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Paul Kersey and Sam Dickson examine Earnest Cox's 1923 classic "White America."
A contemporary of Madison Grant and Lothrop Stoddard, Cox's work has aged remarkably well after a century. He makes the case for total repatriation of blacks as the only realistic solution to America's racial problem. He explores the racial views of the nation's greatest statesmen — Webster, Clay, Douglas, Lincoln, Jefferson, and Ulysses S. Grant — all of whom believed that removing blacks from the United States was one of the federal government's most important responsibilities.
By Paul Kersey and Sam Dickson examine Earnest Cox's 1923 classic "White America."
A contemporary of Madison Grant and Lothrop Stoddard, Cox's work has aged remarkably well after a century. He makes the case for total repatriation of blacks as the only realistic solution to America's racial problem. He explores the racial views of the nation's greatest statesmen — Webster, Clay, Douglas, Lincoln, Jefferson, and Ulysses S. Grant — all of whom believed that removing blacks from the United States was one of the federal government's most important responsibilities.