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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsLeonard Pitts: Why silence from African-American voters?
Last edited Mon Jul 16, 2012, 11:50 AM - Edit history (1)
From today's Miami Herald:
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 couldnt get away from it in a confession booth. You couldnt 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 dont 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!
"Snip"
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.
"Snip"
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 tests 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.
So where are we in all this? Silent, thats where.
"Snip"
Silence.
From the barber shops, silence.
From the beauty parlors, silence.
From the pulpits, silence.
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/07/14/2894666/why-silence-from-african-american.html#storylink=cpy
http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/07/14/2894666/why-silence-from-african-american.html
ananda
(28,866 posts).. why Black people have been so quiet and submissive
pretty much since Bush and Florida to this day.
Well, I think maybe it's because our society has turned
into a seriously racist police state, and all the ins and outs
of the economic change since Bush took office has affected
Black people disproportionately.
Then there's the media, now corporate owned, which very
effectively marginalizes the poor, demonizes and ridicules
anyone not in the rich corporate camp, and sends very
strong messages regarding terrorism, law, and order designed
to keep us all in line.
And of course there's the criminal justice and prison industries
which incarcerate and disenfranchise Black people, mostly males,
notwithstanding the poor education they get in distressed schools
and neighborhoods.
I believe that things are worse now than ever before, really riot and
march and demonstration worthy, but that's not happening at all.
Until people decide to be proactive on their own behalf, both in spite
of and because of government and media abuses, nothing will change.