Bear Grease - Ep. 106: Conman - Asa Carter (Part 2)

Episode Date: May 3, 2023

On this episode of Bear Grease, part two of our Conman series on the double life of Asa Forrest Carter, Clay Newcomb dives into the gritty details of the violence, hate, and conspiracy philosophies of... the first 45 years of his life and how, in the last decade of his life, he transformed into an unrecognizable, “Cherokee Indian” author who wanted to be America’s next Hemmingway – and almost did it. Once again, author of Unmasking the Klansman, Dr. Dan T Carter and Steve Rinella of MeatEater lead the way as his guests. Brace yourself because this winding trail will be treacherous as they talk about the beating of jazz singer Nat King Cole, read from the Unabomber’s Manifesto, and begin to understand how Asa Carter did what he did. We’re going neck deep into the mind of a Conman. We really doubt you’re gonna wanna miss this one… Audio excerpts courtesy of “The Reconstruction of Asa Carter” Connect with Clay and MeatEater Clay on Instagram MeatEater on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and Youtube Shop Bear Grease MerchSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:26 Built to perform, built to last. Check out. First Light's new field. Worldware gear at firstlight.com. I started going door to door, trying to find out something about the most famous writer of this area, man named Asa Carter, roll onto the pen name of Forrest Carter.
Starting point is 00:00:49 She said, get out of here and don't come back. This is part two of our con man series on the double life of Asa Forrest Carter. We're diving into the gritty details of the violence, hate, and conspiracy philosophies that themed the first 45 years of his life, and how in the last decade of his life, he transformed into an unrecognizable Cherokee Indian author
Starting point is 00:01:14 who wanted to be America's next Hemingway, and he almost did it. Once again, author of Unmasking the Klansman, Dr. Dan T. Carter, and Steve Runella of Meat Eater, lead the way as my guests. Brace yourself because our windy trail will be treacherous as we'll talk about the beating of jazz singer Nat King Cole, read from the Unabomers Manifesto,
Starting point is 00:01:40 and we'll begin to understand how Asa Carter did what he did. We're going neck deep into the mind of a con man. For real, I don't think you're going to want to miss this one. If he was shooting for race to instill racial hatred, he missed the mark. If he was shooting to make you love your grandparents. Yeah. My name is Clay Newcomb,
Starting point is 00:02:10 and this is the Bear Greece podcast, where we'll explore things forgotten but relevant. Search for insight in unlikely places and where we'll tell the story of Americans who live their lives close to the land. Presented by FHF Gear, American-made, purpose-built, hunting and fishing gear that's designed to be as rugged as the places we explore. While I was in the middle of doing my research on the Wallace biography, George, Wallace, I watched the educational little tree climb from being a university press book with 5,000 printing of 5,000 books.
Starting point is 00:02:56 Suddenly it was 100,000, 200,000, and it was on the New York Times bestseller list. And as I considered it, I was probably more indignant than I should have been. I thought, this is a guy. This is a lie. And I read the book. I thought there's nothing wrong with the book, but there is something wrong. there is something wrong with claiming to be some Native American, having an Indian ancestry and using it to sell your book.
Starting point is 00:03:25 So I contacted the New York Times. And actually, when I first contacted him, they didn't believe me. They said, no, he has a long record as a novelist. So I sent him a statement from the ambulance driver. who he died in 1979 in Abilene after a biblical death that I describe in the book. And he was shipped out of Abilene by air as Forrest Carter and the Hearst Driver and the Hearst driver I talked to said, all I know is that when he arrived, he was Forrest Carter and when I buried him, he was Asa Carter.
Starting point is 00:04:08 That was Dr. Dan T. Carter. He's no relation to Asa. And on episode one of our Cotton Man series, we dove deep into the contents of a book published in 1976 called The Education of Little Tree, written by a man who claimed he was a Cherokee Indian named Forrest Carter, and his book was semi-autobiographical. It's brilliant prose about an orphaned Native American boy raised by his grandparents while being taught moral lessons about life through their connection to the land and the people in their community. It gives poignant insight into empathy, love, and integrity towards all shades of people except politicians, the government, and anything organized and institutionalized by man, which all these things are inherently corrupt. This all sounds pretty reasonable. Moonshining, deer hunting, fox hunting with hounds, predator prey relationships, turkey trapping,
Starting point is 00:05:06 mules, whoopper will, lore, and how to tell when a watermelon is ripe, is all in the book too. It teams with the rich mountain culture of the Great Depression Era impoverished Southern Appalachia. However, there's a catch that was relatively unknown until 1991
Starting point is 00:05:25 when a New York Times article by Dr. Dan T. Carter, who we just talked to, expose the author as Asa Carter. And he wasn't a Cherokee Indian, but he was an ardent white supremacist considered radical even by others in the movement.
