Stuff You Should Know - The KKK: Loathsome Cosplay Rednecks
Episode Date: January 26, 2021The history of the KKK is rooted in hatred and racism, and it still is today. Learn all about these loathsome rednecks today. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comS...ee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Brian over there and
this is Stuff You Should Know about vile, racist jerks.
Boo.
Boo me?
Not you. You're not a vile, racist jerk. I stole my chuck.
Yeah. So Chuck, do you remember when we did our two-part episode on the Simpsons? And one of the
first things I said was, like, I didn't want to record because all I wanted to do is sit around
and research the Simpsons for the rest of my life. Sure. I felt basically the opposite way
about researching the Klan. Like, I didn't want to record because I didn't want to research the Klan
anymore. Yeah. It wasn't a fun one. No. Well, here's my personal history here in regards to the Klan
is, and now this will be peppered throughout a little bit because I grew up in Stone Mountain,
Georgia. Oh, that sounds familiar. Which is very, you know, some of the early days of the second
wave of the Klan, which, you know, we'll get to all this garbage in this episode, but Stone Mountain
was kind of one of the large national seats. And one of the leaders of the Klan in Stone Mountain
had kids or, it was either kids or grandkids that went, I guess I had to be grandkids that
went to my elementary school. Wow. The Venables. And I was like, you know, I heard about the
Venables and I knew about their story and that his granddad was the Grand Wizard and like,
it scared the crap out of me. Rightfully so. I was scared. And then I got older and I was like,
these are just dumb cosplaying rednecks. Nice. And then I got a little older still.
And I was like, well, that's not fair either. And I tried to start in my life, look at things
through the lens of minority peoples, even though you can't, you know, as a white man,
but you can do your best to walk a mile on someone's shoes and see what it might be like.
Then I was like, I can't dismiss it as rednecks cosplaying because they killed people and lynched
people. And it was a feared group to black people and, you know, all kinds of other minorities,
as we'll see, as they kind of progressed. But I felt it was dismissive to say they're just a
bunch of dumb rednecks and don't give them that power. So, you know, it's just interesting to
sort of go through that evolution as a kid growing up in the South who no doubt in my
lineage and ancestry have horrible things that happened in the deep South that I had to rectify
as like, you know, just because I'm related to great, great, great, great grandparents who
probably did awful things, doesn't mean that I am that person or, you know.
No, not at all. Not at all. You certainly aren't that person at all. I can attest.
But you have to come to terms with it as someone who is the opposite of those people.
For sure. And I think it is wise of you and very thoughtful of you to be like, no, I can't just,
you know, use, I guess, white privilege to dismiss the Klan because it does kind of
infringe on like the impacts that they've had on people of color in the United States. For sure.
I think that's very insightful. At the same time, yes, the Klan are dumb redneck cosplayers.
They're just ones who will also get whipped up into violence and carry out horrific acts. So,
they're dumb redneck cosplayers who you really have to keep an eye on and then break the back of
as an organization by putting them in prison whenever they do something like that or start to.
Yeah. And as we see through their history, depending on when it was and which sort of
iteration, because there's there's been at least three, somewhere more violent and dangerous than
others in some were sort of like cosplaying rednecks. Yeah. Not to, you know, of course,
it doesn't excuse it. It's just like a fun social club or anything like that. But it is
fairly interesting, but I'm ready to be done with this as well. So, let's do it.
Yeah. Well, the thing that kind of strikes me about the Klan the most is they the Klan enjoys
its largest popularity when America is feeling its most racist. Yeah. And usually America feels
its most racist at times when the the rights of minorities or anybody who's not basically white
Protestants are being advanced in society. That's not an accident. Right. But then the Klan always
always oversteps because America may be racist and America might be, I can't even say why,
America is definitely based on white supremacism or white supremacy and enforcing that.
But the taste for violence and the willingness to like kill people of color just for being people
of color is not a mainstream thing, fortunately. So, the Klan has always been on the fringe and
always will be on the fringes. It's just hopefully eventually society will learn its lesson like,
you know, advancing the rights of people of color doesn't mean that there has to be some
spasm of anti-minority sentiment that inevitably leads to violence carried out by groups like the
Klan. I really hope we get to that point rather than just keep existing trapped in this cycle,
you know? And I think we will. I think we are approaching that eventually. I don't know when
it will be, but I feel like with each of these cycles that we go through, there's less and less
people who react horribly the next time or the next time or the next time so that eventually
that reaction will just kind of fizzle out. That's my hope.
Yeah. And it's also interesting. I watched a documentary. It's sort of like a several part
new show from this British, might have been a BBC crew about the modern Klan just from
a couple of years ago during like the Ferguson uproar in Missouri. And he went not undercover
because he was a British guy who was interviewing him. He went in deep with the Klan there for
seven months. And it's interesting to see the just the scattered ideology and that kind of
is a bit of a hallmark of the Klan period through their history is it seems like there's never been
a very codified thing of this is who we are because there's people in this documentary that are like,
you know, three of the members were arrested for plotting to kill a black man and the people they
talked to, they're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, they're out, man. We're not into that. We don't want to
commit violence against black people and we're not even bigoted. We're just a superior race
who are white separatists. But we don't want to, you know, we might burn across for our ceremonies,
but we're not doing bombings and lynchings and we're not down with that at all. But you also
get the feeling that behind closed doors, they're probably like, hey, I wish those guys would have
been able to carry that murder out. Right. And that seems to have been a transition that kind of
went in the seventies started in the seventies, I believe, where there's like a different public
face to the Klan where they tried different like, well, okay, well that everybody hates the Klan.
