Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
George Wallace, Post-Traumatic Stress, and Black Voting
George Wallace, Post-Traumatic Stress, and Black Voting
May 20, 2026 9:41 PM

On June 11, 1963 Alabama Governor George Wallace became a national symbol for racial segregation by blocking the doors of a school to physically prevent the integration of Alabama schools. According to the Alabama Department of Archives, Governor Wallace “stood in the door-way to block the attempt of two black students, Vivian Malone and James Hood, to register at the University of Alabama. President John F. Kennedy federalized the Alabama National Guard, and ordered its units to the university campus. Wallace then stepped aside and returned to Montgomery, allowing the students to enter.” Unfortunately, the way Wallace defended what he promised the promotion of political and religious liberty for the generations that followed.

At the standoff, Wallace defended his actions by an official proclamation saying:

As Governor and Chief Magistrate of the State of Alabama I deem it to be my solemn obligation and duty to stand before you representing the rights and sovereignty of this State and its peoples.

The ed, unwanted, unwarranted and force-induced intrusion upon the campus of the University of Alabama today of the might of the Central Government offers frightful example of the oppression of the rights, privileges and sovereignty of this State by officers of the Federal Government. This intrusion results solely from force, or threat of force, undignified by any reasonable application of the principle of law, reason and justice. It is important that the people of this State and nation understand that this action is in violation of rights reserved to the State by the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of Alabama. While some few may applaud these acts, millions of Americans will gaze in sorrow upon the situation existing at this great institution of learning. . .

I stand here today, as Governor of this sovereign State, and refuse to willingly submit to illegal usurpation of power by the Central Government. I claim today for all the people of the State of Alabama those rights reserved to them under the Constitution of the United States.

If you read the proclamation carefully you will see that there is no mention of a racialized motivation for blocking the doors. The proclamation reads as a defense of limited government and state’s rights. It reads as a defense of liberty and the sovereignty of states to operate without the meddling of the federal government. It reads as a challenge to the ever-expanding power of the federal government. It reads as a defense of representative government–a defense of federalism. It reads as a defense for liberty. Herein, then, lies the problem: not only did Governor Wallace use many of the themes used by those who champion liberty as a means of defending the segregationist views of many in the South, much of the language was permanently associated with “racism” in the minds of many blacks in South.

For example, my parents were in their 20s in the South during the civil-rights movement and the only people they heard talking about “limited government,” “State’s rights,” the expansion of the federal government, and the like, were primarily those who embraced racial segregation for racist reasons. After all, when John F. Kennedy used the coercive power of federal government to force the issue in Alabama, Wallace found himself pressured to fulfill his gubernatorial inaugural promise of “segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.” Those words would not only permanently define Wallace but they would also permanently be associated with racism in the minds of many Southern blacks. For my parent’s generation, the limited government camp is the racist camp. They are one in the same. Therefore, when people ask me why it is that many blacks today, although socially conservative on many issues, continue to vote for progressive and contemporary liberal candidates, I point them to speeches like the one Wallace gave. Even in 2013, when many Southern blacks of my parent’s generation hear rhetoric about “limited government” and “going back to the Constitution,” and the like, they don’t think back to John Locke and the Federalism Papers, they think back to George Wallace and the language of liberty that was used to defend Jim Crow laws.

My father was raised in Jim Crow Alabama and my mother was raised in Jim Crow North Carolina and the stories I have heard of their life were nothing less than traumatic. Having to live one’s life under the threat of potential harm and injustice significantly alters one’s worldview and associations. There are certain trigger words, phrases, concepts, and ideas used by conservatives and classical liberals today that take many of my parent’s generation back to Jim Crow America. This is, in part, why conservatives are so often accused of being racist at the outset when discussing limiting the power of government. Many blacks will just assume it is motivated by racism. I write this not to justify or validate the negative association but to simply note that it is an unfortunate state of affairs for some. As the saying goes, “it is what it is.” As such, in the 1970s, I was raised to never trust any white person who talked about “limited government” principles because they were likely racist (like the Southern whites who supported Jim Crow) and wanted to do me harm. It is easy to see that what happened in the 1950s and 1960s was the expansion of the powers of the federal government in intending to remedy an injustice that e to make matters worse for many African-Americans in the 1970s and 1980s.

