By Noah Rothman
Friday, June 20, 2025
Former President Joe Biden returned from the political
afterlife on Thursday during a Juneteenth observation service at the African
Methodist Episcopal Church in Galveston, Texas. There, he insisted that all his political adversaries were burning
with outrage over the event over which he was presiding.
The millions of Americans who went blissfully about their
day without any knowledge of Biden’s address or the circumstances that have
supposedly filled them with resentment might be shocked to learn that they
secretly harbor racial hatred in their hearts.
During the service, Biden hailed “the events of
Juneteenth,” which are “of monumental importance to America.” And yet, to this
day, “some say to me and you that this doesn’t deserve a federal holiday,”
Biden insisted. “They don’t want to remember,” he added, “the moral stain of
slavery.”
It’s not at all clear whom Biden is indicting here. The
convenient foil he summoned for himself describes few, save the provocateurs
and professional cynics who populate, and are largely exclusive to, online
forums.
America should have at least one federal holiday
commemorating emancipation. If that’s not going to be Emancipation Day, which
celebrates the signing of the Compensated Emancipation Act in 1862 on April 16,
it might as well be Juneteenth. This day memorializes the spread of
emancipation to the farthest reaches of the former Confederacy, a little over
two months after the surrender at Appomattox.
But this holiday, which was once exclusive to Texas and
portions of neighboring states, is still new to much of the country. In 2021,
when Biden made it a federal holiday, just 37 percent of Americans even knew what it was. In their
understandable ignorance, many Americans could be forgiven for thinking that
sidestepping Emancipation Day in the effort to celebrate Emancipation is a
contrivance. That is confusion, not racism.
States can have their own holidays, too. No one would say
that a lack of proper national appreciation for Evacuation Day — the day on
which British troops finally left Manhattan Island about 18 months after the
surrender at Yorktown — means that most Americans don’t care about the
Revolutionary War. It just means that they’re not aware of the rather arcane
aspects of history that are of profound local importance to New York and New
Jersey but have little relevance outside it.
Biden’s goal, sordid though it seems, was to imply that
his fellow countrymen are bigots. His enlightened actions and the contempt they
supposedly generate are illustrative of the degree to which he represents the
salvation of the national soul — something Biden invoked often during his
tenure in the Oval Office. He reflected on his own uncommon wisdom several
times during this convocation.
Biden resurrected an old, lost argument from his time in
the White House when he attacked Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, although not by
name, for trying to “erase history from our textbooks and classrooms,” and he
castigated Donald Trump, also not by name, for restoring the names of military
forts with named for Confederate military officers. Of course, Biden got this
all wrong, too.
Biden’s characterization of Florida’s elementary and high
school curriculum would not be recognizable to anyone who doesn’t get their
news from NAACP press releases. National Review called the allegation that Florida
Republicans are whitewashing the history of slavery a “smear” with ample
evidence in support of that contention. If Biden and his backers are content to
stand by the lie, having had ample time to correct their error, that should
lead objective observers to conclude that the dishonest party here isn’t the
GOP.
As for the renaming of U.S. forts, the Pentagon has done
something rather clever. It is reverting the names of American military
installations from generic stuff like “Fort Liberty” back to a more
recognizable form: Fort Bragg, Fort Hood, Fort Benning, etcetera. But it is not
rechristening these forts to honor the traitors who fought against the Union.
Rather, it is renaming them to memorialize American heroes who just happen to
share the same surname.
Fort Bragg is no longer named for Confederate General
Braxton Bragg. Instead, it commemorates the service of Private First-Class
Roland Bragg, a U.S. Army paratrooper who earned the Silver Star for his
exemplary service during the Battle of the Bulge. General Henry Benning is to
be forgotten in favor of Corporal Fred Benning — a recognition of his impromptu
command of his machine-gun company during the Argonne offensive in World War 1,
for which he earned the Distinguished Service Cross. Colonel Robert Hood has
replaced John Bell Hood as Fort Hood’s namesake, another recipient of the
Distinguished Service Cross for service in the First World War. Fort Robert E.
Lee now honors Private Fitz Lee, an African-American Buffalo Soldier and a
Medal of Honor-winning hero of the Spanish-American War. And so on.
This is what you might call a compromise. Indeed, it is
the best sort of compromise, insofar as it enrages maximalists on all sides of
the issue who are enlivened by cultural conflict and domestic disunity. If Joe
Biden finds himself in the maximalists’ camp, that is more a reflection on him
than us.
It is also indicative of why his administration was a
little-loved and short-lived. The president and those around him made a sport
of antagonizing their political adversaries, robbing themselves of the ability
to craft a broader political coalition in the process. They thought they
occupied the culture’s commanding heights and could dictate terms to everyone
else — precisely the sort of delusion that convinces its sufferers that
compromise is both pusillanimous and unnecessary.
Biden is still fighting those old fights, but his
opponents long ago abandoned the field in pursuit of grander objectives.
Biden’s remarks are a sad reflection on his own inability to comprehend the
country he once led. They certainly reveal a level of contempt for his
neighbors that is, at the very least, unbecoming in a president. It’s no wonder
he isn’t one anymore.
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