(Deroy Murdock, Headline USA) From high above the sidewalks of New York, America’s so-called “Paper of Record” peers down its nose with condescension at the nation whose news it deems “fit to print.”
It sees this country as a giant slave-ship-turned-superpower that surges racism into every conceivable crevice in Earth’s crust.
It slams America’s Founding Fathers who owned slaves; hammers New York Life Insurance, SUNY New Paltz, Georgetown University (my alma mater), and other institutions for their historical slave holdings, and even whacks President Abraham Lincoln for his “reluctant and late” signature on the Emancipation Proclamation.
As the New York Post’s Michael Goodwin observed, “The chief media cheerleader for the chaos unfolding across the nation…routinely eviscerates America’s heroes, its culture and, through the paper’s 1619 Project, its founding.”
In a pair of jaw-dropping articles, Goodwin recently exposed the invisibility of the slave-shaming robes in which the Old Gray Lady attempts to cloak herself.
This media outlet’s family history is rife with slavery, Confederate boosterism, and enforcement of Jim Crow segregation.
Regarding race, the Old Gray Lady should sit quietly in her rocking chair. She is in no position to wag her wrinkled finger at anyone.
As Goodwin explains, the extended Ochs–Sulzberger clan have owned this Leftist tip sheet since 1896. They are tainted by myriad racial horrors.
Abraham Mendes Seixas, an early Sulzberger relative, lived in Charleston, South Carolina.
A local newspaper published a poem in 1784 as a sort of grotesque commercial jingle to market slaves. An excerpt:
Abraham Seixas…He has for sale, Some Negroes, male…
He has likewise Some of their wives…
For planting, too, He has a few
To sell, all for cash…or bring them to the lash.
“Seixas was also the master or superintendent of the Charleston workhouse,” explains Robert Rosen, author of The Jewish Confederates.
“This was a city-run facility in which slaves were beaten for violating laws or rules or running away,” Rosen adds. “It’s pretty bad. So he not only owned and sold slaves but he was paid to inflict physical punishment on them, which I’m sure could be described as torture.”
According to a family history that Goodwin cites, an Ochs relative named John Mayer lived in Natchez, Mississippi.
He owned at least five unnamed slaves in 1860: two males (70 and 26) and three females (65, 45, and 23).
Mayer’s niece, Bertha Levy Ochs, was a gung-ho Confederate. Her brother, Oscar, and two cousins in Mississippi fought under General Robert E. Lee, whom she idolized.
Levy “embraced a contemptuous antebellum view of blacks,” biographers Susan Tifft and Alex Jones report.
Levy was caught smuggling medical-grade quinine, inside her son George’s baby carriage, from Ohio to Confederate agents in Kentucky.
Nicknamed “that Confederate lady,” Levy was buried in 1908 with the secessionist flag draping her casket.
Levy’s son, Adolph Simon Ochs, purchased The Chattanooga Times in 1879.
Under his leadership, the paper commented on 1931’s Scottsboro Boys case, which involved two white women’s false-rape charges against multiple black males.
“Death Penalty Properly Demanded in Fiendish Crime of Nine Burly Negroes,” the paper editorialized. Its trial correspondent called the accused “beasts unfit to be called human.”
Ochs bought the “Paper of Record” in 1896.
In 1906, it toasted the impending centennial of Confederate President Jefferson Davis’s birth and cheered him as “the great Southern leader.”
Ochs died suddenly in 1935. According to Civil War Times, the United Daughters of the Confederacy “sent a pillow embroidered with the Confederate flag to be placed in his coffin.”
Meanwhile, Ochs’s brother George (the infant conspirator in his mother’s clandestine quinine deliveries), excelled as a Democrat politician.
He was Chattanooga’s police commissioner, two-term mayor, and school-board president. That made him a top enforcer of local and state Jim Crow segregation statutes.
The historical race hatred of this paper’s controlling family, thus, is beyond dispute.
The Ochs-Sulzbergers will need buckets of Purell to clean their hands, now filthy from this problematic ancestry.
Deroy Murdock is a Manhattan-based Fox News Contributor, a contributing editor with National Review Online, and a senior fellow with the London Center for Policy Research.