Mississippi is determined to make sure the south rises again

donwuan

The Legend
BGOL Investor
I live in Mississippi and Im doing better than the average American and every city i visit and even out the country white people are running shit and they still the Devil. Evan Africa is a white mans colony and you're named after your slave master and practice his religion and i can go on and on.

I'm say in Atlanta, Detroit, and Chicago we organize or even tear some shit up to make our point. I have never seen that in Jackson.
 

Non-StopJFK2TAB

Rising Star
Platinum Member
I live in Mississippi and Im doing better than the average American and every city i visit and even out the country white people are running shit and they still the Devil. Evan Africa is a white mans colony and you're named after your slave master and practice his religion and i can go on and on.
What a stupid post.
 

jack walsh13

Jack Walsh 13
BGOL Investor
Nigga shut yo ass up
:roflmao3: :roflmao3: :roflmao3: :roflmao3: :roflmao3: :roflmao3:

TbhWnp.jpg
 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

Mississippi’s Lifetime Felony Voting Ban Unconstitutional, Appeals Court Rules​



Mississippi’s lifetime voting ban for people convicted of certain crimes, a relic of the State’s 1890 Jim Crow laws, violates the U.S. Constitution, a federal appeals court ruled Friday morning.

Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge James L. Dennis, writing for a 2-1 majority of a three-judge panel, said in the ruling this morning that “Plaintiffs are entitled to prevail on their claim that, as applied to their class, disenfranchisement for life under Section 241 is unconstitutionally cruel and unusual punishment within the meaning of the Eighth Amendment.”

“In the last fifty years, a national consensus has emerged among the state legislatures against permanently disenfranchising those who have satisfied their judicially imposed sentences and thus repaid their debts to society. … Mississippi stands as an outlier among its sister states, bucking a clear national trend in our Nation against permanent disenfranchisement,” the ruling says.

Under Section 241 of the Mississippi Constitution, people can only regain voting rights either by a governor’s pardon or through an act of the Legislature. The current governor has not issued any pardons since he became governor in 2020, and the Legislature at most passes bills restoring voter rights to a few voters each year. Tens of thousands of Mississippi residents are disenfranchised for life—most of them Black.


“By severing former offenders from the body politic forever, Section 241 ensures that they will never be fully rehabilitated, continues to punish them beyond the term their culpability requires, and serves no protective function to society,” the ruling says. “It is thus a cruel and unusual punishment.”

Court Previously Upheld Section 241

The 5th Circuit previously upheld Section 241 in an August 2022 ruling. Judge James E. Graves Jr., a Black judge from Mississippi, dissented from that ruling, saying that “handed an opportunity to right a 130-year-old wrong, the majority instead upholds it.”

The U.S. Supreme Court decided not to hear an appeal in that case, inviting a scorching dissent from Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.

The plaintiffs in the current case, Hopkins v. Hosemann, are Dennis Hopkins, Herman Parker, Jr., Walter Wayne Kuhn, Jr., Bryon Demond Coleman, Jon O’Neal and Earnest Willhite.

Judge Carolyn Dineen King, an appointee of former Democratic President Jimmy Carter, joined Dennis, who was appointed by former President Bill Clinton, in today’s majority opinion. Judge Edith Jones, an appointee of former Republican President Ronald Reagan, dissented.

“The argument that criminals who served their prison sentences have paid their debt to society offers no analytical safe harbor,” Jones wrote. “The consequences of committing a felony rarely end at the prison walls. Many felons are subject to considerable limits on their freedom to move about and work during probation.”

The State could appeal the ruling to the full 5th Circuit, where most of the judges are Republican-appointed, or to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The 5th Circuit Court is based in New Orleans and handles cases from Louisiana, Texas and Mississippi.

‘To Secure The Supremacy of the White Race’

The majority opinion notes the racist history of Section 241. During the Reconstruction era, newly emancipated Black Mississippians made enormous gains as Black men gained the right to vote. But in 1890, white Mississippi lawmakers began drafting a new constitution riddled with Jim Crow laws, including adopting Section 241 in 1890 in an attempt to disenfranchise Black residents for life. White lawmakers designated certain crimes that they believed Black people were more likely to commit as lifelong disenfranchising crimes.

The new system instituted an explicitly white-supremacist regime, with its drafters bent on disenfranchising, criminalizing and denying opportunity to the state’s Black residents. The legislative committee that drafted Mississippi’s 1890 Constitution was initially explicit in its white-supremacist goals. They adopted a resolution declaring that “it is the duty of this Com. to perform its work in such a manner as to secure permanent white rule in all departments of state government and without due violence to the true principles of our republican system of government.”

