Captain Newport hits a reef.

by Gordon C. Morse
Thanks to The New York Review of Books, we have this 1994 observation by the late Yale historian Edmund S. Morgan:
โThe distinguishing mark of American politics has been the absence of irreconcilable differences between the two parties that successively dominate the national government. Each party rests on a coalition of interests so diverse and inclusive as to prevent the formulation of any program that the other party will find intolerable.โ
Intolerable is avoidable, in other words. We just have to apply that peculiar American genius for maneuver and resolution. We find our way to tolerable postures. We discover ways to live with each other. We steer clear of absolutes.
Morgan cites the Civil War as one occasion when we did otherwise.
In this regard, we should consider Virginiaโs โCommission to Study the History of the Uprooting of Black Communities by Public Institutions of Higher Education in the Commonwealth [the Commission].โ
With its enhanced mandate and recent infusion of additional financial support, the Commission may soon gain momentum.
But where is it headed? What outcomes does it seek? Itโs already talking about โrepairs.โ What does that mean?
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