10. When you think about it, makes sense that those possessing master class hauteur in racist society would take charge of foreign policy
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Replying to @HeerJeet
11. What I'd suggest is that from Calhoun to Kennan (& beyond) domestic racial attitudes shaped how foreign non-European nations treated.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
12. Or to flip it the other way, this same foreign policy elite saw black America as an internal colony within the American nation.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
13. This habit of mind can be seen in Kennan's desire in 1970s to emulate apartheid South Africa & create Bantustans for black Americans
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Replying to @HeerJeet
14. Questions I'm raising are mainly taken up by historians, but would be good for International Relations as a discipline to grapple with
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Replying to @HeerJeet
Old-school racists tended to want to avoid contact with inferior races, hence many opposed Philippines occupation, etc.
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Replying to @ThaddeusRussell @HeerJeet
Old-school racists like Wilson, Bryan, etc, right?
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Replying to @esstheman @HeerJeet
. . . could be "raised" to the level of whites.
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Replying to @ThaddeusRussell
Um, Wilson thought that would happen in the far future. So not anti-racist by any reasonable standard
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??? Don't see how that passage illustrates what you claim.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
He believed Filipinos could be made part of the European world. Scientific racists did not.
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