They later revised the resolution, changing “white rule” to “intelligent rule.” Contrary to popular misconception, Jim Crow laws usually masqueraded as colorblind. But on the floor of the Mississippi Constitutional Convention, lawmakers were open about their intent.

“I will agree that this is a government by the people and for the people, but what people? When this declaration was made by our forefathers, it was for the Anglo-Saxon people. That is what we are here for today—to secure the supremacy of the white race,” Franklin County delegate J.H. McGehee said to applause from his fellow lawmakers at the 1890 convention as he vowed to strip voting rights from Black residents “even if it does sacrifice some of my white children, or my white neighbors or their children.”

After the state adopted that law as part of its constitution, along with other provisions like poll taxes and literacy tests, James K. Vardaman, one of its drafters, explained the goal: “There is no use to equivocate or lie about the matter … Mississippi’s constitutional convention of 1890 was held for no other purpose than to eliminate the n–ger from politics. Not the ‘ignorant and vicious’, as some of the apologists would have you believe, but the n–ger.” Supporters hailed Vardaman, who served as a Mississippi governor and U.S. senator, as the state’s “Great White Chief.”

Section 241 originally permanently disenfranchised people who committed the following crimes: bribery, burglary theft, arson, obtaining money or goods under false pretense, perjury, forgery, embezzlement and bigamy. In their effort to only include crimes they believed Black people were most likely to commit, the white supremacist drafters of the 1890 Constitution did not originally include murder and rape as disenfranchising crimes. The State amended the Constitution in 1950, removing burglary as a disenfranchising crime and again in 1968, when it added murder and rape to the list.

‘Mississippi Original Good Ole Boys Cheated So Many’​

Shuwaski Young, a Democrat running for secretary of state against incumbent Republican Michael Watson this year, said in a statement this afternoon that the ruling “finally upholds what we already knew: Lifetime voting bans in Mississippi are unconstitutional and cruel.”

“This is a special day for all Mississippians who want equality and fairness at the ballot box,” he said. “As a Black candidate running for statewide office, it pains me that Mississippi’s original good ole boys cheated so many generations out of their right to vote. And, not all of them were Black as intended.”

Simpson Thacher & Barlett LLP lawyer Jon Youngwood, who argued the case before the 5th Circuit, said in a statement Thursday that the ruling “is a major victory for Mississippians who have completed their sentences and deserve to participate fully in our political process.”

The New York City-based firm argued the case for the plaintiffs alongside the Montgomery, Ala.,-based Southern Poverty Law Center.

“Section 241 of the Mississippi Constitution lifetime disenfranchisement scheme disproportionately impacted Black Mississippians,” said Ahmed Soussi, staff attorney for the SPLC. “We applaud the court for reversing this cruel and harmful practice and restoring the right to vote to tens of thousands of people who have completed their sentences.”

Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch has not commented on the case or indicated whether or not the State plans to appeal.

 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
210106174535-07-us-capitol-riots-0106.jpg


The Civil War is not over with, lot of people died plus the humiliation of having their 'property' taken away from them and given citizenship. Southerners were defacto blocked from being President for at least 100 years. President Clinton was allowed due to his strong Civil Rights record, if you are looking funny at all, expect to go nowhere.

The North is being deindustrialized by the South through various tactics.
 

husband73

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
210106174535-07-us-capitol-riots-0106.jpg


The Civil War is not over with, lot of people died plus the humiliation of having their 'property' taken away from them and given citizenship. Southerners were defacto blocked from being President for at least 100 years. President Clinton was allowed due to his strong Civil Rights record, if you are looking funny at all, expect to go nowhere.

The North is being deindustrialized by the South through various tactics.
Now that stupid MUTHAFUCKA in the pic is from Lower Delaware..and usually Delaware don’t fly the confederacy flag ( I should know I’m from there)
 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
I believe the assassination of JFK was some type of insurrection/revolt by the South due to forcible integration. 100 years voting in election and nobody from the Confederate won.

LBJ had to embrace MLK and Civil Rights, and he was 'allowed' to be president. When the South capitulated and started embracing integration.

If you are talking like Desantis, it is going to be a long road for him.
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I live in Mississippi and Im doing better than the average American and every city i visit and even out the country white people are running shit and they still the Devil. Evan Africa is a white mans colony and you're named after your slave master and practice his religion and i can go on and on.