Starting point is 00:05:42 He was a leader in the Klu Klux Klan, under constant surveillance from the FBI. He was involved in several acts of violence, and he was a speechwriter for Alabama Governor George Wallace. Asa Carter was a con man. He was a professional white supremacist dedicated to his craft. He was a wordsmith, an orator, an actor. He had an IQ of 138,
Starting point is 00:06:08 and some considered him a media and marketing genius. And I say segregation now, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever. Those famous words spoken by George Wallace were written by Asa Carter. Today there is a 1,000-page FBI folder holding all the surveillance done on Asa. He was suspicioned to be a dangerous man. Is that why he had to change his? identity. But the latter part of his life, his writing, did that evidence a changed man? We're contrasting the two external data points we have on his life. Number one, a brilliant
Starting point is 00:06:54 book of empathy to Native Americans, and number two, a professional life dedicated to racial supremacy. Racism is typically rooted in a desire to preserve one's culture at the detriment of another. It's the manifestation of a fear and insecurity, but it's also misguided love of one's own culture. But loving your culture isn't necessarily a bad thing. I'd say most people of the world appreciate their culture. But if we're trying to really understand who Asa Carter was, I think we've got to see and acknowledge the mechanics at play. In Ace's case, he was very interested in preserving the Anglo-Saxon South, which he believed had been taken advantage of in the post-Civil War reconstruction, which isn't an outlandish statement. However, the philosophy of his hate preyed on people's
Starting point is 00:07:49 bitterness, weakness, and fear. The rudimentary, carnal, corrupt ideology produced nothing but more brokenness. What makes crazy men so dangerous is how close they are to being incredibly normal. I'd also like to say that I'm not telling this story to demonize the South, nor suggest that we're a bunch of racists down here. On the contrary, this story is so extreme, it stands out like a strutton gobbler in a wheat field. To say that the South hasn't massively moved forward in racial reconciliation since the Jim Crow days would be inaccurate. And it would be as inaccurate to say that race. racism doesn't exist here in 2023. And I think stories like this are important to talk about. I think it helps us understand where some of this stuff comes from and how to fix it.
Starting point is 00:08:44 It's important to remember that Asa Carter died at the age of 54 in 1979, the year I was born. So we're just guessing about his motivations. Here's Dr. Dan T. Carter, who I'm going to call Dan to keep things simple on this podcast, who is now 8.5.000. years old and Sharpe's attack. He's going to tell us about his on-the-ground research on ASA in the 1990s. Well, the summer 1991, when the posthumous book, The Educational Literary became so popular, I thought, I've got to find out something about this guy. So I had been in Alabama doing a lot of research, and I drove up to Aniston, went to the local library, they were very helpful.
Starting point is 00:09:30 but I couldn't I couldn't exactly find out where he lived. I knew the area, Darmineville it was called, in a rural area there. So I drove out there. My wife was with me. And I think I'm, I could be a con man, I guess.
Starting point is 00:09:49 I was never dishonest with anybody, but I would always say I'd go out to doors or business. I went to several small businesses there and said, I'm trying to find out something about the most famous writer of this area, man named Asa Carter, rolled under the pen name of Forrest Carter, and everybody either claimed they didn't know anything. But then I started going door to door.
Starting point is 00:10:18 This is real journalism. And a fair number of people didn't, you know, they were younger, they didn't know. But if it was older people, without except, I started to say almost, but without exception, they either became hostile or they wouldn't talk to him. And years later, when I got the FBI files, I found out why. The local community resented the fact that when he was active as a right-wing radio announcer and everything lived there, he was under constant suspicion by the FBI. They were constant monitoring.
Starting point is 00:10:53 They follow him. They park at the end of his driveway. And this is the middle of civil rights movement. these people didn't like government people anyway. And they saw this kind of persecution of their hometown boy. Yeah, yeah. So I finally found a small engine shop, and I talked to the guy. He said, I don't know anything about him.
Starting point is 00:11:12 What he did. He just didn't want to talk to me. And as I left, one of the mechanics, an older guy, walked out behind, and he motioned me over. And I went over, and he said, and listen, said, I wasn't one of ACE's boys, he said, boys, part of his clan group. But he said, I know a boy, he said, who's real good friends with Asa's son, Asa Jr.
Starting point is 00:11:37 And I said, I'll tell you how to find his house. So I drove up there, went inside, talked to his wife first. And she got her husband. She was cheerful and everything. And he came down and I explained what I wanted. He didn't say a word. He went back upstairs. I could hear him on the phone, but I couldn't hear what he was saying, and his wife was kind of embarrassed.
Starting point is 00:12:01 She said, I don't know what's going. So she walked up the stairs to the top of the stairs for a minute. She came running down the stairs. She said, get out of here right now. And I said, what do you mean? She said, get out of here and don't come back. And I don't know what he was promising to do, but it clearly was not a good idea to stay there. So I left, and he came running out on the porch just as I.
Starting point is 00:12:25 drove off. He was hot. Dan would later receive some veiled threats of violence from others after his New York Times story broke. Neighbors standing up for the reputation of neighbors is conceivable, but so was violence in the stratosphere of Asa Carter. On April 10, 1956, jazz singer Nat King Cole was attacked on stage in Birmingham, Alabama, and members of Aces Klu Klux Klan group did it.
Starting point is 00:12:57 Well, they say that the reason those men attacked you was because of a feeling against rock and roll music and Negro music so-called. Now, what do you feel about that? Well, I mean, if that was the case, then I'm the wrong guy. You're not rock and roll. I don't think so. I think if you heard me before, I'm sure you wouldn't ask me that
Starting point is 00:13:16 if you heard me before. What do you know what rock and roll is? That was Nat King Cole being interviewed about the attack. The clan was very concerned about the racial crossover popularity of black musicians and the dangerous craze of rock and roll music. Six men were arrested for the attack and Asa Carter would set up a legal defense fund for them declaring them political prisoners. Asa was incredibly media savvy and knew how to turn a story. In a non-related incident, Asa would be accused but acquitted of shooting two men with a 44 Magnum at a clan meeting in downtown Birmingham.
Starting point is 00:14:00 These men had accused him of stealing money and he shot him. Lots of people saw it happen, but nobody would talk against Asa so they had no evidence. But it's widely believed that he did shoot these men. But let's get back to Dan being in Alabama in the early 1990s trying to learn about ASA. I asked him how ASA could have pulled off this double life so well. It's partly the power of his skills. When he was in high school, I interviewed one of his high school friends, and he was in a high school play. And this classmate of his said, it was embarrassing.
