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HOW WE WIN THE CIVIL WAR by Steve Phillips

HOW WE WIN THE CIVIL WAR

Securing a Multiracial Democracy and Ending White Supremacy for Good

by Steve Phillips

Pub Date: Oct. 18th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-62097-676-0
Publisher: The New Press

It’s 2022—high time, Phillips urges, to finally defeat the Confederacy.

We must choose “between democracy and whiteness,” writes Phillips, author of Brown Is the New White. The democracy of which he writes is an anti–White supremacist, multiracial, and multicultural one. The Whiteness is that of the Confederate constitution, exemplified by the declaration of the Confederacy’s vice president that “the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery subordination to the superior race is his natural and normal condition.” Though there’s some stridency to Phillips’ argument, it’s not hyperbolic. The emergence of a neo-Confederate White supremacist movement, abetted by the Trump administration, and recent Republican efforts to suppress the ethnic-minority vote are of a piece with the past. Phillips characterizes this continuity as the product of a “Confederate Battle Plan” that has five major planks, including never giving an inch while insisting, say, that elections have been stolen and White people disenfranchised, as well as “rewriting the laws so that they don’t lose again.” Inimical to a true multiracial democracy, this battle plan has been refined and sharpened—and it’s in place today. Against it, Phillips proposes a “Liberation Battle Plan” with components that include the demand that Democrats stop trying to accommodate and compromise with those “who are waging an unrelenting, centuries-long war in defense of their cherished belief that America should be a white nation.” Leading this battle in its most recent skirmishes are Black activists, particularly Black women such as Georgia’s Stacey Abrams. These leaders “don’t look like the traditional white male model of intelligence and competence,” but they are obviously capable of unexpected victories, aided by smart use of hard data and clearly defined plans of attack, all in the interest of arriving at “a social contract for the society we want to live in.”

A politically charged, thoughtfully reasoned call to rally around the flag—and not the Stars and Bars, to be sure.