What if we explain it like this, right? What if we put it like this and society's like, no,
that's nice try. Yeah, it's not going to work. All right. Should we get into this and the origins?
Yeah. So, like you said, there's been three iterations of the Klan. The first iteration
of the Klan started out as they think basically a social club made up of disgruntled Confederate
veterans in Pulaski, Tennessee in 1866. And this group of veterans got together at a time where
there was a real trend, a craze basically for secret societies in the 19th century. Apparently,
in the 1890s up to the 1930s, it's called the Golden Age of Fraternalism, where something like a
third of American men were members of a secret society or something based on like actual real
ancient secret societies like the Knights Templar, the Rosicrucians. These were just kind of fake
ones that gave you a reason to like leave the house on Tuesdays and Thursdays and go like,
you know, have whiskey down at the Moose Lodge or the Elk Lodge. You kind of get that feeling.
Yeah. And groups like the Moose and the Elks and the Knights of Columbus, they all grew out of that.
And in fact, Woodman of the World Insurance is called that. It's kind of a weird name if you
think about it, but Woodman of the World was a secret society from the 19th century and they
would sell their members insurance policies and that's where that insurance came from. So this
is kind of like the context of where the Ku Klux Klan originally came from in the 19th century,
this crazer trend for secret societies. Yeah. And by all accounts, it was started on Christmas Eve,
like you said, in Pulaski in 1865 by six men, Calvin, Jones, Richard Reed, Frank McCord,
John Kennedy, and John Kessler, I think. And then, believe it or not, the final guy's name
was Jim Crow. No. James Crow. No. Yeah. In Pulaski, Tennessee. And they were sort of based on this,
one of those secret groups called the Sons of Malta, but it seems like it was more inspired by,
because they weren't around by the time the Civil War ended, but they definitely sort of
kind of cribbed some stuff from the from the Maltins as far as, and this is the whole thing
with the secret societies, like outfits and costumes and rights and initiations and dumb
names of leadership that you make up. It's all a big part of it. I have never understood the
desire and not just obviously the clan, because clearly not interested in that, but any fraternal
group like that, including fraternities in college, I just, I never got it. Yeah.
That Sons of Malta you mentioned seemed to have been directly impactful. I don't know if there
were members who were from the Sons of Malta or how they heard of it, but the Sons of Malta and
then another group called the Ku Klux Adelphan, and both of them seem to have been party crews or
crews from Mardi Gras in New Orleans. And then the Sons of Malta somehow made their way up to
Boston, and that's where they really kind of got hold or got popular, I guess. But neither one of
those were racist groups from what I could tell. And from also what I could tell, the Ku Klux
clan wasn't necessarily intended to be a racist, terrorist, political organization, at least at
first. But shortly after they formed in 1865-66, the federal government passed the Reconstruction
Acts, and Reconstruction definitely deserves its own episode. Really want to do one or two
on Reconstruction at some point. But when they passed that act, that kind of changed or gave
focus to this what may have been like just kind of a group of racist people and turned them into a
racist political terrorist organization. Now they had something to do besides meet at the Moose
Lodge, and that was to enforce white supremacy in the deep south through acts of violence and
intimidation and terror techniques. And that was the first incarnation of the clan, and they spread
really quick from Tennessee down to Georgia and other neighboring states, thanks in part to personal
visits for organizing by a guy named Nathan Bedford Forrest, a Confederate general, who is not a
great guy. Yeah, there are a lot of complications with that guy. We'll get to him in a sec. But
the name KKK or Ku Klux Klan, they think might have, and there's no, again, it's been such a
sort of willy-nilly organization as far as having a national sort of codified presence,
that there's not even like a website that I saw that you can go to. It's all regional.
Man, I'll bet those are some terrible websites. They're pretty bad. Comic sans everywhere.
Yeah, they're pretty bad when there's like a black background and like pink
fonts and stuff like that. Spewing racist bigotry and ideology. Oh my god.
It's pretty bad. Yeah. I wanted to like throw my laptop out the window at one point.
But they think it might have derived from the Greek word,
Ku Klux, K-Y-K-L-O-S, which was basically denotes what people thought were like the
natural cycles of government or types of government that a civilization could have.
Which is pretty haughty if you think about it for the KKK. I mean,
political philosophy that dates back to the third century BCE, that's really something.
But Ku Klux is what it, K-U-K-L-O-S, is what it was sort of translated as in modern,
and well, not the modern era, but back then. And clan with a K, like what I saw was it was
originally Ku Klux, one word, and then clan with a C. And they think that may have come from maybe
Scottish clans. They play Scottish music sometimes at their rallies, but that's not affirmed either.
