Mary Kate Nolin Wise was not just a democrat, she was referred to in Mobile, Alabama talk show circles in the 60's and 70's as The Lady Democrat! And, since most of the talk show hosts in that day were somewhat conservative, I guess they got an earful when they started cutting down her heroes such as George Wallace.
Mother felt strongly about certain issues and didn't mind expressing them when the occasion came.
I know it pained her to see me come home from college and the Army with a bent toward being a Republican. She felt I had been brainwashed by the world around me.
Actually, I don't remember when I became a political conservative. I do remember the feelings I had while serving in Vietnam watching the likes of Jane Fonda fraternizing with the communists in North Vietnam while we were dying from their bullets in South Vietnam.
Then, I noticed how Lyndon Johnson created special busing programs in the South, my homeland, to integrate the schools while leaving the northern schools alone to do as they saw fit. Why the double standard? Here I was fighting for all America, not for just the Northern section's rights to govern themselves.
Then, I saw in the news the riots and burned buildings from disorderly blacks in my home town of Mobile while I was far away fighting for people to be free and decent, not disorderly and destructive. It appeared that the Democratic Party was the Party of political dissent at the expense of those who didn't believe their way.
Mother and I never discussed these things too much out of respect for each other's feelings.
I believed in the strength and courage of George Wallace to stand in the school house door to keep law and order in the South. I began to see the U. S. Government as an oppressive arm under the Democrats that wanted to shove the yankee ways down our throats, just because they could.
I still recall his calling out those "psuedo-intellectual pointey-headed liberals" who were running the White House and calling the anti-South shots to force us to become liberal in our politics and thinking.
Dad never talked much about politics. All I knew was that he liked to watch "Hard-Ball" on TV on Sunday nights. I couldn't see how he could watch several people talking all over each other in an online shouting match.
Mother and Dad were conservatives. They were God fearing Christians who believed in hard work and family values. Dad even voted for a Republican State Senator because he was a solid conservative.
Dad's cousin Jack Wise, was a Republican. He was a public accountant who got his degree from the University of Alabama. He had also served in two wars, WW II and Korea. He came to eat supper with Mother and Dad most every Sunday night. It was not smart for Mother and Jack to talk politics. Dad and Jack could talk some, but Dad just wrote him off for the most part. Dad told me once that he was never around any Republicans growing up in the country in Smut-eye. There was only one Republican up there, ole Arthur Nolin, one of Papa Nolin's relatives.
Jack Wise epitomized the relationship between Republicans and Democrats in the South. We were different in philosophy of how to live life, but we were still family. Blood was thicker than politics. They all loved each other. Mother was trusted by Jack to be the Executor of his estate when he died.
I fought in a war where Communist Forces were invading the people of South Vietnam. They killed thousands. Jack fought in Korea where Communist Forces were invading South Korea. Thousands lost their lives their and Jack almost lost his.
So, when a political party harbors Communist sympathizers, my basic instincts tell me to run from it.
I am torn by many issues that the party politicians use to gain power. I feel as if I have a Republican's mind and a Democrat's heart.
Two of my favorite people in history are Booker T Washington and George Washington Carver. They were two friends and business associates who started Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, not too far from my home town of Elba, Ala. To me, Booker T. represented the work ethic of a Republican and George Washington Carver represented the academic thinking of a liberal Democrat. However, George Washington Carver was a strong Christian who gave God credit for his gifts and blessings. That is not a tenet of today's Democrat party.
Clearly, the political party's of today are not those of yesteryear when Mother and Dad were dyed-in-the-wool democrats.
But, rest assured, if The Lady Democrat felt some injustice or corruption was being carried out by either party, the world would know about it on Mobile Talk Radio.
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