NEW: Forrest County voted to 51-49 to keep a Confederate monument standing on county property in Hattiesburg.
Hattiesburg voted overwhelmingly the monument from its downtown, but white towns & white flight areas overrode the majority Black city's vote. mississippifreepress.org/6769/forrest-c…
*Hattiesburg voted overwhelmingly TO REMOVE the Confederate monument from its downtown
The Confederate monument stands near one to slain Black rights activist Vernon Dhamer, a KKK victim.
"That just cause resulted in the murder of this man who was pursuing civil rights. And then we let this thing that caused his murder continue to stand." mississippifreepress.org/6769/forrest-c…
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story referred to Hattiesburg founder W.H. Hardy’s second wife, Hattie Lott, as the founder of the Forrest County chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Hardy’s third wife, Ida V. May, founded it. mississippifreepress.org/6769/forrest-c…
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Rep. Price Wallace's declaration that Mississippi needs to "succeed from the union" comes less than a week after Mississippians' voted to replace a flag that symbolized the last time we tried to *secede from the union with a new one. mississippifreepress.org/6731/mississip…
Top Mississippi Republican officials, on the other hand, have mostly remained silent about President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris' victory. mississippifreepress.org/6813/top-missi…
NEW: “We need to succeed from the union & form our own country,” Mississippi Rep. Price Wallace tweeted after networks called the election for Biden, misspelling "secede."
Two young Mississippi House Republicans celebrated the fact that America elected a woman to the vice presidency.
Republican House Rep. Jansen Owen: "Regardless of one’s political ideology, this moment stands as a testament to our great nation." mississippifreepress.org/6813/top-missi…
Republican Mississippi House Rep. Kent McCarty: “I would hope that ALL of us, regardless of party, can acknowledge the historical significance of the daughter of immigrants becoming the VP of the United States. ... I’m not sure why that’s controversial." mississippifreepress.org/6813/top-missi…
This dude and his whole congregation appears to be going through a hysterical mass psychosis event over the election results.
It reminds me of the infamously super awkward laughing scene in Final Fantasy X.
The difference: Tidus, the Final Fantasy character, wasn't encouraging thousands of maskless people to gratuitously spray aerosol particles amongst one another indoors amid the deadliest pandemic in 100 years.
The US reported 133,000 new #COVID19 cases yesterday.
In Hattiesburg, a Confederate statue looms by a monument to voting rights activist Vernon Dahmer, murdered by the KKK in 1966.
Most Hattiesburg voted to remove it. But nearby white flight enclaves voted for it to stand in the majority Black city. mississippifreepress.org/6769/forrest-c…
The map shows how Forrest County voted on the Confederate monument. ~80% of Hattiesburg voted to remove it from the majority Black city. ~60-80% of white voters in other parts of Forrest said the city must keep it & won 51-49.
Map: @wspittman/@MSFreePress mississippifreepress.org/6769/forrest-c…
Most voters in Petal voted for the Confederate monument to remain in the city.
Petal, a destination for white families fleeing Hattiesburg after public-school desegregation, was the home of a klansman accused of helping conspire to kill Vernon Dahmer. mississippifreepress.org/6769/forrest-c…
So this happened today: A Black Mississippi State football player ran out onto the field carrying a Mississippi flag—a Mississippi flag free of our Confederate, slave-owning past.
Here's my @MSFreePress story on Mississippi's long road to changing our flag, how Black activists here led the charge for decades despite repeated setbacks, & how, 20 years after failing in 2001, change came this summer. #BlackLivesMattermississippifreepress.org/3710/you-white…
BREAKING: Mississippi overwhelmingly voted to end a Jim Crow-era "electoral college"-like system for picking governors, which was intended to dilute the power of Black voters.
PSST: America's national electoral college is also rooted in upholding white supremacy and slavery. That's where MS got the idea.
At the federal convention in 1787, James Madison said he'd prefer a popular vote—if not for southern resistance to the idea. mississippifreepress.org/6658/voters-co…