Black Americans silent as efforts to suppress the black vote grow

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Black Americans silent as efforts
to suppress the black vote grow​


An open letter to African America:





McClatchy Newspapers
July 15, 2012

By:
banner-leonard-pitts-286.jpg

Miami Herald columnist Leonard Pitts Jr. won
the Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 2004. He
is the author of the Novel, Before I Forget.



An open letter to African America:

In the late '90s, the Internet belched forth <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">a rumor</span> that the Voting Rights Act was soon to expire and that black folks would lose the vote as a result. Though stupid and untrue, the rumor spread like a dust cloud till it was inescapable. You couldn't get away from it in a confession booth. You couldn't get away from it in a phone booth. Everybody was up in arms.

Flash forward to 2012. <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">Now the threat is real.</span> There is a sustained effort to suppress the black vote as we approach this pivotal election. And what is our response?

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">Silence</span>.

"I don't sense that African-Americans are truly aware of what is in the process of happening or could happen to them," says Rep. John Lewis, Democrat from Georgia. "People should be angry. There should be a sense of righteous indignation. African-Americans and people of good will, Latinos and young people, should be saying, 'How dare you? The gall of you!'?"

Lewis, of course, is the man whose skull was cracked in 1965 on a bridge in Alabama in the fight for black voting rights. Fifteen years ago, he couldn't walk down a street without being assailed by a false rumor that those rights were imperiled. Now, when the threat is real, he is appalled by the silence he hears.

Here is what is going on in that silence:

In Washington, conservative Republicans are seeking to gut the Voting Rights Act. In Florida, they are, in effect, purging Democrats from the voting rolls. In Kansas, there is a law requiring a voter show proof of citizenship. And in 30 states, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, there are Voter ID laws, either passed or under contemplation.

Conservatives argue that such laws are needed to prevent voter fraud. This argument might hold more water if there actually were any significant voter fraud in our elections. There is not.​

In a speech last week before the NAACP, Attorney General Eric Holder likened Voter ID laws to the poll taxes of yesteryear. He is right. Like the poll taxes, like the grandfather clauses, and literacy texts of decades past, Voter ID laws are officially race-neutral. And like those discarded laws, these new ones have the intention and effect of preventing African-Americans from voting. Poor people, you see, are less likely to have photo IDs — and black people are disproportionately poor.

Keep in mind that blacks are already disenfranchised by laws denying the ballot to former felons. Given the phenomenon of mass incarceration — i.e., a criminal injustice system that will bypass 10 white cocaine dealers to jail one black guy dealing crack — disenfranchising former felons largely means disenfranchising us.

Voter ID laws add fresh insult to standing injury. And let no one be fooled by GOP claims that this is not political. Mike Turzai, who sits in the Pennsylvania state legislature, inadvertently set fire to that lie last month. In a speech to a Republican State Committee meeting, he praised, "Voter ID, which is gonna allow Governor Romney to win the state of Pennsylvania ..." So where are we in all this? Silent, that's where.

It is easy to rally in the face of a tragedy like Trayvon Martin. That was a visceral, emotional thing. Still, what happened to that child is only REPRESENTATIVE of systemic injustice. This IS systemic injustice, and we should be just as exercised about it, if not more so.

And yet .?.?.

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">Silence.</span>

From the barber shops, <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">silence</span>.

From the beauty parlors, <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">silence</span>.

From the pulpits, <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">silence</span>.


<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">In the face of a naked attempt to steal not just an election, but a right that was purchased for us at a cost of bones and blood, silence. It's happening now, right under our noses.

"And we're too quiet," says Lewis. "We're just too quiet."
</span>




ABOUT THE WRITER

Leonard Pitts Jr., winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a columnist for the Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, Fla. 33132. Readers may write to him via email at lpitts@miamiherald.com. Leonard Pitts chats with readers every Wednesday from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. EDT on www.MiamiHerald.com.




Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2012/07/15/156087/commentary-black-americans-silent.html#storylink=cpy
 

Black Americans silent as efforts
to suppress the black vote grow​


An open letter to African America:





McClatchy Newspapers
July 15, 2012

By:
banner-leonard-pitts-286.jpg

Miami Herald columnist Leonard Pitts Jr. won
the Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 2004. He
is the author of the Novel, Before I Forget.


An open letter to African America:

In the late '90s, the Internet belched forth a rumor that the Voting Rights Act was soon to expire and that black folks would lose the vote as a result. Though stupid and untrue, the rumor spread like a dust cloud till it was inescapable. You couldn't get away from it in a confession booth. You couldn't get away from it in a phone booth. Everybody was up in arms.

Flash forward to 2012. Now the threat is real. There is a sustained effort to suppress the black vote as we approach this pivotal election. And what is our response?

Silence.