Starting point is 00:14:42 And I said, because he was bad. He said, no, it's because the rest of these were high school kids. And he was like a Hollywood actor. He was totally at ease on the stage. his lines were delivered like a professional actor and it made the whole it awkward to watch you know so from the very beginning
Starting point is 00:15:04 he had these skills when he decided after he got out of the Navy to go to the work to the University of Colorado he had done his naval training there during the war he graduated from high school but it was some rural high school in Alabama and the entrance person
Starting point is 00:15:23 at the University of Colorado. Well, I don't know about this. So, would you mind taking an IQ test? He's 138. So there was never any doubt about how really smart he was. He made a lot of political misjudgments, but in terms of intelligence, he was very capable and a great performer. He was like a Hollywood actor.
Starting point is 00:15:47 Aisa was gifted with words, with reading people, and had instinctual insight into the way humans operated, what compelled them, what scared them, what moved them. Most dynamic leaders have this capability. He knew what people wanted to hear. Here's Dan with some of Aces' deep background. Asa Carter had a background very much like mine. He grew up on a small farm in northeast Alabama, near Aniston. And he, there's no evidence at all during his, his high school years from his classmates, that he was anything other than a typical white Southern boy.
Starting point is 00:16:31 I mean, sure, all of us of that generation, his generation, and even up to mine, were unconsciously racist. But he wasn't, there's nothing to indicate he was virulent about it at all or even obsessed about it. So there was nothing, you know, in his early childhood that indicated this. And then he had some traumatic event. He enlisted in the Navy in the officer training program in 1943, and he flunked out, not because he wasn't smart, but because he went to a rural high school that just did not prepare him for the rigorous kind of program involving mathematics and other things. He just didn't have the background. And it really embittered him.
Starting point is 00:17:15 And he was now 18, almost 19 years old. He goes in the Navy. He becomes a radio operator, a very courageous one. He serves in combat. But while he's on a ship in the Pacific, he meets a small group of people who are studying a series of racist, anti-Semitic, anti-Black writers, Gerald L. K. Smith.
Starting point is 00:17:38 Names it you might not be familiar with the day, but we're really big in the 1930s and 40s. many of them growing out of the fascist movement of the 1930s. And they couldn't talk about during the war. Obviously, we were all in the war against it, but secretly, many of them really, really supported Hitler. And they were fine with the war against Japan. That was why Carter always said,
Starting point is 00:18:08 I was glad to fight the Japs, but I didn't want to fight my Aryan brothers. And he became obsessed with this during the time he was in the Navy. And that was a turning point in his life. Think about it for most of us young people. And I know this from studies as well, that your real political outlook, if you have a political outlook, is often shaped 18, 19, 20, when you're becoming an adult. That's exactly the time for him. And then from then on, he was one of these, what's the word for, autodidact in which you
Starting point is 00:18:44 teach yourself. He read, he had a brilliant IQ. He read, but he read exclusively in two kinds of literature. One was fascist literature, anti-Semitic literature. The other was this veneration for the Confederacy. He worshipped the Confederacy and saw in the, and not the fancy Confederates like Robert Lee and these, but in the tobacco chewing kind of. Kind of people like Nathan Bedford Forrest who could barely read and write, but thought like to maintain, you know, the White South in the Confederacy. And these became his heroes. And he gradually developed a whole way of appealing to people.
Starting point is 00:19:34 He started out as a radio announcer in Denver after the war. Then he worked in Yazoo City, Mississippi a little while. And then he was hired and given a rube. radio program that gradually spread to a network. In 1865, this state right here after the war between the states was occupied by a federal irony. In one year, they confiscated 190,000 farms and homes from these poor old redneck, great-granddaddy virus.
Starting point is 00:20:01 But they refused to integrate. They refused to cooperate. In 1874, they whipped them. They whipped them. That was the voice of AESA. listened to many of his broadcast. And he was really good. He's quite different from the broadcast, many of the broadcasters of the period,
Starting point is 00:20:26 who were stentorian and what today makes you kind of cringe to listen to them. They had this kind of booming voice in which everything was overly dramatized. That's not the way he was. He acted like he was your uncle sat down and just talked casually to you. So it was different. It was a different frequency that people could connect to, maybe more than they ever had. Yeah, and he was so good at a kind of folksy style in which he would tell stories about most of them made up, but about his past or about other people.
Starting point is 00:21:03 And then he would always link it back to the threat. He was smart enough to realize that anti-Semitism, particularly after the Holocaust and the news about the Holocaust, didn't play very well. I didn't mean it wasn't there. There were a large number of Americans who were still anti-Jewish, but he realized it was kind of the third rail. So he didn't talk about that much on his radio show. What he did discover was the great weapon that white supremacists had in the South, anti-communism, because the anti-communist fervor of the 1940s and 1950s explodes with McCarthyism, and what white southerners immediately realized, because there were some savvy politicians for us, we have to convince white Americans outside the South that all the
Starting point is 00:21:57 civil rights stuff is being formatted by the Communists. In the South, we have 98% Anglo-Saxon race. Not counting a... These are responsible people who erect free government and who have stood up and told them you must operate, you must conduct yourself from a separate state. But the communist says one world government, one world economy, one world geographically, and a one world race. Those are heavy words. It's hard to reconcile that he's the guy that wrote the education of Little Tree. The political play was to say that the communists were behind the civil rights movement.
Starting point is 00:22:47 Whether he believed that or not, we don't really know. Some evidence would later suggest that he didn't believe that at all, but it was just a political strategy. What many have since said is that Ace's public career in media was him playing an exaggerated character that he believed the South wanted. And therein lies the problem with political leaders and most men. media personalities. They've got to get ratings and votes so they do what sells. And like a nasty social media algorithm, they give the people their base level desires of what they think they want.
