' John Wilkes Booth, however, ensured that the South's only friend on Capitol Hill was ten feet under. Those who took over still couldn't do what they originally wanted, but they did quite a bit to destroy the South. First, they forbid anyone who supported the Confederacy to vote, leaving mostly uneducated former slaves as voters. Then, the carpetbaggers found some easily manipulated free slaves that these new voters would support, and for years, all states in the South lost their right to govern themselves, as their politicians were being held up by Northern strings. This led to the birth of a shadow organisation called the Ku Klux Klan. The purpose was to protect Southern political interests.

It's quite sad that this led to the mass violence that the KKK is now famous for, but the movie is probably the most influential silent movie in history, and I thought it was quite good. It's a good film, especially if you want to see a good chunk of history.
D.W. Griffiths was a pretty strange character. I watched another movie of his titled "Intolerance". I got the impression that he thought prostitution should be legal. He definitely did not have a high opinion of the Progressive movement.
 
Hobbit said:
The majority of them were born into it.

And once again, acclimated does not mean you have to like it. At the Naval Academy, my body acclimated itself to running on a broken leg in a matter of days, a conditioning that is both blessing and curse to this day, almost 6 years later. It doesn't mean my leg didn't hurt like a bitch the whole time.
You didn't answer my question. How long would it take for you to be accustomed to being my slave? I promise I won't make you run on your broken leg, unless Diuretic beats you in the accustomization race. Then who knows.
 
Diuretic said:
Ever been in a prison Clay?
Blah Blah Blah.


Seriously. How long? Days? Months? Years? How long does it take for one to grow accustomed (not agreeable) to being enslaved?
 
The ClayTaurus said:
Blah Blah Blah.


Seriously. How long? Days? Months? Years? How long does it take for one to grow accustomed (not agreeable) to being enslaved?

I asked that question for a reason. When a person goes to prison for the first time they're wide-eyed, scared, obedient to the authorities, basically they're in a childlike state. The longer they're in there the more comfortable they become. And when they get out the threat of going back is obviously distasteful to them in that they would naturally prefer to be out of prison but the initial fear, the wide-eyed, voice-quivering, "yessir, nossir" behaviour is gone, disappeared, never to be seen again. It's because that given a sufficient time they got used to prison, after all it's just another social organisation.

How long does it take for a new prisoner to become acclimatised, socialised into the new environment? I don't know, I think there are lots of variables that need to be taken into account. I do think that if you sentenced someone to six months in prison and then let them out after a week you might never see them again, but if leave the first-timer in there long enough to get accustomed to it the chances of them not coming back are diminished somewhat.

Of course some people can't adjust and the trauma makes them commit suicide. But in general most adapt. Humans, as I said before, are highly adaptable.
 
Diuretic said:
I asked that question for a reason. When a person goes to prison for the first time they're wide-eyed, scared, obedient to the authorities, basically they're in a childlike state. The longer they're in there the more comfortable they become. And when they get out the threat of going back is obviously distasteful to them in that they would naturally prefer to be out of prison but the initial fear, the wide-eyed, voice-quivering, "yessir, nossir" behaviour is gone, disappeared, never to be seen again. It's because that given a sufficient time they got used to prison, after all it's just another social organisation.

How long does it take for a new prisoner to become acclimatised, socialised into the new environment? I don't know, I think there are lots of variables that need to be taken into account. I do think that if you sentenced someone to six months in prison and then let them out after a week you might never see them again, but if leave the first-timer in there long enough to get accustomed to it the chances of them not coming back are diminished somewhat.

Of course some people can't adjust and the trauma makes them commit suicide. But in general most adapt. Humans, as I said before, are highly adaptable.
But see, it's a bad comparison.

You don't go to jail for no reason, and you still get livable conditions and square meals. Hell, you can get TV and all sorts of other shit in prison. Prison and slavery are not even floating in the same lake, let alone in the same boat.
 
Diuretic said:
I asked that question for a reason. When a person goes to prison for the first time they're wide-eyed, scared, obedient to the authorities, basically they're in a childlike state. The longer they're in there the more comfortable they become. And when they get out the threat of going back is obviously distasteful to them in that they would naturally prefer to be out of prison but the initial fear, the wide-eyed, voice-quivering, "yessir, nossir" behaviour is gone, disappeared, never to be seen again. It's because that given a sufficient time they got used to prison, after all it's just another social organisation.

How long does it take for a new prisoner to become acclimatised, socialised into the new environment? I don't know, I think there are lots of variables that need to be taken into account. I do think that if you sentenced someone to six months in prison and then let them out after a week you might never see them again, but if leave the first-timer in there long enough to get accustomed to it the chances of them not coming back are diminished somewhat.

Of course some people can't adjust and the trauma makes them commit suicide. But in general most adapt. Humans, as I said before, are highly adaptable.


Oh yeah, anyone can adjust to fudge packing and ritual group violence. After awhile, it becomes enjoyable and habit forming. So much so that breaking the law again and again becomes a necessity in order to go back to Shangrila. :laugh:

Yeah, I'm be obnoxious.
 

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