MountainLaurel
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Sun Jun-19-05 04:49 PM
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In the early 1940s, a politically ambitious butcher from West Virginia named Bob Byrd recruited 150 of his friends and associates to form a chapter of the Ku Klux Klan. After Byrd had collected the $10 joining fee and $3 charge for a robe and hood from every applicant, the "Grand Dragon" for the mid-Atlantic states came down to tiny Crab Orchard, W.Va., to officially organize the chapter.
As Byrd recalls now, the Klan official, Joel L. Baskin of Arlington, Va., was so impressed with the young Byrd's organizational skills that he urged him to go into politics. "The country needs young men like you in the leadership of the nation," Baskin said.
The young Klan leader went on to become one of the most powerful and enduring figures in modern Senate history. Throughout a half-century on Capitol Hill, Sen. Robert C. Byrd (D-W.Va.) has twice held the premier leadership post in the Senate, helped win ratification of the Panama Canal treaty, squeezed billions from federal coffers to aid his home state, and won praise from liberals for his opposition to the war in Iraq and his defense of minority party rights in the Senate.
Despite his many achievements, however, the venerated Byrd has never been able to fully erase the stain of his association with one of the most reviled hate groups in the nation's history.http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/18/AR2005061801105.htmlA long article, but worth the read.
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Frances
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Sun Jun-19-05 05:00 PM
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sweetladybug
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Sun Jun-19-05 05:13 PM
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2. Senator Byrd has changed and he is one of our best Senators. |
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He continues to fight for the rights of all Americans (regardless of color)
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eriffle
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Sun Jun-19-05 09:03 PM
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That Sen. Byrd will never be able to shake his history. I do not believe Sen. Byrd is a racist today, and it is sad that there are other current and former politicans who never officially joined the KKK but truly are racist and Sen. Byrd is called Robert "KKK" Byrd by certain RW talk show hosts. It was a sad and different time back then, and I believe Sen. Byrd has changed, and that is what the book and the article is about.
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Petrushka
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Mon Jun-20-05 10:16 PM
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4. There are over 800 pages in Senator Byrd's autobiography . . . |
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. . . and, yep, it's a "shame"--a shame that some reporter couldn't find time to read more than 2 of those pages.
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Hubert Flottz
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Tue Jun-21-05 07:17 AM
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5. That reporter was just "Following Orders"! |
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Wed May 01st 2024, 02:05 AM
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