Starting point is 00:23:26 Do you realize how nasty and dirty social media algorithms are? They'll feed you and your kids filth and tell you it's a favor. And media and politics do the same thing. Do you see these reoccurring themes in American people? politics. Here's Dan on anti-communism. And that became the theme, his theme, and that of other right-wing radio broadcasters, not only southern but northern as well, that the Communist Party is maneuvering these people, that they're not smart enough to do it on their own. And in their publications, as opposed to their sort of inner publication, is really the Jews that
Starting point is 00:24:10 were behind it. and it would be, it would sort of be on the periphery all the time so that, for example, in his broadcast and the broadcast of many of these people, they would often emphasize the Jewish names of individuals who supported civil rights. Because it was true, and as a whole, Jewish Americans were a group that were much more supportive of African Americans than generally white Americans were. So he was able to get away with it mostly. He did run into a problem in 1955.
Starting point is 00:24:47 He overstepped himself. And on a radio broadcast, he talked about the Jews in their role in formatting this. And actually, it was a group of white businessmen who were closely tied to the Jewish community in Birmingham who said to his sponsors, you've got to get rid of this guy. and they succeeded, and that just reinforced his, you know, believe the Jews were behind. They fired me from my job. He later ended up doing other radio broadcast, but never as successfully as he originally was. Aesah became so radical that he outpaced his peers.
Starting point is 00:25:29 But deep down, he believed the Jews were behind the civil rights movement, and they intended to deconstruct the current South. What's odd to me is it seems like a lot of people were interested in deconstructing the South. Here's an interesting observation from Steve Ronella about Ace's book, The Education of Little Tree. Some of this just doesn't make any sense. Here's another when I stumbled over, knowing about the presumptive feelings of this Klansman, okay, and their antipathy and hatred of Jews and religious persecution of Jews, okay? So here I'm reading the educational Little Tree.
Starting point is 00:26:08 And there's a guy that there's a storekeeper, the tree sees these guys very well. And one might look and be like, oh, of course. They evade the Jew, the storekeeper. Okay. There's a storekeeper who's Jewish. Little Tree overhears someone, refer to him as a Jew and mentions his stinginess.
Starting point is 00:26:24 Little Tree goes on to say, Mr. Wine was not stingy. He was thrifty and paid his obligations and seen that his money was used in the right manner. later he says he's worried about this and he says to his grandpa what is a jew okay so you're like so as the reader i'm like what's grandpa gonna say now knowing that here's this we have a clansman espousing his beliefs what do grandpa's answer be grandpa just says i don't know something is said about him in the bible somewheres or other must go back a long ways like the indian i hear tell they ain't got no nation either
Starting point is 00:27:05 End the story. As political rhetoric, what is that gaining? The primary character, Little Tree, is introduced to a person who stereotypes this individual. He's a Jewish stingy. And they spend a lot of time talking about the difference between stingy and thrifty. Stingy, you just hoard things. Thrifty, you have things that matter. So you don't spend on things that are frivolous because you want to focus on things that matter.
Starting point is 00:27:31 This is a conversation they've had. He says, the guy's not stingy, he's thrifty. He just wants to know where his money's going. It seems like it would have been an easy spot to throw him under the bus if he wanted to. It's, yeah. Once again, we're conflicted with the first version of Ace's life compared to the presumed life of a man that could write the education of Little Tree. Does that make any sense to you? Doesn't to me.
Starting point is 00:27:58 Just to clarify the timeline, Asa Carter's life as a professional racial supremacist media personality, was in the 1950s into the early 1970s. Acer ran for governor of Alabama in 1970 against George Wallace. On a platform so radical, George Wallace was the moderate candidate. He claimed that Wallace had left the cause. And A's message that had been so well received for 20 years was now obsolete. It didn't jive with the voters of Alabama. And he received 1.6% of the state.
Starting point is 00:28:35 Statewide vote. Last spring, Clay Newcomb and I collaborated with Jason Phelps at Phelps game calls in building each of our own favorite turkey diaphragms called prime cuts. Now, I'm going to tell you, I love mine because it's easy to use. I'm not going to go, I'm not going to win a turkey calling contest. It's just not going to happen. But when I run this call, I get the sounds that gobblers are looking for. I have a great turkey hunting track record.
Starting point is 00:29:05 If you go listen to real turkeys out in the woods, they're not going to win. calling contests, right? That's who I listen to. I can make those sounds on my cut. I also hunt with Phelps's cut, and I hunt with Clay's cut because they're all three great cuts. Check out Prime Cuts at Phelpsgamecalls.com. I think you'll be glad you did,
Starting point is 00:29:26 and you'll find out that the Steve Rinella cut is an easy-to-use cut for beginning callers who just want to start making good turkey noises and getting action. Here's Steve with an interesting tidbit on ISIS political career. This is another thing people got to go back to their history books to study up on. These guys are all Democrats. Right. He was trying to get the Democratic nomination for governor,
Starting point is 00:29:53 and he was running as being an absolutist on segregation. Wow. Listen, I keep like as we're talking, I keep warming up to the idea that there's just like an unstable. hand here. But then you get into this. How could you write so tightly and so beautifully? It was after the devastating loss of this political race for governor that Asa began writing the novels he'd always wanted to write. He knew he'd never get published as Asa Carter, so he changed his name to Bedford Forrest Carter, which eventually just became Forrest Carter. And FYI, Nathan Bedford Forrest was the first Grand Wizard of the Klu Klux Klan, who had later renowned.
Starting point is 00:30:39 his involvement in the clan. We mentioned him before on our episode about Hulk Collier. Here's Dan with more details of Ace's identity switch. So with that change of identity, obviously in public, like if he's talking to Barbara Walters, he's going to be, he's going to speak like Forrest Carter, look like Forrest Carter, talk like. Did he maintain that identity like throughout his whole life during that period? Yes, absolutely. What about his, he was married?