The overall lesson from Wallace’s speech is simply this: for those who seek to promote the cause of liberty in African American contexts, they need to be aware of past associations and, therefore, need to be creative about the language used to promote religious, economic, and political liberty in the future because some in the past have inadvertently muddled the cause.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Reflecting on Berlin
I was in the 8th grade in November of 1989, and I don’t think that the fall of the Berlin Wall had any immediate impact on my thinking at the time. I don’t remember if I watched the coverage on TV, or if there were any big discussions of the event in school during the following days. I was a history buff back then, to be sure – I still am – but I don’t think that I was engaged...
Dems Cornered on Health Reform
As we appear to be nearing a climax in the many-months-long health care reform debate (maybe), opinion is remarkably divided on what the end result will be. Outright victory for left-wing reformers? Passage of a watered down, mon-denominator reform bill? Or clear victory for Republican opposition? All possibilities remain on the table. The relative success of conservative candidates in major elections Tuesday led mentators to reason that the environment has gotten more difficult for moderate Democrats and that, therefore, Pelosi...
Veterans Day Review: As You Were
Washington Post reporter and author Christian Davenport has told a deeply raw and emotional story in his new book As You Were: To War and Back with the Black Hawk Battalion of the Virginia National Guard. This book does not focus on battlefield heroics but rather it captures the essence and value of the citizen- soldier. Most importantly this account unveils through narrative, the pride, the pain, and the harrowing trials of the life of America’s guardsmen and reservists. Davenport...
Acton Commentary: After the Berlin Wall — the Enduring Power of Socialism
The Economist marked the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall by observing that there was “so much gained, so much to lose.” As the world celebrates the collapse munism, who would have imagined that in less than one generation we would witness a resurgence of socialism throughout Latin America and even hear the word socialist being used to describe policies of the United States? We relegated socialism to the “dustbin of history,” but socialism never actually died...
The fall of the Berlin Wall: Reminiscence and reflection
Excerpts from remarks delivered at the Acton Institute annual dinner in Grand Rapids, Mich., on Oct. 29, 2009: Twenty years ago today, a growing tide of men and women in Eastern Europe and northern Asia were shaking off the miasma that had led so many to imagine that central economic planning could work. The socialist regimes of Eastern and Central Europe—accepted as ontological realities whose existence could not be questioned—were, well, being questioned. On November 4th, 1989, a million anti-Communist...
‘Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!’
Today marks the twentieth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. Acton adjunct scholar and sometime PowerBlog contributor Eric Schansberg links to a bit of background to Ronald Reagan’s remarks at the Brandenburg Gate provided by Anthony Dolan, Reagan’s head speechwriter, in today’s WSJ. Peter Robinson is credited with the famous utterance, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!” In his remarks at this year’s Acton Institute Annual Dinner, Rev. Robert A. Sirico recalled that President Reagan’s challenge was derided...
Secularism and Poverty
A colleague recently mentioned that a wag had observed the church had failed to solve poverty, so why not let the federal government have a try? I think it is interesting that anyone, such as the wag in question, could think that the federal government can effectively solve the problem of poverty. I don’t think it can because it resolutely refuses to confront the sources. Really, truly, don’t we know the cause of a great deal of the poverty in...
Communism as Religion
From the opening page of Lester DeKoster’s Communism and Christian Faith (1962): For the mysterious dynamic of history resides in man’s choice of gods. In the service of his god — or gods (they may be legion) — a man expends his mits his sacrifices, devotes his life. And history is made. Understand Communism, then, as a religion; or miss the secret of its power! Grasp the nature of this new faith, and discern in contrast to it the God...
Acton Commentary: Government Health Care — Back to the Plantation
Black leaders constantly remind Americans of our racism. Should not these same leaders protest the expansion of government control contained in the health-care reform bill currently working its way through Congress? Here’s why. Notwithstanding their rhetoric of freedom and empowerment, many prominent black leaders appear content to send blacks back to the government plantation—where a small number of Washington elites make decisions for blacks who aren’t in the room. Why do minority leaders not favor alternatives that demonstrate faith in...
Messianic Marxism
From “The Origin of Russian Communism” by Russian philosopher Nicholas Berdyaev (published by Geoffrey Bles, 1937): Marxism is not only a doctrine of historical and economic materialism, concerned with plete dependence of man on economics, it is also a doctrine of deliverance, of the messianic vocation of the proletariat, of the future perfect society in which man will not be dependent on economics, of the power and victory of man over the irrational forces of nature and society. There is...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved