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Although Barbour wasn't in office during the Mississippi flag election, he has been an unabashed supporter of the flag. For years, he regularly wore a lapel pin with tiny U.S. and Mississippi flags. That accessory has largely disappeared in recent months, replaced by a lapel pin in the shape of Mississippi. When Barbour took office in January 2004, he asked his newly appointed commissioner of public safety to review a 2000 decision to remove the Mississippi flag from state troopers' vehicles. Barbour's commissioner reversed the earlier decision, by the state's first black Highway Patrol chief, and the flag reappeared on patrol vehicles. Before the current flap over the proposed Forrest license plate, the governor declined to criticize another racially divisive figure. In an interview with the AP in December, Barbour said segregation is "indefensible" but spoke fondly of a long personal relationship his family had with the late U.S. Sen. James O. Eastland, a Mississippi Democrat who espoused racial segregation during a Senate career that spanned the 1940s to the 1970s. "We grew up Eastland Democrats," said Barbour, who became a Republican as a young man in the mid-1960s. Asked whether he had agreed with Eastland on race, Barbour said: "When I grew up, the South was segregated. And once I got grown and to the point of having some judgment, it was obvious to me segregation is indefensible. And doesn't exist here and hasn't really existed here in my adult life." In an article published in December by the Weekly Standard magazine, Barbour said he didn't recall Mississippi's civil rights era as "being that bad."
The comment outraged Eddie S. Glaude Jr., a Princeton University professor of African-American studies who grew up in Mississippi and left the state after finishing high school in the mid-1980s. Glaude told the AP this week that Barbour has shown a "morally reprehensible" pattern of indifference to the way black people were hurt by racial strife in Mississippi's past. Glaude said the refusal to denounce Forrest is another example. "I know he's playing to different audiences here," Glaude said. "That just simply reveals a kind of deep indifference and that indifference is troubling." Barbour has taken positive steps to recognize black leaders in Mississippi. During his state of the state speech in January, he called on lawmakers to revive dormant plans to develop a civil rights museum in Jackson. They're working on that now. In a speech on the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, he condemned the racial violence of the 1960s. And in May, Barbour will host a reception for the Freedom Riders who met mob violence when they challenged interstate bus segregation across the South 50 years ago. Still, the governor seemed exasperated Thursday when asked again in Kentucky about the license plate issue. Said Barbour: "I'm expecting to be asked next, 'What do you think of Kublai Khan?'"
[Associated
Press;
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