But eventually, I think that C was replaced with a K. It became KKK, and these lodges
started popping up all over right after the Civil War. Because kind of like you said, once
a minority gets a little bit of freedom, there's a bit of an uprising in clan membership. And
that's what happened from the first iteration is like we have these enslaved people that are now
free. We need to basically intimidate them into feeling like they still have no freedoms, even
though the loss is different. Right. So one of the first things they did was when reconstruction
came along and all of a sudden there were black people in the South could hold political
office or be judges or all this. This was like flipping a switch as far as the South is concerned.
And it, like I said, it laser focused like the aims of the Ku Klux clan and that they now took
up an intimidation and terrorism campaign against black people in the South, against Republicans
in the South. The Republicans at the time were a much different party than they are today and
that they were into the idea of big government to support and enforce social justice. And then
years later around the turn of the last century, Williams Jenning Bryant was a candidate who was
a Democrat who basically ran on the Republican platform, a big government to enforce social
justice. And then later on it was cemented by FDRs, a big kind of transition or switch basically
of ideologies between the parties. But at the time, if you were Republican, you were probably,
if you were in the South, you were probably for equal rights for black citizens. And you were
a target of their intimidation campaigns as well.
Big time because not only were they kind of battling these politicians, but
voter intimidation was a very real thing in voter suppression. And they would murder people,
like hundreds, maybe thousands of people in the South, especially Louisiana
reports ahead of the 1868 election where they murdered people for intimidation and literally
to keep them from voting. Yeah, dude, there was one town called Opalousus, Louisiana,
a town of 25,000. So it was pretty big. It was the county seat of the parish. I can't remember
what parish. But in two weeks, 200 people were murdered around the 1868 election. 200. That's
14 people a day in this town of 25,000 people all because of terrorism carried out by the KKK.
Yeah. And Ed helped us put this together and Ed is keen to point out. And I think we should do
is that a lot of what the Klan has always tried to do is lead their groups by fear.
And you still see that today, not only through the Klan, but other groups like fear of,
you know, that the immigrant's going to take your job or fear of this, fear of that.
And back then it was fear of these enslaved people that are now free rising up, you know,
and getting revenge. And that didn't happen. Like even though slavery happened, like once
black Americans earned their freedom, they did not all of a sudden say, oh yeah, well,
payback time. We're angry. We're going to come after you. They were happy to be freed and just
to try and live as regular people with rights and society. And that wasn't the message that
the Klan was putting out. They were like, you need to be afraid of them, even though there are no
accounts of that happening. It was just black people trying to be regular, normal people.
Right. And the other problem with that kind of thing is, is like when somebody does stuff like
this, when they carry out a terror campaign, it makes people wonder like, geez, well, what did
the other people do to deserve this? Well, the other people didn't do anything to deserve this.
And that's what's called the false balance or balance fallacy, where the idea that there's,
you know, there's problems on both sides or there's good people on both sides. It's like, no,
sometimes one side is the problem, basically 100% of the problem. And I think that was really
important of Ed to point out, and for us to point out too, that there was nothing that the Klan was
defending against except white supremacy and black suppression, the suppression of rights
among black people. That was it. It's as despicable as it sounds. There was nothing gallant or good
about it. There was nothing honorable about it. And in fact, they were so violent and so criminal
and so despicable that within three years of their founding, the Grand Wizard of the KKK,
Nathan Bedford Forrest, who we mentioned earlier, issued his one and only basically
executive orders, Grand Wizard saying, we have to disband and burn all of our stuff because
this has gotten out of hand. That's how violent they had become and how despicable their acts had been.
Yeah. Forrest Gump's namesake. Like I said, he was a pretty controversial remains,
a controversial dude, in that he was one of the generals of the Confederacy and he was in charge
when the Fort Pillow massacre happened, which was something we can get into in detail,
maybe in a short stuff, maybe. But essentially, hundreds of largely black soldiers who had given
up and surrendered were just massacred on this day at Fort Pillow. And he was known as a brilliant
general, the Wizard of the Saddle, which is what he was called because he was a Calvary guy.
And that later became, you know, they kind of ganked that for the clan as far as the Grand
Wizard. They kind of stole that from there. Ganked. But he seemed to be a vile man, but then later
in life, like you said, became disillusioned with the clan. Some people said it was just because
he didn't think they were organized enough. Some people said it was because he thought they got
too violent. But in Memphis, late in life, he gave this big speech about, you know, basically
trying to hold up the black man and give them jobs and put them in positions of important
positions in our government and to make them doctors and lawyers. So I don't know if it was
a change of heart. There's been a lot of controversy since then about, like, should we honor this guy
more, you know, or talk about, like, his entire life up until that moment?
No, I think it's like he deserves to have, like, it all spread out on the table. But I feel like
once you oversee, like, a massacre of unarmed black soldiers and oversee, like, a white supremacist
terrorist group, that's pretty tough to come back from. Even though, I mean, it is definitely
worth noting, and I think fair to note that he did have at least something of a change of heart,
at least publicly. I saw that he wrote to, I think the governor of Tennessee or somewhere
and offered to help destroy white vigilantes who were harassing black citizens because he
thought it was uncalled for. So yeah, he was an unusual person over the span of his life,
but he still did some pretty horrible stuff. Of course. And this, you know, this pops up
anytime there's a debate over whether they should strip the name from this or that, you know,
because there's plenty of stuff named for him. There is a high school in Jacksonville, Florida
that was named Nathan B. Forrest High School until 2014. Yeah. 2014, there was a high school
named after basically the founder of the Ku Klux Klan, in Jacksonville, Florida. They should just
name all the high schools in Florida, Tom Petty High School. Is he from Florida? Yeah, he's from
Gainesville. I didn't know that. Yeah, big time music scene down there back then. Okay, what happened
to it? The music scene? Yeah. I don't know. Maybe there's still this one. Who else came out of
Gainesville at that time? The Don Felder, the guitar player for the Eagles was Tom Petty's
guitar teacher. And then like Leonard Skinner hung out in Jacksonville and I think the Allman
Brothers, they were making guys, but they hung out down there too. That was the scene. Okay.