Respect.... What part of the Great Mississippi are you from?? What do you do for work out there??

I KNOW the TRUE HOLY HISTORY OF THE GREAT MISSISSIPPI there is a reason why they want to keep the

ORGANIC MISSISSIPPIANS in the TRENCHES and kept from the TRUE SECRETS of WHO they are...???

Lots of TRUE WORLD HISTORY KEPT HIDDIN in the Great Mississippi bruh!!!
 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
What we need to do is create a city or area of the country for exceptional people to live. I have found through experience, you have to pull yourself apart because they will steal or interfere. Many of these countries in Africa need to zone an area for people like me, naturally through our success, it will expand out and get larger. As discussed below, the rest of the country like where I live will be your labor force that you can exploit.

You can't be a weak piece of shit selling drugs, spying on other people, racial cannibalism, slavery, or other nonsense. It will comprise mostly of the professional class although exhibiting productive behavior and high achieving is welcomed. What is left behind is a labor force in the South where you can setup factories. I am currently in a city where I am integrated with them and it is not working out.

I am not talking about people with money, athletes are some of the worse offenders. I want to create some type of board that can get applications which will be studied thoroughly. The British did this back in the day dumping fools off in Australia and the Americas, but it should have been more aggressive.



Money is no longer an effective tool for this process to happen, so you can be living next to a drug dealer or scamster.
 
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Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

Mississippi’s Lifetime Felony Voting Ban Unconstitutional, Appeals Court Rules​



Mississippi’s lifetime voting ban for people convicted of certain crimes, a relic of the State’s 1890 Jim Crow laws, violates the U.S. Constitution, a federal appeals court ruled Friday morning.

Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge James L. Dennis, writing for a 2-1 majority of a three-judge panel, said in the ruling this morning that “Plaintiffs are entitled to prevail on their claim that, as applied to their class, disenfranchisement for life under Section 241 is unconstitutionally cruel and unusual punishment within the meaning of the Eighth Amendment.”

“In the last fifty years, a national consensus has emerged among the state legislatures against permanently disenfranchising those who have satisfied their judicially imposed sentences and thus repaid their debts to society. … Mississippi stands as an outlier among its sister states, bucking a clear national trend in our Nation against permanent disenfranchisement,” the ruling says.

Under Section 241 of the Mississippi Constitution, people can only regain voting rights either by a governor’s pardon or through an act of the Legislature. The current governor has not issued any pardons since he became governor in 2020, and the Legislature at most passes bills restoring voter rights to a few voters each year. Tens of thousands of Mississippi residents are disenfranchised for life—most of them Black.


“By severing former offenders from the body politic forever, Section 241 ensures that they will never be fully rehabilitated, continues to punish them beyond the term their culpability requires, and serves no protective function to society,” the ruling says. “It is thus a cruel and unusual punishment.”

Court Previously Upheld Section 241

The 5th Circuit previously upheld Section 241 in an August 2022 ruling. Judge James E. Graves Jr., a Black judge from Mississippi, dissented from that ruling, saying that “handed an opportunity to right a 130-year-old wrong, the majority instead upholds it.”

The U.S. Supreme Court decided not to hear an appeal in that case, inviting a scorching dissent from Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.

The plaintiffs in the current case, Hopkins v. Hosemann, are Dennis Hopkins, Herman Parker, Jr., Walter Wayne Kuhn, Jr., Bryon Demond Coleman, Jon O’Neal and Earnest Willhite.

Judge Carolyn Dineen King, an appointee of former Democratic President Jimmy Carter, joined Dennis, who was appointed by former President Bill Clinton, in today’s majority opinion. Judge Edith Jones, an appointee of former Republican President Ronald Reagan, dissented.

“The argument that criminals who served their prison sentences have paid their debt to society offers no analytical safe harbor,” Jones wrote. “The consequences of committing a felony rarely end at the prison walls. Many felons are subject to considerable limits on their freedom to move about and work during probation.”

The State could appeal the ruling to the full 5th Circuit, where most of the judges are Republican-appointed, or to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The 5th Circuit Court is based in New Orleans and handles cases from Louisiana, Texas and Mississippi.

