If you're one of the people who wonder if the sudden need for voting rights legislation is about race, the facts are impossible to explain in a brief two-minute segment on the news so:
A thread.
It began with a dude named Ernest Montgomery, who was the only Black councilman in Calera, Ala. He represented a district that was mostly Black
The interesting thing about Calera is that the town's demographics are almost the EXACT mirror of the state of Alabama.
In 2008, when it was time for him to run again, the town decided to redraw the district lines. So they gerrymandered the Black district, which...
You know what?
I know someone who can explain it better.
Why'd they do this? Well, because during the presidential election for Barack Obama, something weird happened in AL:
Black people were registered in droves. And when it came time for the election, they OUTVOTED white people.
But, because of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, this was actually illegal. According to the VRA, places with a history of voter suppression, including the entire state of AL, were supposed to get permission (or preclearance) from the DOJ before changing their voting maps or rules.
Alabama didn't do this, so Montgomery lost the election. When the DOJ found out, the Attorney General told Calera:
He ordered a new election and Montgomery won his seat back.
This may seem like a victory, but this was EXACTLY what Republicans were hoping for. For years, they had filled the Supreme Court with judges who were hostile to voting rights. Now they had their chance.
They basically argued that Alabama wasn't racist anymore so they shouldn't be subject to a preclearance formula that was 40 yrs old (you know they think racism was something that was "back then")
So Shelby County, Ala. (where Calera is located) sued attorney general Eric Holder
When SCOTUS decided Shelby v. Holder, the court's most virulently anti-voting rights justice just happened to be Chief Justice John Roberts. He basically said:
"Because the preclearance formula successfully stopped racists from being racists, we can't say they're still racists.
"Let's get rid of the formula that stopped racists from being racist. And since the DOJ won't have anything to judge racism (except the ENTIRE HISTORY OF AMERICA), they should stop judging racists until Congress creates a new racism formula"
He wrote that down on paper!
But of course, maybe they were right. Maybe those places had changed. Maybe racism was over and poll taxes were a thing of the past. So, what happened?
Within 24 hrs, Texas passed a voter ID law that constitutional scholars called "racist AF."
Or, as a Federal Court found:
Alabama and Mississippi soon followed suit (Fun Fact: Mississippi is also one of the states where Black people register and vote at higher rates than d'wights)
By the time next national election in 2016, guess which places had new voting laws?
The "formerly" racist places.
Now, here is the thing: The Shelby v. Holder (and a lot of other rulings) are based on widely-held assumptions:
1. That a thing is only racist if its INTENT is to discriminate–the EFFECT doesn't matter.
A lot of people believe this (It's John Roberts's entire legal philosophy)
This only applies to racism, though. When someone spits in your face, does the wetness of your face depend on the spitter's intent? If we applied that concept to anything other than racism, we wouldn't need manslaughter laws or adult diapers
You can't truly know someone's intent
The EFFECT of the actions is what matters.
The second concept is:
2. Racism is a thing of the past.
Maybe you can name an example where this country achieved racial progress because white people collectively said: "Let's do better."
I can't.
Slavery didn't end by choice. It took laws, constitutional amendments & the bloodiest war in the history of America to stop it. Laws, court rulings and bloodshed ended Jim Crow, lynching, redlining, segregation and racial disenfranchisement, not goodwill or the passage of time.
Yet, for some reason, people still believe we don't need laws to prevent white people from acting the way they acted since the day they arrived on this continent.
I know it sounds like I'm ranting, but this actually brings us back to Shelby v. Holder.
See, the Shelby v. Holder (and many other recent SCOTUS rulings on racial discrimination) were decided on the concept that the EFFECT of a law can be racist as long as it wasn't created with racist INTENT
They have literally redefined racism by making it unprovable
For instance, in '19, SCOTUS & your boy Roberts wrote that partisan gerrymandering is OK if it isn't done with racist intent. And, because you can't prove intent, they can openly target Black districts for gerrymandering as long as they claim it's political
Again, it's on paper.
Here is where I inject a crazy conspiracy theory, but this one is actually true.
Shortly after the SCOTUS decided in Rucho v. Common Cause to let North Carolina gerrymander away Black voters' power, Stephanie Hofeller found her deceased father's hard drive.
When she looked at the contents, she was like: "Y'all gotta see this all this bullshit!"
But before she could let us see all that bullshit, NC filed a lawsuit to stop her from letting us see all that bullshit. But Stephanie didn't give a fuck no goddamned lawsuit
So she put that bullshit on the internet.
What was the bullshit that NC didn't want us to see?