Should we take a break? Sure. All right, let's take a break. I didn't think Tom Petty and the
Allman Brothers would make an appearance in the Klan episode. Yeah. But they did and we'll be back
right after it to talk about the Enforcement X. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
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All right. The Enforcement Acts. This is basically when the federal government stepped up,
starting in 1870 and said, you know what? We can't count on these states, especially in the south.
And we should point out, and Ed makes a good point of pointing out that like there was racism all
over the country. Always has been. There have been clan groups all over the country. But in the south,
it was in the government. It was in the courts. It was in the school systems like it was nowhere
else in the country. So the federal government said we can't count on these southern states
to do the right thing and to have real investigations and prosecute people and to protect
black citizens. So we're going to pass the Enforcement Acts that basically says
we can go in there and we can kind of take care of business on our own if we have to.
Yeah. And take care of business they did. General Grant, Ulysses Grant, who was then
President Grant, had an attorney general named Amos Ackerman. This guy's awesome.
He is awesome. He's one of the heroes of this story. He doesn't even have a Wikipedia page.
He doesn't? No. That's pretty lame Wikipedia. It's bad. He's a Georgia boy too. Yeah. Yeah,
he is. So this guy ended up the attorney general under Grant and he basically used everything
at his disposal from forming basically the prototype of the FBI to getting federal troops
and getting martial law declared down in South Carolina to oversee the presidential election
down there. Like all sorts of different stuff. Everything he had, he would throw at the Klan
and ultimately kind of broke the back of that first Klan that combined with Bedford Forest. I
don't know why you have to say both of those names, but you just kind of do. Combined with his
executive order disband, like the Klan, the first Klan went away very, very quickly actually.
Yeah. And it's hard to tell how big it was at its first peak. Some people say maybe a half a
million people, but like you said, it faded out pretty quickly. And we'll talk about when the
Klan fades out. It doesn't really go anywhere as far as these people go. It's not like everyone
all of a sudden was awesome and not racist. It just means the formal Klan just lacked membership
basically. I don't know. I think when suddenly the federal government and maybe your senator
or your representative or you hear the president talking smack about this group that you used
to think was pretty cool, but now all of a sudden you realize that the rest of the country thinks
you're a backward dummy for looking up to these Klan members. It can kind of make people
self-reflect a little bit. So I wonder how many people do change their minds or have
historically over the course of this. Not necessarily like, well, I'm not racist anymore,
but I think that that's a possibility that somebody can reflect like that. Or at the very
least the next time they're not going to participate or agitate or join in. I don't know.
Did you see that meme of the dude in I think Indiana or Illinois? I can't remember. I believe
in a wheelchair and he's at a Black Lives Matter rally. He's holding a sign that says,
I'm sorry, I'm late. I had a lot to learn and he apparently was, I don't know if he was racist,
but he was certainly not in favor of Black Lives Matter and I guess started reading about it and
looking into it and doing his research and had a complete change of heart and showed up at one of
their rallies in support of them, which was pretty cool. Have you seen that? I have not seen that.
So it is, I mean, it can't happen. Like people's sentiments about this kind of stuff can't change
and I feel like when people are like, oh, oh, I'm in favor of keeping other human beings down for
really no reason whatsoever except they don't look like me. I feel like that that's like a,
there's a lot of room for improvement that can happen in that sense, you know?
Yeah. I mean, I'm sure individuals have changed like that. I wish it was en masse.
There were other violent racist groups when the Klan was not as popular during that period.
They just didn't have, they didn't have that sort of unified look.
Well, so let's talk about that look if you're ready to. Do you want to?
Yeah. I mean, you can thank DW Griffith and Thomas Dixon Jr. for that.
Yeah. Because prior to this, the Klan did not really look like what you would think. They
wore masks and hoods and, you know, disguises and they tried to disguise their voice. Apparently,
sometimes they would pretend that they were the ghosts of Confederate soldiers coming to
terrorize black families, fooling absolutely no one. But they didn't wear necessarily what you
would think of as like the Klan today. And like you said, that strictly came from DW Griffith.
And I guess Dixon, Thomas Dixon to a lesser extent, but Griffith like really put it up there
for everybody to see with the Birth of a Nation. Yeah. Birth of a Nation was a movie based on
a play that was based on a book from Thomas Dixon Jr. He published The Klan's Men with a Sea,
Kolan, a historical romance of the Ku Klux Klan, and where they were depicted as heroic sort of
noble Christian warriors. And that became a play that had, was a little bit more popular.
