This is why I am going to post a couple of stories tonight for their benefit. Stories that I know that they would never have seen had it not been for their friendly neighborhood Field Negro.
This is because ----sadly for them--- they get all of their news from certain right wing and far right websites and cable television stations.
Just call this the things you will never see on FOX, post.
These punks aren't even creating a disturbance for any type of a just cause; they are just destroying shit and creating mayhem because they can.
Then there is the case of the Willie Horton type ad making the rounds in a congressional race in Nebraska. I thought that America had moved past those days of racial code words and dog whistles?
What ever happened to our "post-racial" ideals?
This guy's name is Nikko, not Willie, but he looks just as sinister. And he will get the job done of scaring white folks into voting for the desired candidate just fine.
Now, like Willie Horton, Nikko is being linked to a candidate for office by his political opponent and Lee Terry is hoping that all the good folks of Nebraska will be outraged that his political opponent would support anything that would free such a monster.
Let's see if it works. I am betting that it will.
Finally, the supremes have decided that "poll taxing" and other means of restricting the right of ordinary citizens is a cool thing.
They decided that the draconian laws in Texas which makes it hard for folks to go out and vote is perfectly fine,and that the fear of voter fraud is greater than the fundamental right of every citizen of this country to be allowed to vote.
"Today's decision means hundreds of thousands of eligible voters in Texas will be unable to participate in November's election because Texas has erected an obstacle course designed to discourage voting," said Sherrilyn Ifill, president of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.
A spokeswoman for the Texas attorney general's office, however, lauded the decision.
"We are pleased that the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed that Texas' voter ID law should remain in effect for the upcoming election," spokeswoman Lauren Bean said. "The state will continue to defend the voter ID law and remains confident that the district court's misguided ruling will be overturned on the merits. The U.S. Supreme Court has already ruled that voter ID laws are a legal and sensible way to protect the integrity of elections."
"Protecting the integrity of elections" for this guy means only certain people who are our ideological soul-mates will be allowed to vote.
But it's not only in Texas. The forces of bigotry are hard at work all over the South, and they are trying to make sure that the wrong citizens don't have a voice at the ballot box.
It used to be passive, but now, given the changing demographics, they have become desperate.
After months of the New Georgia Project asking for an explanation for the delays, Kemp responded in September—by slapping them with an injunction based on 25 “fraudulent” applications his office found. It doesn’t take a voting-war vet like Lewis to figure this out. Georgia Republicans got blindsided by 85,000 new Democratic registrations in a midterm year, and now the secretary of state is playing Bull Connor to stop them from voting."
They would argue that they are just protecting the "integrity of elections" by any means necessary.
"The greatest threat to public confidence in elections in this case is the prospect of enforcing a purposefully discriminatory law, one that likely imposes an unconstitutional poll tax and risks denying the right to vote to hundreds of thousands of eligible voters..."
They would argue that they are just protecting the "integrity of elections" by any means necessary.
"The greatest threat to public confidence in elections in this case is the prospect of enforcing a purposefully discriminatory law, one that likely imposes an unconstitutional poll tax and risks denying the right to vote to hundreds of thousands of eligible voters..."
Unfortunately that was the dissent in the Texas voter ID case.
I would love to see Clarence Thomas's medical records.