Starting point is 00:31:09 to his wife's name was India. That's right. Is that correct? When did he marry her? He married her right out of the Navy in 1947. Okay, so she was here for this whole thing? Oh, yeah. And she was very much his supporter and played along with the whole thing.
Starting point is 00:31:28 She didn't even, she lived, they bought a house, as I described in the book, through a flukeish set of circumstances. He came into some money. And he bought a house down in St. George Island, and she lived down there. But he spent most of his time in Avalene. He came into some money. In 1972, Aesah wrote his first novel under the alias Forrest Carter, which he titled Gone to Texas. And the movie rights to the book were purchased by Clint Eastwood, and he made it into his breakout movie, the outlawed Josie Wales.
Starting point is 00:32:06 And this part is absolutely wild, almost unethical. unbelievable. But knowing that he was being tracked by the FBI, ASA went to the FBI office and told them how to get in touch with him if they needed him because he was about to, quote, make some money for the first time in my life, and I don't want anything to screw it up. This is a direct quote from the over 1,000-page FBI file on ASA. He then moved to Abilene, Texas. At this point, he called his son's nephews. He grew a mustache, grew out of sideburns, wore a cowboy hat, and became a new-aged Cherokee Indian writer. But he had some help with this new story.
Starting point is 00:32:53 All of that was made possible because of one man, a man named Don Josie, who was a wealthy, wealthy Texas oil millionaire who had given a lot of money to George Wallace. And Carter had met him, and they just became like brothers. And when Carter contacted him in 1971 and said, look, I want to change my identity and move to Texas. And the two of them came up with this background story. Don Josie would meet the newsman when he first started trying to promote his book and say, yeah, he worked for me for 25 years as a Bronco Buster. and Don Josie on several ranches. He said he was here and there and wherever. Okay, so he had an accomplice.
Starting point is 00:33:40 He had an accomplice who set up the background story for him. Okay. And so when anybody asked about, why didn't even hear this guy? Guys, you know, all these years. And he came up with these stories about how he was a storyteller to the Cherokee Nation. Well, it's just strange. Nobody went back to here to North Carolina. Carolina, Eastern Tennessee, and said, can you tell us about this? Nobody ever checked in it.
Starting point is 00:34:08 Right. You know, it's partly the power of his skills. Aisa had skills. The release of the book, The Outlawed Josie Wells and Eastwood making the movie was the beginning point of his new life. What's interesting is that Aza's life mirrors the plot of this movie almost to the T. Josie Wales is a Confederate soldier who won't give in to to the ideology of a reconstructed South. Asa made a living talking about rejecting reconstruction and how the South got the shaft. Josie Wells leaves the South under persecution
Starting point is 00:34:45 from the Yankee Army and heads to Texas. Asa, under the persecution of the establishment, left the South and headed to Texas. Josie Wales, in the movie, makes a new life with the Comanches in Texas. Asa becomes Forrest Carter, the Cherokee Inn. Indian and has a completely new life in Texas. Is that not wild?
Starting point is 00:35:09 It's hard to know if this guy is crazy or a genius. Now we're going to have to hold it together and stay on track. We're talking about a lot of different books and a lot of moving parts. It's a complicated story, bros. This is Bear Grease. Now we're going to talk to Steve about Ace's later book, the 1976 book, The Education of Little Tree. This book was even later in the progression of the Forrest Carter character. I have a question for Steve about how intentional the message of that book was,
Starting point is 00:35:41 or was he just writing the book he thought people would like? What I would ask, too, is if he was writing this book, would his value system just be found inside the way that he would tell the story that he was interested in? or did he really write this book with the intention of creating people that were deeply anti-government? And, you know, it's like how intentional was it? If when I hear, in my understanding of not being a subject matter expert, when I hear a segregationist Klansman, I think of someone who is deeply invested in racial hate, okay? That's what I get. I'm not, I don't think I'm going out on a limb here.
Starting point is 00:36:27 Yeah. If that's what he was shooting for in this book, I, like, he missed the mark. Right. If for some reason he had gotten where he was just anti-establishment,
Starting point is 00:36:38 he just wanted to see the whole thing burn down. Sure. If you told me that the, if you told me the Unabomber wrote that book, okay, what the Unabomber was a radical environmentalist and he was anti-establishment. Okay.
Starting point is 00:36:51 If you told me that the Unabomber wrote that novel, now a bunch of people are going to fly off the handle, they haven't read the Unabomber, manifesto. I've read the Unabombers manifesto. So if you're feeling like insulted right now or that I'm saying something naughty, I know what I'm talking about. And if you read the Unabomers Manifesto, you'll see
Starting point is 00:37:07 what I'm talking about. If you told me the Unabomber wrote that book, I would buy it. Really? If you told me a Klansman wrote that book, even though we know it's true, I would initially be like, I don't get it. If he was shooting for race to instill racial hatred, he missed
Starting point is 00:37:23 the mark. If he was shooting to make you love your grandparents, Yeah. That's why the more I think about it, my wife's idea that maybe the guy was just nuts. Steve said he would have believed it if the Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski, wrote this book, The Education of Little Tree. Expounding on this is a bit like chasing the distant gobble from a bird. You know you can't kill. But we're going to do it anyway.