And then DW Griffith based the movie on that play. And it was, you know, this is where you saw
crosses burning and this is where you saw those white pointed hoods and horses with robes on them,
those poor, poor horses. They have no idea what they're doing. It makes me feel terrible.
Let's not drag the horses into this, shall we? No, I wish they wouldn't. But, you know,
what we know as sort of the look of the Klan was fully put forth by DW Griffith on screen.
I was kind of curious because I know he was a huge, huge name in Hollywood and a pioneer in
Hollywood and was a founding partner of United Artists with Chaplin and Mary Pickford and I think
Douglas Fairbanks maybe. But I was curious about both those guys, like were they super racist
or was this just a movie to them? And Dixon was supposedly really racist, although he supposedly
denounced bigotry in the wake of this sort of new Klan that was created. I had a harder time finding
out what DW Griffith was all about. He never apologized for anything and he seems to have
sort of escaped scrutiny in some ways. In his lifetime? I think so, but I'm not really sure
because I didn't have time to really do a deep dive into whether or not like he believed this
stuff or he was like, I'm going to make a salacious movie that's going to be super controversial and
get banned and get me a lot of attention. But whether his heart was in it or not,
the impact that his movie had was just astounding. It was like, imagine if when Star Wars came out,
all of a sudden like Jedi schools popped up in real life and like they would form together and go out
and run for office as like Jedi's basically. Sweet, we need a third party. Right, yeah,
the Jedi party. But imagine if those Jedi were like virulent racists who were dedicated to
suppressing the rights of minorities. What do you think about that? It's much less good.
It's much less good and that's, yeah, that's kind of what happened. It's a good point. Yeah,
but based on this movie, it was a popular movie that kicked off what's considered the second wave
or second incarnation of the Ku Klux Klan and gave us all of that. The symbolism, the grandiose
look and feel and just kind of like gave it this almost legend that really didn't exist
because the first Klan was never like that. They were a bunch of hooded, murderous thugs who would
ride around on horseback at night and set people's houses on fire. They didn't look anything like
that. So yeah, you can lay, you know, the resurgence and interest of the Klan almost squarely at the
feet of DW Griffith and then only because it wasn't as popular to a lesser extent Tom Dixon's feet.
Not Tom Dixon, the great, great lighting designer. Tom Dixon, the racist author.
Yes. Thomas Dixon, Jr. I think, right? Yeah. In fact, the Birth of a Nation, a part of it,
was filmed in the neighborhood I lived in LA in Los Feliz right there where, remember where we shot
the driving around stuff for the Toyota commercial? Yeah. Can I just say, one of my favorite memories
is while we were driving around, yes, you didn't look to the right and you started to pull through
a crosswalk and this lady with her husband and like three kids start like, I think smack the hood
of the Prius that we were filming in and like yell at you and you like yell back at her and shook
your fist. Like you got into like a shouting match. You did in every way except physically
shaking your fist, but you got in like a shouting match with some pedestrian while we were filming
a Toyota commercial. It was beautiful. It wasn't quite a shouting match. It was very brief. She
way overreacted. Oh, totally. No, no, I'm not saying you were in the wrong, but it was just...
Well, it reminded me of everything I hated about living in LA. I think in that one moment
was like how bad this lady overreacted. Yeah. It was fun though. That was a great memory. Yeah,
but Birth of a Nation was filmed like right down the street from there, part of it.
My favorite movie theater in LA, the Vista, was right on this corner and also the movie theater
that doubled as Detroit for True Romance for the Karate Kung Fu theater at the beginning.
But yeah, like right out there in front of that is this big like convergence of five streets and
apparently like some of the huge like marching scenes from Birth of a Nation were filmed right
there. Oh boy. Anyway, this second birth of the Klan, a lot of it can be credited also to
the actions of William J. Simmons, who was inspired from the movie and in 1915 went to the
top of Stone Mountain here in Georgia and burned across and... Inspired by a movie. Yeah. Well,
it's really important to get that across. And the hate and the previous Klan like... Sure. You
know, it was all still there. But James Venable, who I mentioned earlier, who I went to school with
his grandkids, he was a kid on top of the mountain with William Simmons at the time. Oh yeah. And
he was up there and I think with his uncle. And this was kind of looked at as sort of one of the
first meetings of the newly reborn Ku Klux Klan in the 1915s to 20s. Yeah. So in addition to having
like a much more unified look and I guess design ethos, this version of the Klan, the second version
of the Klan seemed more organized. At least they were organized enough to actually become a political
force, not just in support of say the Democrats at the time or in support of just whatever local
judge was known to be a racist and they would support him and intimidate voters against him.
