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Louisiana interracial marriage case revives southern stereotypes

The pace has only picked up after the election of Barack Obama, whose skin color has revealed a usually hidden strain of racism that remains present in the South.

Ever wonder why jokes about the South and 鈥渞ednecks鈥 persist?

Look no further than Keith Bardwell, the Louisiana justice of the peace who refused to marry an interracial couple because he was worried about how their kids would cope. 鈥淚鈥檓 not a racist,鈥 the judge said. He even lets black people use his bathroom, he said.

Sure, the underlying tenets of humor about the South has a bit to do with the insecurity of the North facing a virile Sunbelt economy that, up until recently, had a major influence on national and presidential politics.

But the political defeat of the Southern-based Republican party has given a little more leeway to poke fun at the South. Of course, that task is only made easier by the fact that some Southerners can鈥檛 help but step in it again and again.

The pace has only picked up after the election of President Barack Obama, whose skin color has revealed a usually hidden strain of racism that remains present in the South. (Regionalism, if not racism, seems mutual: Besides White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, an Alabamian, real down-home Southerners are a rarity in the Obama inner circle.)

This week we had the Louisiana judge who somehow had missed the last 30 years -- the US Supreme Court outlawed bans on interracial marriages in 1967 -- and refused to marry an interracial couple.

鈥淭here is a problem with both groups accepting a child from such a marriage,鈥 Mr. Bardwell said. 鈥淚 think those children suffer, and I won鈥檛 help put them through it.鈥

There was Congressman Joe Wilson鈥檚 鈥淵ou Lie鈥 outburst to President Obama. Judging by his fundraising since, Wilson鈥檚 been hailed as a hero even though his comment embarrassed many in South Carolina.

Earlier this year, Rusty DePass, a Republican activist, said a gorilla that escaped from the Riverbanks Zoo in Columbia, S.C., was an ancestor of Michelle Obama.

The state may pay a steep price for a few local chuckles in such cases, warns Brian Hicks, a columnist for the Post and Courier in Charleston.

鈥淎 loudmouthed minority of Neanderthals and sore losers have so poisoned the national discourse with their racist rantings, crude jokes and veiled threats that they have sullied South Carolina's reputation more than any governor, congressman or senator could ever imagine. So, thanks for that.鈥

Okay, it鈥檚 always fun to kick the South and its sympathizers around when they鈥檙e down. (See: Reconstruction). But sometimes, even people here in the South agree, the criticism is more than warranted.

The darker side, , is that recent pratfalls in the South hint that 鈥渢he Republican鈥檚 1968 鈥楽outhern strategy鈥 has morphed into the Southern Democratic Party鈥檚 1860 strategy 鈥 reminiscent of the antebellum South.鈥

Of course, to a majority in the South, that鈥檚 not funny -- and neither is Mr. Bardwell鈥檚 refusal to marry the couple. Many of the 77 percent of Americans who support interracial marriage, according to Gallup, live in the South.

Realizing that Southerners playing into the hands of late-night monologists can be politically damaging to a party trying to be more diverse and inclusive, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and other state officials have criticized Bardwell for his beliefs, and have called for his resignation.

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