After skimming this one, I felt that Kennedy would do best to shut his gob and get with the program.
Needless to say, I immediately reexamined my own reaction. It was only a feeling, after all.
As anyone who still reads this blog knows; I'm a son of Europe's "Celtic Fringe." More accurately (and for all that I despise the term as employed in these parts), I'm "Anglo-Celtic." This is a four-dollar way of implying that like that of many Southerners; my DNA is ultimately less a double helix than a Gordian knot of Gael, Gaul/Briton, Angle, Saxon, Jute, Pict, Norse, Roman, and God alone knows what else.
Although convenient, casual racism is every Southern male's assumed birthright; our mixed heritage (our "hybrid vigor," as it were; Patrick Ferguson disparaged it and subsequently paid the piper -- his life comprising the medium of exchange) precludes the committed, vicious, ideology of racial superiority one finds in Mein Kampf, portions of the Talmud, or the ravings of MEChA, the Nation of Islam and the Ku Klux Klan.
Having said that, I'll allow that Kennedy's apparent (if ironic, given his surname) grudge against the Scots-Irish is largely valid. Although James Webb rightly characterized ours as an inclusive culture, our "inclusiveness" often lacks consistency: Blacks named "Riley," Cherokee and Creek chiefs named "MacIntosh," and Mexican/Texan pistoleros bearing my own surname abound.
The Melungeons, though? They took our names -- and nothing else. We wouldn't give them any more.
In all probability, the Gentle Reader is equally unacquainted with the Melungeons, East Tennessee, and the intricate web of racial/ethnic relations in pre-WWII America. As, however, we live in an age of officially sanctioned villains and victims, and pay lip-service to the inherent value of every ostensibly brutalized culture du jour; our failure to remove the beam from our own collective eye whilst vacuuming dust motes from our neighbors' ill becomes us -- every one: us for treating the Melungeons like s**t, and YOU for being unaware of their existence.