They would actually put forth candidates who were members of the Klan and publicly members of the
Klan. Probably most famously, Robert Byrd, a senator from West Virginia, was a Klan member
and like never backed away from the Klan at any point. There were other Southerners like from
Georgia, who were senators, I mean, who were also Southerners from Georgia, who were from the Klan,
some representatives, lots and lots of local officials. And like the Klan would actually,
they became something of a political force as well. Yeah. I mean, the local thing is really
was a big deal because it could be and you know, politics, we all get worked up over
national politics as well we should. But if you really want to see a difference in your life day
to day, local politics is where it's at. And you know, county commissions and school boards
and boards of directors like that on the local level is really where the Klan could get in there
on a more low key basis and do a lot of damage. So that, you know, they had official uniforms
now, they had official ranks and titles. They were still sort of like, hey, we're just a fraternal
order. And that's kind of all we are. But at the same time, they expanded their ethos and it wasn't
just black people anymore. It was, they were anti-Semites, they were anti-Catholic. They were
against Communists. They were against anything that wasn't white. And all of this was sort of
under the banner of, hey, what we really are because, you know, they would also like
try and out pedophiles and stuff like that. What they said they really were were patriots
and heroes and good Americans, which sounds very familiar these days. It really does. This
version of the Klan very much reflects the kind of white supremacist BS that you see today in America,
where it's very much spread across different groups that are kind of held together by this
thread that, you know, white people are losing ground and they need to make it back up through
whatever we need to do. That really seems to reflect a bit. Also, the fact that there are crazy
nutjobs in Congress today who hold white supremacist values, basically publicly, really bears a
striking resemblance to the second resurgence of the Klan. Yeah, who, I mean, we should point out
again at like white Christian, white Protestant Christian. Right, that's important. Seemed to be
the only thing that was okay, like anything else, like anti-Catholic, anti-Jew, anti-everything,
except white Protestant Christian. This was the largest popularity, the widest popularity of the
Klan. The Southern Poverty Law Center estimates that they may have had around the mid-1920s,
as many as four million members spread across the U.S. It wasn't just in the south. I mean,
there were plenty in industrial cities in the north, there were plenty on the west coast,
plenty in the Midwest. Indiana was known as a stronghold of the Klan. I read that as many as
half a million, it had half a million members, which would have been a third of the population
of white men in Indiana at the time in the 1920s. You might ask, why was everybody in the Klan,
just in the same way that the Reconstruction gave, I guess, purpose to the Klan, massive waves
of immigration that had started in the late 19th century to the United States was making America
generally racist, and they were easily whipped up by things like, you're going to lose your job to
all these immigrants. Yeah, it was very much based on local grievances, like whatever the local fear
was. And a lot of times, you're right, that was immigrants coming into the town and taking your
jobs or black men marrying white women or whatever they felt the local thing was that would be most
effective at recruiting, kind of, was what they kind of honed in on. The mystique of it all was
very, I think, intoxicating to a lot of these people and still is in that documentary. It's
amazing to see these people two years ago talking about, clearly, that's an important thing for them,
like getting dressed up, meeting together in the woods and burning your cross, riding around at
night on your night rides or midnight rides in your car, putting up flyers under the cloak of
darkness. It's like cosplay, it really is. They're playing like they're in some important club.
It's interesting that the women in this documentary, all of them said, well, you know, this isn't the
kind of thing I probably would have been into, but it really improved my marriage when I got on
board and joined. And now my husband and I have something to talk about. We have commonalities.
And you hear this and you're just like crawling out of your skin at seeing this marriage, which is
clearly just a male-dominant marriage. But if you'll join my clan or if you like my football
team, we'll finally have something in common. And I love football. So I don't want to throw
football into the bus. But so yeah, so I mean, it makes sense. If you don't have much of an identity
or you are looking for something to give your life purpose, like a group or a club, especially one
that's, you know, looked up to by some people, like can really give your life a real shot in the
arm, you know, I guess. In good ways. I mean, there's so many great clubs where people that feel
like they don't fit in. They can be a big brother, big sister. Yeah. But I mean, it is interesting
that so much of it in this documentary seems to come from that mystique and that wanting to belong
to a group. And I'm just a, this one guy, he was like, you know, I'm just a landscaper. And I was
just out partying. And now, now I have focus. Now it's something to do. I've got these brothers.
So one of the, one of the things you mentioned was the midnight rides and going out at midnight.
And one of the, one of the reasons they do that is because the clan has always thrived on anonymity.
Like they, they don't, I mean, that's, that's not to say that they don't show their face in public.
Some of them do, but plenty of them don't. And that there's strength in that. And one of the
reasons that they would ride at night was because it afforded that much more anonymity, even if
they're, they weren't particularly anonymous in that, you know, their neighbor who they were
terrorizing probably recognized their voice. But the fact that they, their face wasn't shown,
there was plausible deniability to that. Well, speaking of anonymous though,
in this documentary, anonymous outed this one group in Missouri. Yeah. They got shut down
and they put their, all their information on the web. Wow. And it showed a little bit of the video
with the guy and the guy Fox mask and the, the, the computerized voice or whatever. Right.
Saying that, you know, we're coming after you. We're going to put your names online.
And it was, it was fairly interesting doing God's work. That's actually, yeah, for real.
And that's actually like a traditional anti clan tactic that groups like the NAACP or the anti
defamation league used back during this time when the clan was at its peak popularity in the 1920s.
They would bribe people to get their hands on a membership list. They would send in people to
infiltrate to get their hands on a membership list. And then they would publish it. And now all of a
sudden that anonymity and the strength that's afforded by the anonymity is gone. And you just
broke up a clan chapter in your local area because nobody wants to be associated with
anymore. And they probably have to make some sort of public statement about how they left,
you know, or they, it's all just a misunderstanding. They were never part of it.
Right. Or you're in fear of losing your job, maybe.
