1. You've probably seen this picture of Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and his gaggle of white men signing the state's voter suppression law -- the new, new Jim Crow. But there's a shocking angle to this story that you haven't heard. Sit down for this one...
2. Notice the antebellum-style portrait behind Kemp as he signs the suppression law? Thanks to Twitter crowdsourcing and particularly @TheSeaFarmer, I can report the measure to limit Black voting was signed under the image of a notorious slave plantation in Wilkes County, GA
3. If you scroll about halfway down this PDF link, you can see that the painting is clearly "Brickhouse Road -- Callaway PLNT" (PLNT for "Plantation...subtle, right?) by artist Olessia Maximenko from Wilkes County, GA gaarts.org/wp-content/upl…
4. Today, the Callaway Plantation is a 56-acre historic site where -- as the ExploreGeorgia website cheerily notes -- tourists can get "a glimpse into the by-gone era of working plantations in the agricultural South." exploregeorgia.org/washington/ent…
5. The promotional sites gloss over the fact that by the time of the Civil War, the Callaway Plantation only thrived because of the back-breaking labor of more than 100 slaves who were held in cruel human bondage
6. The harsh reality of life for slaves in the era of the Callaway Plantation is captured in this oral-history "slave narrative" of Mariah Callaway, a woman who was born into slavery on the plantation in 1852. In her account, she notes that... accessgenealogy.com/georgia/slave-…
7. "...[T]here were some slaves who were unruly; so the master built a house off to itself and called it the Willis jail. Here he would keep those whom he had to punish. I have known some slaves to run away on other plantations and the hounds would bite plugs out of their legs.”
8. Visitors today to the Callaway Plantation say this legacy of inhumanity is downplayed. One wrote on Trip Advisor the slave cabin "is hidden in some trees and mentioned as an afterthought and something you can go to and look at yourself." en.tripadvisor.com.hk/ShowUserReview…
9. In short, the Callaway Plantation is a monument to Georgia's history of brutal white supremacy that unfortunately didn't disappear when Mariah Callaway and the other slaves were emancipated in 1865. By the 1890s, Georgia's white ruling class...
10. ...enacted a series of harsh Jim Crow laws to segregate all public facilities and block Black people from voting. The state, for all of Atlanta's "Too Busy To Hate" bluster, was a KKK hotbed in the 1960s' civil rights era, and in the 1980s...
11. Georgia blazed a trail into the new era of mass incarceration and voter suppression, epitomized by Brian Kemp and his purges of legitimate voters and other Jim Crow-inspired tactics. In 2021, the irony...
12. ...of Kemp signing this bill -- that makes it illegal to give water to voters waiting on the sometimes 10-hour lines that state policies create in mostly Black precincts -- under the image of a brutal slave plantation is almost too much to bear.
13. The symbolism is no accident. Brian Kemp and his white henchmen have created an image for our times, in working to continue a tradition of inhumanity and white supremacy that now spans centuries, from the human bondage...
14... that took place behind the placid scenery of Brickhouse Road in Wilkes County, to the suppression now hidden behind a phony facade of "voter integrity." This legacy is a crime against humanity, and it cannot stand - 30 -
OK, everybody, by popular demand, I funnelled all of my outrage into an instant column (on my day off, no less). Georgia is an all-hands-on-deck crisis for our democracy. Please help me spread the word inquirer.com/opinion/georgi…
Here's an excerpt from the new column version
Also, the column corrects one error from the haste of my initial tweet thread. The former enslaved woman, named Mariah Callaway, actually worked on a different nearby plantation in Wilkes County, although she clearly speaks to conditions in the area at that time

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More from @Will_Bunch

20 Mar
1. A right-wing troll emailed me a ridiculous Daily Mail article (I know that's redundant) about why the U.S. media isn't pretending that Biden's brief stumble boarding Air Force 1 is the biggest thing that ever happened. So let's talk about presidents... dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9…
2. ...and mental health, shall we? The reason so many people focused on Donald Trump's seeming mental and perhaps physical decline during his time in the White House was because it tied into his clear symptoms around bigger issues like Narcissistic Personality Order. That...
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16 Mar
1. So I’m at Kenyon College in Ohio today for my book on college’s role in America’s broken politics and I got to see something really cool: The first-ever-in-the-nation strike by student workers
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3 Mar
There's a line in Lynyrd Skynyrd's "Sweet Home Alabama" that always makes me smile -- "There's good people in Alabama"...because it's true. I worked in Birmingham 1982-85 and some folks there are still my friends 35 years later. They were/are smart, open-minded people who... 1/3
...liked to slam dance to the Jim Carroll Band or make fun of backwoods sheriffs. I never lived in Texas, Mississippi or Florida but I know it's the same way - lots of good people doing their best amid a bigger, backwards culture that can elect the worst leaders. It's because 2/3
...of those great humans that I never damn an entire state, or wish it ill health, or catching a virus, etc. Focus anger where it belongs - on hate, bigotry and the politicians and hucksters who exploit it. Pray for the many good people in those places, and their good health 3/3
Read 4 tweets
28 Feb
1. OK, done with my column, my "back to brunch" (at home with my family pod) and Sunday chores, so here's my thread on why 1970 is the greatest music year of all time. But I have to start with two...
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17 Feb
1. On Rush Limbaugh's passing: Harry Truman supposedly said "it's a damn shame when anyone dies." Fair enough. But

Consider this timeline:

1985: Neil Postman's "Amusing Ourselves to Death" predicts a world where entertainment values wreck civil discourse

1987: Reagan's FCC...
2. ...kills the Fairness Doctrine and creates the possibility of conservative talk radio

1988: Sacramento radio guy Rush Limbaugh goes national with right-wing talk

Now, Limbaugh (as his later soulmate, Glenn Beck) was basically the nightmare predicted in "Amusing Ourselves...
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Before "Lock her up!" there was...
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27 Oct 20
1. I took 2 hours off last night to celebrate my adult son's birthday. I came back and the world was literally on fire. And I am furious about what is happening in DC, Philly, everywhere. I don't want to hear 1 word about civility. Fuck civility. We need radical change
2. In DC, I saw Trump take HIS new personal Supreme Court justice, Amy Coney Barrett, out on his Mussolini balcony to wave the final degradation of the Supreme Court in America's face. This is fascism, and if Democrats do nothing in 2021 it will fester. We must expand...
3. ...the court to undo this stain, and expand the judiciary with new jurists who will embody America's diversity instead of crushing it. But this depends on winning an election that Trump, Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh have shown their willingness to corrupt. I was trying to...
Read 9 tweets

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