Starting point is 00:37:50 Kaczynski terrorized America by sending bombs in the mail to random people for 20 years. The FBI had over 150 people working full-time trying to find out who he was. In 1995, he wrote an anonymous 35,000-word manifesto demanding it be published or he'd send more bombs. He wanted to, quote, overthrow the economic and technical foundation of modern society and to protect wilderness, which is the antithesis of technology. Here is an excerpt from his manifesto, which was a very example. published in the New York Times in Washington Post in 1995. Let me know if this sounds reasonable to you. Modern man is strapped down by a network of rules and regulation and his fate depends on the actions of persons remote from him whose decisions he cannot influence. This is not accidental or a result of the arbitrariness of arrogant bureaucrats. It is necessary and inevitable in any technologically advanced society. The system has to regulate human behavior closely in order to
Starting point is 00:39:03 function. The result is a sense of powerlessness on the part of the average person. It may be, however, that formal regulations will tend increasingly to be replaced by psychological tools that make us want to do what the system requires. The system has to force people to behave in ways that are increasingly remote from the natural patterns of human behavior. For example, the system needs scientists, mathematicians, and engineers. It can't function without them, so heavy pressure is put on children to excel in these fields. It isn't natural for an adolescent human being to spend the bulk of his time sitting at a desk absorbed in study.
Starting point is 00:39:42 A normal adolescent wants to spend his time in active contact with the real world. Among primitive peoples, the things that the children are trained to do tend to be in reasonable harmony with natural human impulses. Among the American Indians, for example, boys were trained in active outdoor pursuits, just the sort of thing that boys like. But in our society, children are pushed into studying technical subjects, which most do grudgingly. Because of the constant pressure that the system exerts to modify human behavior, there is a gradual increase in the number of people who cannot or will not adjust to society's requirements. welfare leeches, youth gang members, cultist, anti-government rebels, radical environmentalists,
Starting point is 00:40:30 saboteurs, dropouts, and resistors of various kinds. Wow. Now I can see what Steve meant when he said the Unabomber could have written the education of Little Tree. And now you can say that you've heard part of the Unabomber's manifesto, and it caught you and me both by surprise. Remember what I said about the trouble with some crazy folks is that they're often really close to making rational arguments
Starting point is 00:41:01 that make a lot of sense? Yep, we said that. Here is a throat punch question for Steve Ronella on Ace's writing. What in the heck was he trying to say? Man, knowing what we now know, I got two ideas about it. You asked me how I became introduced to the book. I was in a class about political rhetoric. We read works from people who had like an axe to grind.
Starting point is 00:41:29 And one day he gives us education literature. As far as I can remember, he probably gave us two nights to read it. We all come in and we talk about the book for a while. Everybody's kind of blown away about the book. This is pre-internet, so you can't look stuff up good. And he says, what would you think if I told you that was written by a Klansman? What does that change? Now, to answer that, I want to point out a thing that I also became aware of in college.
Starting point is 00:41:51 is we were introduced to a lot of theories of literary criticism. You can read a text, a book. You can read this book and apply a Marxist criticism to it, meaning you're going to read this book and we're going to look at how money, how does money influence behavior? Okay. How does like the big man eat up the little man? Okay.
Starting point is 00:42:13 Let's say we're going to look at it from a feminist perspective. What is the role of the grandmother? Okay. Why do when certain things are happening the boy and the grandfather going to him but the grandma that doesn't participate? What does she do while they're gone? And we'll look at this whole book just in gender. Okay, that'd be like feminist criticism. But there's this other idea in criticism. It was popularized by this guy Roland Barts, who was a philosopher and critic. And he brought up this additional way to look at a book, which is called Death of the Author, to look at art or books or whatever. Meaning a text is only itself. It doesn't matter what the author meant. The author's biography doesn't matter. The author's background doesn't matter. It doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:42:58 The text is itself. The text is its own living, breathing thing. Don't burden it with what someone meant, right? When a song means something to you, okay, let's say you listen to a song, a song means something to you and it feels a certain way. And then someone says, oh, no, that's not what it's about. If you listen to the lyrics carefully and then you watch this interview with the
Starting point is 00:43:19 songwriter, you'll see that it's not about heartbreak. It's about his mom. The death of the author stuff will be like, that doesn't change it. When I hear it, that's how I feel. That's what it made me think of. I don't care what he thought.
Starting point is 00:43:32 He has nothing to do with this. It's a thing. It's a piece of art. And there's my interpretation of it. And all that is just extra. So if we look at this book that way, you can't help but think it's about all the things you and I were talking about earlier.
Starting point is 00:43:46 There is a lot to be said about environmentalism and how you view and respect nature. There's a lot to be said about the obligations you have to the people around you. There's a lot to be said by selfless giving, generosity, right? Tons of that stuff to be said. But when we bring the author back into it, which is kind of what you're getting at, we bring this Klansman, this segregationist, this Klansman author back into it. And you're like, well, what was it all about?
Starting point is 00:44:11 There's three takes. One is my wife's idea. I'm going to tell it to you and I'm going to leave it hanging. One take is that he changed. He was wrong. This is his apology. Right. One take is that he didn't change at all.
Starting point is 00:44:25 And he is a something of an anarchist. He despises the U.S. government. He despises Catholicism, has a real axe to grind with organized religion, doesn't like the education system. He's an anarchist. When I recently emailed with the teacher that taught it, he pointed out, there's a lot to be found in here around things that you might consider the don't tread on me movement anything organized anything establishment should be torn down okay maybe that's what he meant but if that's what he meant and this is a clan text there's some parts that are really hard to get your head around
Starting point is 00:45:06 one of the first things that happens in the book is they're they get on a bus the grandfather gets the boy they get on a bus opening scene the opening scene they step on to a bus and the bus driver, keep in mind, this is in the 70s, and we're talking about a bus, okay? People getting on buses and Rosa Parks and the civil rights movement and how you're seated on a bus, what your interactions with the person driving the bus are. A hot topic back then. Is in here. Little Trey and his grandfather get on the bus.