Stephanie's dad was Thomas Hofeller, the man known as the "master of the modern gerrymander" (White people are TERRIBLE at nicknaming. I would've called him "Tom N. Gerrymaster")
Hofeller drew up the NC map that went to the SCOTUS. So what was on his hard drive?
Intent.
70,000 emails, spreadsheets & documents showing race was the ONLY factor in NC redistricting. He even pitched a map that could've created an all-white legislature theintercept.com/2019/10/30/nor…
But that's not all. It turns out, Hoefeller had secretly created maps for Republicans in other states used to gerrymander their states.
Which states?
The racist ones. All were either under preclearance or passed restrictive laws after Shelby v Holder.
Well...ALMOST all of them
To be fair, there was one map that predated Shelby v. Holder...The redistricting map for the great state of Alabama.
One document contained summaries of each map Ala was considering.
The summaries were literally just how many Black people would live in the proposed district
Did the gerrymandering, Voter ID and voter suppression work?
In 2008 & 2012 Black voters in Ala, Texas, & NC outvoted white voters. The same thing happened in 2016.
But after the gutting of the VRA that stopped states from passing restrictive voting laws, watch what happened:
Shelby vs. Holder is what struck down preclearance & the VRA.
If that never happened, states wouldn't be able to pass these restrictive voting laws.
If states hadn't passed these restrictive preclearance laws, there wouldn't be this new call for voting rights legislation
History, data and an actual hard drive show that it is ALL about race. Nothing else.
But the most important question is:
What if they took all that energy they use to stop Black people from voting & actually put it toward liberty and justice for all?
I guess we'll never know.
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We must also realize that privileged groups never give up their privileges voluntarily. If we are victimized with the feeling that we can ...wait for the white man to voluntarily give us our justly deserved freedom, we will be the victims of a dangerous illusion"
"The thought of the inferiority of the Negro is drilled into him in almost every class he enters & almost every book he studies... It is strange then, that the friends of truth have not risen up against the present propaganda in the schools & crushed it."
Carter G Woodson, 1933
Sometimes I sit back
with a buddha sack
Mind in another world thinkin':
'How can we exist, due to facts
written in school textbooks,
Bibles, etcetera
Fuck a school lecture,
the lies get me vexed.
A city where fires are prevalent was electing a new fire chief. To keep the Firefighter’s Union on his side, Candidate A promised to hire more firemen
“I have no education, experience or training,” he said. “But this only means I don’t think like other firefighters.”
Instead of fighting fire, Candidate B wanted to PREVENT fires.
He proposed stronger fire codes, more fire hydrants & more fire inspectors. He wanted to teach fire safety & use tax money to put a fire extinguisher in every home.
Candidate A won with 51%
The chief’s first action was to rescind all fire inspections.
He hired more firefighters but said that sprinklers, extinguishers & fire codes “should be up to the individual” because “the government shouldnt be able to tell us what to do with our property.”
I'm sad Netflix removed the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air because it was one of the greatest crime dramas of all time.
Wait...You didn't know?
The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air was about a police informant working undercover to expose a drug-trafficking cartel.
A thread.
I don't know how y'all bought that story about Will moving across the country because he got in "one little fight." When the Fresh Prince started in 1990, the crack game was too lucrative for Philly dope boys to risk all that drug money by killing a high school kid over a b-ball
If you listen closely, Will said it was a "couple of guys who were up to no good" and they were making trouble in the neighborhood even before he got in that fight.
The fight happened, but there was more to the story.
Of course, there is so much more to the phenomenon called copaganda, so...
A thread.
First, let's start with the obvious. Is copaganda real? does itt influence how you view the police?
Think back to when you were arrested. Oh, that didn't happen? Oh, that's right. Most Americans don't have contact with police. And when they do, it's usually a traffic stop.
So, what shapes your perceptions of the police?
Well, there are numerous studies that show that when people who haven't had significant contact with police think about cops, their perceptions are based on what they've seen in the media they consume. frontiersin.org/articles/10.33…
Imagine if the Constitution included a secret lottery that marks 10% of all birth certificates with a red stamp allowing them to get away with 1 murder during their lifetime.
Here’s the catch:
The lottery winners would NEVER know if they had received the “murder stamp at birth
Now, most people don’t plan to murderer anyone, so you’d think the public would change this law
But you must also consider the fact that every American would know that they have a 10% chance to get away with murder.
So here are the arguments for & against changing the law:
1. IT’S A CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT
The Founders included it to protect against tyranny. The government is less likely to violate your rights if there’s a 10% chance you have the murder stamp. Thus, the Murder Stamp Amendment also protects people who DON’T have a murder stamp.