"I don't sense that African-Americans are truly aware of what is in the process of happening or could happen to them," says Rep. John Lewis, Democrat from Georgia. "People should be angry. There should be a sense of righteous indignation. African-Americans and people of good will, Latinos and young people, should be saying, 'How dare you? The gall of you!'?"

Lewis, of course, is the man whose skull was cracked in 1965 on a bridge in Alabama in the fight for black voting rights. Fifteen years ago, he couldn't walk down a street without being assailed by a false rumor that those rights were imperiled. Now, when the threat is real, he is appalled by the silence he hears.

Here is what is going on in that silence:
In Washington, conservative Republicans are seeking to gut the Voting Rights Act. In Florida, they are, in effect, purging Democrats from the voting rolls. In Kansas, there is a law requiring a voter show proof of citizenship. And in 30 states, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, there are Voter ID laws, either passed or under contemplation.

Conservatives argue that such laws are needed to prevent voter fraud. This argument might hold more water if there actually were any significant voter fraud in our elections. There is not.​
In a speech last week before the NAACP, Attorney General Eric Holder likened Voter ID laws to the poll taxes of yesteryear. He is right. Like the poll taxes, like the grandfather clauses, and literacy texts of decades past, Voter ID laws are officially race-neutral. And like those discarded laws, these new ones have the intention and effect of preventing African-Americans from voting. Poor people, you see, are less likely to have photo IDs — and black people are disproportionately poor.

Keep in mind that blacks are already disenfranchised by laws denying the ballot to former felons. Given the phenomenon of mass incarceration — i.e., a criminal injustice system that will bypass 10 white cocaine dealers to jail one black guy dealing crack — disenfranchising former felons largely means disenfranchising us.

Voter ID laws add fresh insult to standing injury. And let no one be fooled by GOP claims that this is not political. Mike Turzai, who sits in the Pennsylvania state legislature, inadvertently set fire to that lie last month. In a speech to a Republican State Committee meeting, he praised, "Voter ID, which is gonna allow Governor Romney to win the state of Pennsylvania ..." So where are we in all this? Silent, that's where.

It is easy to rally in the face of a tragedy like Trayvon Martin. That was a visceral, emotional thing. Still, what happened to that child is only REPRESENTATIVE of systemic injustice. This IS systemic injustice, and we should be just as exercised about it, if not more so.

And yet .?.?.

Silence.

From the barber shops, silence.

From the beauty parlors, silence.

From the pulpits, silence.


In the face of a naked attempt to steal not just an election, but a right that was purchased for us at a cost of bones and blood, silence. It's happening now, right under our noses.

"And we're too quiet," says Lewis. "We're just too quiet."





ABOUT THE WRITER

Leonard Pitts Jr., winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a columnist for the Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, Fla. 33132. Readers may write to him via email at lpitts@miamiherald.com. Leonard Pitts chats with readers every Wednesday from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. EDT on www.MiamiHerald.com.


Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2012/07/15/156087/commentary-black-americans-silent.html#storylink=cpy


They are scared. They'd rather attack others blacks instead.:smh:
 
I don't think it's silence really. Right now, with the election still off in "the future", many Black people don't see the urgency. But I've noticed more people talking about it as the election nears and the efforts spread from state to state.
 
Priorities !

Some think they can change the system by voting once every 10 years. A lazy generation.

But they were taught by an equally lazy, thoughtless generation.

It's like the health care debate: if you don't see how it touches you directly, you're not that interested. We see in the debates we've had on this topic with some others, they see it as a "why can't they just get an i.d." type issue not seeing the broader picture like roll purges.
 
But they were taught by an equally lazy, thoughtless generation.

It's like the health care debate: if you don't see how it touches you directly, you're not that interested. We see in the debates we've had on this topic with some others, they see it as a "why can't they just get an i.d." type issue not seeing the broader picture like roll purges.

Case in point:

QueEx or anybody: I was reading your post and have a question, Can a state gain or lose representatives based on the outcome of the census?
 
half y'all fucks on BGOL have been ranting for two years how voting doesn't matter

why all the fuss now? should have got your ass off work, out of bed in 2010, and went to the polls, in some of these crazy ass states
 
half y'all fucks on BGOL have been ranting for two years how voting doesn't matter

why all the fuss now? should have got your ass off work, out of bed in 2010, and went to the polls, in some of these crazy ass states

Those guys don't come to this particular board much so you're preaching to the choir.
 
half y'all fucks on BGOL have been ranting for two years how voting doesn't matter

why all the fuss now? should have got your ass off work, out of bed in 2010, and went to the polls, in some of these crazy ass states


What do you expect Most don't have a clue as to how the system works.

QueEx or anybody: I was reading your post and have a question, Can a state gain or lose representatives based on the outcome of the census?
 
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