Starting point is 00:45:35 The bus driver makes a joke to everybody on the bus and says, how? And everybody on the bus has a laugh. Cherokee greeting, like, high. Yep. A big, loud, sarcastic. charismatic Cherokee greeting of how directed toward the people on the bus who all laugh at the Indians. It makes them feel very awkward to pay and makes it painful for them to count out and pay the bus fare. And that's like some low that's loaded.
Starting point is 00:46:03 Yeah. And it's not about whites. It's about the treatment of Indians. What's more, there's a part in the book where grandpa is relating a story that happens to his father. And his father had, it's like a parable about the reconstruction South. And in it, union soldiers, union soldiers, kill a black man. It is like when you look at it like stepping, like never minding the death of the author thing and just taking the educational liturry as this thing, which is very hard, admittedly, very hard to do, knowing what we know about the individual wrote it. And it's a clan thing.
Starting point is 00:46:41 It's a segregationist thing. It's very complicated, if that's the case. Yeah. My professor that I emailed with, he pointed out, if you do look at it as political rhetoric, he's not preaching to the choir, right? He's taking people from the environmental movement. He's taking people who feel Native Americans were brutalized by the U.S. federal government. He's drawing an audience here. This was on Oprah, prior to the revelation about the author, this was on like this sort of like formalized book list, library shelf of Oprah Winford.
Starting point is 00:47:15 In the early 90s. Okay. Is it so, like, seditious that it's taking an audience of the environmental movement back to the landers, hippies, people who sympathize with the Native American movement in the 70s, he's introducing them to anti-establishment. He's introducing them to the idea that their government is evil. Like, is he that shrewd? Can I do the third one? Yeah. My wife's like, maybe he's schizophrenic.
Starting point is 00:47:42 Did you know in real life he at one point in time had his kids stop acting like he was their father? He wanted them to treat him as though he was their uncle. He died in complications of getting into a big fight, physical fight with his kid. You look at the bio and you see that there's a person who struggle with mental illness. Yeah. Maybe we're trying to go like, well, maybe he meant this. Maybe, you know, we're playing checkers and he's playing chess. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:09 Right? Maybe he was just straight up crazy. Maybe he's nuts. He's schizophrenic. He's nuts. He doesn't know what he thinks. He can't hold his family life together. He's like, and he's not the first insane person to be a great writer at all.
Starting point is 00:48:22 Yeah. Man. I guess this brings up the question of what is the definition of being crazy? At an external level, this guy was incredibly intact. However, we know that he craved attention, the limelight. He was an incredibly good liar. But maybe his motivations were much more simple. I asked Dan the same thing.
Starting point is 00:48:45 I asked Steve and got an interesting answer. So here's the big question. This is the reason I came to North Carolina. Why did Asa Carter write this book? That's a simple answer. Asa Carter became disillusioned with politics. And not only did he realize that he was losing the battle against integration.
Starting point is 00:49:14 But he realized his brand of politics was never going to fly. He made a very conscious decision. He told, I interviewed his lawyer, and he said, you know, I'm going to make some money. I've struggled a lot. And he had good periods, bad periods, but he said, I'm going to make some money.
Starting point is 00:49:34 I'm going to be the next him in way. Well, he wasn't the next him in a way, but he actually had ambition. He always had ambitions. And so he had really clearly in his mind the Outlawed Josie Wales. That grew out of his research and writing about Jesse and Frank James because he saw them as Confederate heroes because, you know, they were marauders and then became outlaws and so on. And he tried to claim they weren't outlaws. So I understood that about the Outlawed Josie Wales and the second book.
Starting point is 00:50:11 But the Indian thing, it was only as I began to dig into it that I really began to understand. He was drawn to Indians and cowboys for a lot of reasons, but Indians in particular, because he saw Native Americans and their struggle to maintain their way of life against a vicious and murderous national government army as analogous. to his struggle to maintain white southern culture. And in some ways, it was much safer to write about Indians being oppressed than white southerners being oppressed. Now, would that, did he, do you think he actually thought that that would translate to people?
Starting point is 00:50:59 Because that wouldn't be. No, no, but to him, it was. Just deep, some need inside of him. I don't think he thought most people would see it that way. Right. The other thing is he was always attracted to the whole story of Native Americans. And I think it was part of that generational thing, you know. And that that is true that Americans became much more attracted to Native Americans once they were gone.
Starting point is 00:51:26 They were gone. It was just like this mythical thing that they were. He somehow grasped that at a very early age. I was reading this interview. I mean, I thought of it as something growing out of the six. or 70s. And Fred Berger, the guy that I'm really indebted to,
Starting point is 00:51:44 he died suddenly of a heart attack. But he had interviewed a lot of people. But he interviewed one of his shipmates, a guy named Gordon Lackey, who was closest friend when he was in the Navy in World War, too. And it turned out, he told the whole story of Little Tree
Starting point is 00:52:00 when he was 18 years old. Just as a... It's a story. He just said, I grew up with... My grandpa was a... Cherokee America. And he told the story of Little Creek. As if it was him. Like he lied to these guys.
Starting point is 00:52:14 Yeah, he lied to this guy. And at Lackey said, when Fred interviewed him, he said, you know, I thought maybe it was a bullshit here. But he said, then most of us were in the Navy, you know, when we talked to each other. But it was fascinating to me that at age 18, he already had the basic outlines of that story. And it was just waiting. And he didn't begin that right. that until later. But his earlier stuff, he began writing, he had piles of manuscripts, his friend said. Back in the 1950s and 60s, he was writing. So he was always, he wanted to be a novelist.
