Japanese-Americans in internment camps was consistent with being "progressive."
Trying to stack the Supreme Court - lame and unprogressive.
Appointing two well known Republicans to high level positions - whooo boy!
Gutting your own social programs for the war effort. Don't get the progressives started!
And "loving the clan" is quite a misleading statement.
You say Wilson supported Jim Crow laws?
FDR's tenure was nothing but a continuation of the "gentleman's agreement" within the Democratic party that Northern Democrats would not interfere in race issues on the behalf of black Americans. To make sure the New Deal passed, Roosevelt chose not to offend Southern Democrats by challenging the white supremacist system of Jim Crow. Roosevelt did not publicly support civil rights for blacks until his wife took up the mantle.
Yes, Wilson screened the movie "Bith of a Nation" before it attained national noteriety, but did Wilson REALLY approve of the movie? Might be urban legend. Here is historian and Wilson biographer Arthur S. Link, described Wilson's involvement in the controversial showing:
Dixon conceived a bold scheme -- to arrange a private showing of the film at the White House and thereby to obtain the President's implied endorsement. <41>
Wilson fell into Dixon's trap, as indeed, did also members of the Supreme Court and both houses of Congress. Then, when the N.A.A.C.P. sought to prevent the showing of "The Birth of a Nation" in New York, Boston, and other cities, Dixon’s lawyers countered successfully by declaring that Chief Justice had seen the movie and liked it immensely. <42>
The Chief Justice, a Confederate veteran from Louisiana, put an end to the use of his name by threatening to denounce "The Birth of a Nation" publicly if Dixon did not stop saying that he had endorsed it. <43> Perceiving the political dangers in the situation, Tumulty suggested that Wilson write "some sort of a letter showing that he did not approve of the 'Birth of a Nation.'" <44> "I would like to do this," the President replied, "if there were some way in which I could do it without seeming to be trying to meet the agitation . . . stirred up by that unspeakable fellow Tucker ." <45> He did, however, let Tumulty say that he had at no time approved the film; and three years later, when the nation was at war, he strongly disapproved the showing of this “unfortunate production." <46>
<41> Dixon tells the story in "Southern Horizons: An Autobiography," unpublished MS. in the possession of Mrs. Thomas Dixon, Raleigh, North Carolina, pp. 423-424.
<42> For accounts of the hearings in New York and Boston, see Mrs. Walter Damrosch to J.P. Tumulty, March 27, 1915, Wilson Papers; Mrs. Harriet Beale to J.P. Tumulty, March 29, 1915, ibid.; Representative Thomas C. Thacher of Massachusetts to J.P. Tumulty, April 17, 1915, ibid. enclosing letters and documents relating to the hearing in Boston; and Thomas Dixon, "Southern Horizons," pp. 425-441.
<43> E.D. White to J.P. Tumulty, April 5, 1915, Wilson Papers.
<44> J.P. Tumulty to W.W., April 24, 1915, ibid.
<45> W.W. to J.P. Tumulty, c. April 25, 1915, ibid.
<46> J.P. Tumulty to T.C. Thacher, April 28, 1915, ibid.; W.W. to J.P. Tumulty, c. April 22, 1918, ibid.
In addition, the "well known" quote from Wilson was also a fabrication. "Wilson is widely alleged to have praised the notoriously racist movie Birth of a Nation (based on a book by his former classmate Thomas Dixon), saying: 'It is like writing history with lightning, and my only regret is that it is all so true. The quote has not been definitively traced to Wilson, who screened the movie at the White House but never commented publicly on it". - wikipedia.
Of course, I don't make the mistake of judging people who lived 100 years and 60 years ago by today's standards. And it's nice to have more than a surface knowledge of history.