But that really helped break up this, this version of the clan in the 1920s. And then,
the federal government, again, if you look at these, these successive waves of the Ku Klux Klan,
the federal government is the one who steps in to break the back of the clan. And they did it
again, basically using the same playbook from the enforcement acts, the IRS in the 1940s,
somehow the clan had gotten a tax exempt status and the IRS removed it and then sued them for
back taxes equal to about $10 million in today's dollars. And the clan broke up real quick after
that. So in the pocketbook, that's the yeah, exactly what you do. So the federal government
just used a bunch of tactics to basically get rid of the clan again, and then the clan went away.
And that was that for a while. All right. So should we take another break here?
Yes. This sucks, man. We're, this is going to be a long episode. I hate giving the clan a long
episode. I know. We'll take a break and maybe we'll just come back and sing protest songs and then
call it a day. All right, we'll be right back. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise
or times get tough, or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever
think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh god.
Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man. And so
with my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep. We know that Michael and a different hot,
sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step. Oh, not another one.
Mm hmm. Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story
of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to
listen so we'll never ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on
the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mange Shatikler and
to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life.
In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get second hand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and
pay attention because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses,
major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had a handle on
this sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't
look good. There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a
skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the
iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
If I had a hammer, I'd hammer in the morning, I'd hammer in the evening, all over this land.
We should totally do this. I'd hammer out danger. Danger. I'd hammer out the clan.
The clan, boo. Outer space. What? You get that reference?
Is that from, hold on, hold on. Best, no. Which one was that one?
Cohen Brothers. Oh, no. I was thinking of the one, the Christopher Guest movie.
No, it was from the Cohen Brothers, the folk music
movie that is escaping me right now with Oscar Isaac. Yeah, yeah.
Adam Driver has a really funny part where they're recording in there and he's just doing background
speaking like that. Right. And Timberlake is singing about going to outer space and he goes
outer space. What's the one where Harry Shearer ends up joining like a folk group at the end?
Oh, yeah. That was Mighty Wind. Mighty Wind, yeah. That was a good one too.
Yeah, another good movie. That was a good one.
All right. Unfortunately, we have to wind this up and talk about the third wave of the clan,
which was the civil rights era. You would think that the civil rights era clan would be the
biggest iteration, but it actually wasn't. They were one of the more dangerous eras because
they were very famous for carrying out bombings all over the south mainly, including very sadly,
the bombing in Birmingham. I think there were 138 bombings over like a seven-year period,
but the bombing in Birmingham where they bombed the church and Addie Mae Collins, Cynthia Wesley,
Carol Robertson and Carol Denise McNair for young black girls were killed. And if you don't
know the story, just go watch the Spike Lee documentary for little girls because it really
does a great job of kind of retelling what an awful thing that was.
Yeah. And that definitely was the most famous and most despicable, but they bombed a lot of other
people, murdered a lot of other people. There's a couple that live not too far from where my place
in Florida is named Harry and Harriet Moore, whose house was bombed by the clan on Christmas Eve.
They chose Christmas Eve because they knew that I think their older children would come home.
They wanted to kill as many of them as possible. So there was a real reign of terror that the
clan was carrying out during the civil rights era. And Birmingham apparently was called bombing
ham for a while because it was just so prone to being bombed like where the church was bombed.
But also because it was where the clan was the strongest and most politically backed up, which
to the civil right leaders credit, they said, well, then we're going to Birmingham. That's where
we're going to set up shop, which is what brought Birmingham to basically the forefront of the civil
rights war. Yeah. You know, there were some other high profile events, the assassination of Medgar
Evers, obviously the Mississippi burning case. If you saw that movie, again, it did a really good
job of the case of those three civil rights workers in 1964 who were killed. And you know,
there were still lynchings going on and there were still people in seats of power, attorneys and
people on juries. And it was a very mixed up time in this country because rights were being achieved
while all this bloodshed was going on. And like you mentioned before, it's like they're trying
to hold on to this thing that is not what America is anymore. No, it's like T.S. America is a
multicultural society and it's better off for it. Like, let's just all get on the trolley,
shall we? Yeah. So the FBI, it's worth mentioning, played a dual role. Apparently, J. Edgar Hoover
knew all the way back in 1965, who carried out the 16th Street Baptist church bombing,
but just sat on it because he wasn't like a really big fan of civil rights or the civil
rights movement. But at the same time, the FBI actually did have an integral role in breaking
up local Klan groups by using like Co and Tel Pro, that program where they would basically
infiltrate and start getting people to question the leaders or start accusing each other of
disloyalty and just turn a group on each other like what they did to the Black Panthers,
they did to the KKK far less frequently, but they did have an impact on helping to break up
the KKK in the civil rights area as well. Yeah. And since the civil rights era kind of to today,
the Klan has really lost a lot of its membership. It has been, and that again is not to say that
any of the racism went away. It's been fractured sometimes into more dangerous groups, further
alt-right white supremacist groups and neo-Nazis. There have been people in power, David Duke,
you know, we have to mention him. He was an actual House member from the state of Louisiana.
He was the national Grand Wizard of the Klan. And I think they started to kind of
push away a little bit from the symbology of, you know, these kind of crazy symbols and the
hoods and the cross-burnings. I mean, that stuff still went on on local and state level.
