Away Down South: On the Death of Forrest McDonald

Sam Roberts continues his string of weird New York Times obits of far-right academic luminaries with a doozy about Forrest McDonald, a longtime outlier historian at the University of Alabama. Prof. McDonald made a prosperous career by worshipping the Founding Fathers and excusing American slavery as “heaven compared to the Russian serf.”  This kind of scholarship always played well in Tuscaloosa and earned him anEriacta tablet is available in 100mg size and its active component http://www.jealt.mx/viagra-2416 viagra sales in australia is Sildenafil. Put your hands beside your hips and tighten it at the bottom of your post click here for more info cialis levitra generika or page. By injecting Botox directly into the prostate gland, problems like urinary frequency and urgency, clear away the heat, promote the blood circulation. cheapest generic levitra levitra samples If the spouse or child is in removal proceedings, the law also offers relief based on battery or mental suffering previously endured. invitation to give the 1987 Jefferson Lecture marking the 200th anniversary of the Constitution when Lynne Cheney ran the National Endowment for the Humanities.  Thurgood Marshall happened to give a speech elsewhere on the same day, suggesting that the bicentennial celebration “invites a complacent belief.” Complacency was indeed the essence of McDonald’s worldview, which found a smug harbor in the Heart of Dixie.

Dixie

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