Starting point is 00:52:53 It was just at this break when he decided to break from his political past that it gave him an opportunity to become that writer. That's interesting. But I have a bigger question for Dan. so when you have a story like this someone writes something later in their life like we know that george wallace would later like ask for forgiveness for a lot of the stuff that he did and go on this reconciliation tour and do all this stuff some people would read into him writing this empathetic book towards native americans and say that he was just a changed man yeah in the book you say that he maintained being a racist his whole life now how do How do we know that?
Starting point is 00:53:38 Well, he had several friends in Texas who did not know who he was. They knew him as far as Carter. One of them was a woman named Louise Green, who had been a radio television personality there. And it was a really interesting woman. I interviewed her at some length. She was very close to Carter. She came to terms with the fact that he was not who he said he was. After his death.
Starting point is 00:54:04 After his death. I was the one that told her. he was. Wow. Yeah. And she said what broke my heart about him was that in many ways he was a fascinating individual and she loved to be with him. I mean, he was just a great person to be around when he was in the forest car persona. Yep. But she said what would happen with he by this time, the time she knew he was struggling with alcohol. And what would happen was when he got drunk, out it would come. And, And the last time she saw him was very shortly before his death. They went out to dinner in Abilene.
Starting point is 00:54:45 And she was worried because he was drinking too much. And this black couple came in. And he started raging about he wasn't going to eat where a bunch of using the N-word. It went on and on and on. And she kept trying to get him to stop. She said, you know, not only is it not the way I feel, I live here, and I'm here, you're saying all this loudly so everybody can see it, and people think I believe this. And she said he wouldn't stop. And she got up and left. And that was the last time she saw him alive. Wow. And it was just, to her, it was heartbreaking because it was, to her, it was an individual who had such incredible skills. as a writer, but also this personality, which would have allowed him, as she said, to do such great things. And yet something went awry at a very young age that sent him this way.
Starting point is 00:55:51 Do you think that he would be classified in some type of mental illness today, schizophrenia or bipolar or something? I don't think it would, it'd be hard to classify it. It's the kind of fanaticism we see a lot of people. It is interesting to me that his sister, who loved him very much, but who totally disagreed with him, she was chief of psychiatric nurses at the University of Alabama Birmingham Hospital. And she loved her brother, but she sat down with him on one occasion and tried to persuade him to see somebody for psychiatric help. And he never spoke to a game. he just cut himself off completely. So whether it was mental illness or a diagnosable mental illness,
Starting point is 00:56:43 it clearly was a kind of compulsion and a kind of fanaticism that went to the very core of who he was. And the interviews with his nephew and a niece were most useful because they spent a lot of time with him. And they talked about how he could be wonderful. Oh, he's funny. He would play the guitar with his brother and sister-in-law, and they would sing songs, and he'd tell stories,
Starting point is 00:57:13 and then something would, like a switch would go off. And he would, particularly if you crossed him, and you'd contradicted him, and he would become furious then. And as both of both his niece and his nephew said, he could be scary. Asa Forrest Carter lived a... life of drama and violence, his death was even more so. For years, we knew that there were suspicious circumstances. I mean, this was common knowledge at the time, that he died, and the
Starting point is 00:57:52 official autopsy showed that he died of being unable to regurgitate food, he choked to death on him. But there were also rumors that something terrible had happened. at his son's home, but no one could tell exactly what happened. And in 1991, I'm not to do my own horn here, but I went out to Abilene, and I met Judge Samuel Mata, and I told him what I was interested in and written him ahead of time. And he got the sealed police report out, which had been sealed since no charges were ever bought. And he found away from me. to get access to it, even though it was sealed. So we had to read the book to find out.
Starting point is 00:58:42 And if you want to find out, his death, which, as I said, certainly has kind of biblical overtones. Just read the story of Canaan Abel. You read the book. Well, I am just an old rebel. Rekin that is all I am. For this carpet bag of government, I do not give a dead blame. I'm glad I fit again it
Starting point is 00:59:07 I'll keep fighting until we won And I don't want no pardon For nothing that I done No I don't want no pardon for what I was nor what I am And I won't be reconstructed And I don't give a dead blame This is a Sicardia May God bless you
Starting point is 00:59:31 And I thank you for listening Dr. Dan T. Carter's book Unmasking the Clansman was published in April 2023. You can find it on Amazon and just about anywhere books are sold. I can't thank you enough for listening to Bear Greece. Be sure to listen to the undercover agent
Starting point is 01:00:02 who's been assigned to play the long game on me, Brent Reeves, and his new podcast, This Country Life. It's on the Bear Grease feed. And one day, when I'm busted for crimes I've never committed, it'll make a great story. In the meantime, check out, This Country Life released every Friday on the Bear Grease podcast feed, and be sure to check out First Lights new Trace Pant and Jacket System
Starting point is 01:00:28 for lightweight, breathable hunting gear for the South. I look forward to talking to all the folks on the Bear Grease Render next week. Talk to you soon. On Blood Trails, the stories don't end when the hunt is over. They just get darker. I've seen something in the road. I instantly thought it was a sweet, then there was a full of blood.
Starting point is 01:01:12 Oh my God, he doesn't have a hit. Blood Trails is a true crime podcast born in the outdoors, where the terrain is unforgiving, the evidence is scarce, and the truth gets buried under brush and silence. Indications were he should be right there but he wasn't.
Starting point is 01:01:30 This season, we're going deeper. From cold case files to whispered suspicions, from remote mountains to frozen backwoods. Each story begins in the wilderness and ends in darkness. Because out here, there are no witnesses, no cameras, just fragments and the people left behind trying to piece them back together.
Starting point is 01:01:52 He's not an honest person. He's incapable of being honest. Somebody somewhere knows something. I'm Jordan Sillers. Season 2 of Blood Trails premieres April 16th. Follow now on Apple, IHeart, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an IHeart podcast. Guaranteed human.

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