Right. But I think nationally, they kind of tamp that down a little bit and was like,
I think it'd be better if we could just hold office.
Right. So, and that's basically, there's a direct thread to today, this idea where
they're just trying to soft sell racism and suppression of minority rights.
And it just repackage it in other ways, but it's all the exact same thing. And it,
it doesn't matter how you dress it up. You're trying to deny the rights of other human beings.
So say whatever you want to hell with your ideology, you know?
Yeah. Yeah, totally. It's, there's never been a good handle on the numbers,
because it hasn't been a super organized national thing, but they think it is down to like
less than 30,000 now. And when they do these specials and kind of go to these groups,
the meetings, you know, in these towns are a number in the single digits sometimes. It's not,
yeah, it's not like hundreds of guys getting together. And of course, there are women in
there now, keep saying guys, but it's largely always been men because they call them clansmen.
But these wives are getting involved as well, so they can have something in common with their
husbands. Yeah. And the good thing is, is the numbers are small enough that basically local
communities are strong enough to come out and chase clan rallies, break them up. As was the case
in Madison, Indiana on Labor Day in 2019, the clan said that they were going to have a cookout.
And apparently about 10 of them showed up and the entire Madison, Indiana community,
not the entire, but a significant portion of them showed up and basically chased the clan
out of the public park and broke up their rally in 10 to 20 minutes from what I read.
That's usually par for the course. And the clan is relegated to basically just spewing hate online
or like you said, leaving flyers on people's cars. So the Southern Poverty Law Center says
that they have been tracking their decline and they think they may have plateaued,
which is not good because you like to just keep seeing them decline, but they bottomed out,
in other words. The problem is, is there's no lack of other racist groups that are
that are equally problematic, if not more so. Yeah, there's one part in this new special
where this kid, there are these two guys dressed in their robes and putting up a flag in their
front yard or whatever, a Confederate flag and then one other, I guess, clan flag. And
this teenager in St. Louis comes across the street or whatever suburb they're in.
And it's just like, Hey man, white power. I just want to, I just want to see what you guys are
all about. You know, I'm really interested in joining up and, and these guys talked to him for
a minute. And it's just like, it's so troubling to see this dumb kid, you know, reaching out in
all the wrong ways because he's been taught something, right? You know, yeah. And when you
see this family, he's in these people's homes and there's five, six year old kids sitting around and
and the wife's got a cigarette and she's taken a shot of bourbon and she's got her mountain dew
in her hand and spewing hate and these children are sitting there and you just want to like,
you want to run in there and steal these kids. I know you're not supposed to say that.
You just did though. But I just did. It's awful. Yeah. It is pretty awful. Anytime you're talking
about hate, it's awful and it should be, it should turn your stomach. I hope it's
taught. It's taught. It is learned stuff, almost cost. Totally. That's how, yeah, that's how,
yes, for sure. We already did one on hate before and we maybe should do a redux on it. I don't
know. I got one more quick thing that's kind of always, I always thought was kind of fun
at, on a lighter note at baseball games. I'm not sure the history. I should look that up,
but a strikeout when you're keeping log is known as a K and fans have bring K signs and they hang
up with a pitcher is known for a lot of strikeouts. Yeah. One for each strikeout. Yeah. One for each
strikeout and they hang it up in the stands in front of their seats and they have always hung
that third K upside down as per tradition. So it never says KKK, which I think is great.
Yeah. It is great. Way to go baseball fans sticking it to. Way to go baseball fans.
Well, you got anything else? No, nothing else. If you want to know more about the KKK,
go visit the Southern Poverty Law Center. They have some really good research on it,
including some are just like, this is just pathetic. It's kind of reassuring in some ways.
If you're bothered by this, maybe that'll help. And since I said that, it's time for a listener mail.
Let me see here. I'm going to call this Ezra the podcaster. Hey guys, my name is Ezra. I'm 14 years
old. I've started a podcast on my own and it is inspired by your show. I'm doing a school project
on my podcast and I would love it if you could respond with a couple of your tips for beginners.
My podcast is called High School is a Joke. I listen to you every day and it would mean a lot
if you responded and even mentioned me in an episode. Thank you for always making me laugh,
to be more knowledgeable at the dinner table. You guys are really cool. I don't want to let
you know that you've inspired me to start my own show. Sincerely Ezra. That's awesome. Ezra,
congratulations. You got any advice? Well, I'll give you the advice I found is the best of all
time and that is just talk about stuff that you find interesting because even if people aren't
listening, you're still going to enjoy doing it and that'll make you keep it up and if you keep
it up, then other people start to notice and come around and next thing you know, you'll have an
audience. That's great advice. Stay away from the clan. It's even better advice, Chuck. Everybody,
whether you're a podcaster or no, steer clear of the clan. Don't even talk to them. Well,
if you want to get in touch with us like Ezra did, you can send us an email,
send it off to stuffpodcastatihartradio.com. Stuff you should know is a production of
iHeartRadio. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app. Apple podcasts are
wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and
my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because
I'm here to help and a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through
life. Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology
is way more widespread than any of us want to believe. You can find it in Major League Baseball,
international banks, K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on
this subject, something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology
changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas
are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever
you get your podcasts.