‘To Secure The Supremacy of the White Race’

The majority opinion notes the racist history of Section 241. During the Reconstruction era, newly emancipated Black Mississippians made enormous gains as Black men gained the right to vote. But in 1890, white Mississippi lawmakers began drafting a new constitution riddled with Jim Crow laws, including adopting Section 241 in 1890 in an attempt to disenfranchise Black residents for life. White lawmakers designated certain crimes that they believed Black people were more likely to commit as lifelong disenfranchising crimes.

The new system instituted an explicitly white-supremacist regime, with its drafters bent on disenfranchising, criminalizing and denying opportunity to the state’s Black residents. The legislative committee that drafted Mississippi’s 1890 Constitution was initially explicit in its white-supremacist goals. They adopted a resolution declaring that “it is the duty of this Com. to perform its work in such a manner as to secure permanent white rule in all departments of state government and without due violence to the true principles of our republican system of government.”

They later revised the resolution, changing “white rule” to “intelligent rule.” Contrary to popular misconception, Jim Crow laws usually masqueraded as colorblind. But on the floor of the Mississippi Constitutional Convention, lawmakers were open about their intent.

“I will agree that this is a government by the people and for the people, but what people? When this declaration was made by our forefathers, it was for the Anglo-Saxon people. That is what we are here for today—to secure the supremacy of the white race,” Franklin County delegate J.H. McGehee said to applause from his fellow lawmakers at the 1890 convention as he vowed to strip voting rights from Black residents “even if it does sacrifice some of my white children, or my white neighbors or their children.”

After the state adopted that law as part of its constitution, along with other provisions like poll taxes and literacy tests, James K. Vardaman, one of its drafters, explained the goal: “There is no use to equivocate or lie about the matter … Mississippi’s constitutional convention of 1890 was held for no other purpose than to eliminate the n–ger from politics. Not the ‘ignorant and vicious’, as some of the apologists would have you believe, but the n–ger.” Supporters hailed Vardaman, who served as a Mississippi governor and U.S. senator, as the state’s “Great White Chief.”

Section 241 originally permanently disenfranchised people who committed the following crimes: bribery, burglary theft, arson, obtaining money or goods under false pretense, perjury, forgery, embezzlement and bigamy. In their effort to only include crimes they believed Black people were most likely to commit, the white supremacist drafters of the 1890 Constitution did not originally include murder and rape as disenfranchising crimes. The State amended the Constitution in 1950, removing burglary as a disenfranchising crime and again in 1968, when it added murder and rape to the list.

‘Mississippi Original Good Ole Boys Cheated So Many’​

Shuwaski Young, a Democrat running for secretary of state against incumbent Republican Michael Watson this year, said in a statement this afternoon that the ruling “finally upholds what we already knew: Lifetime voting bans in Mississippi are unconstitutional and cruel.”

“This is a special day for all Mississippians who want equality and fairness at the ballot box,” he said. “As a Black candidate running for statewide office, it pains me that Mississippi’s original good ole boys cheated so many generations out of their right to vote. And, not all of them were Black as intended.”

Simpson Thacher & Barlett LLP lawyer Jon Youngwood, who argued the case before the 5th Circuit, said in a statement Thursday that the ruling “is a major victory for Mississippians who have completed their sentences and deserve to participate fully in our political process.”

The New York City-based firm argued the case for the plaintiffs alongside the Montgomery, Ala.,-based Southern Poverty Law Center.

“Section 241 of the Mississippi Constitution lifetime disenfranchisement scheme disproportionately impacted Black Mississippians,” said Ahmed Soussi, staff attorney for the SPLC. “We applaud the court for reversing this cruel and harmful practice and restoring the right to vote to tens of thousands of people who have completed their sentences.”

Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch has not commented on the case or indicated whether or not the State plans to appeal.




Meanwhile up north
 

Non-StopJFK2TAB

Rising Star
Platinum Member
Now that stupid MUTHAFUCKA in the pic is from Lower Delaware..and usually Delaware don’t fly the confederacy flag ( I should know I’m from there)
I once saw the Confederate flag in Quackertown on my way to Dorney Park which is Allentown. I have seen it in Bucks County and I’ve seen it in the Cherry Hill area.

I don’t think I’ve ever seen a flag or any other “I’m an ignorant person insignia” on a Rolls Royce or anything of value. However, when I do see one of those things in an “affluent” neighborhood, I know that it’s not the physical neighborhood that is overvalued but the people who reside in it.

Owning black people is a lottery ticket that would eventually pay out. You as the owner didn’t know how and when. That’s what white people want: they want the opportunity to be rich beyond their wildest dreams.
 
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