I think Reverend William Barber is the most powerful voice for justice in the nation today. He wrote this article that was published in the Washington Post. That newspaper yesterday called on Governor Ralph Northam to resign.
Rev. Barber does not agree. He thinks that Gov. Northam can demonstrate repentance by whathe does today. And he calls out the hypocrisy of those who want Northam to resign yet continue to harm Black people by supporting voter suppression, ignoring poverty, and the denying their rights as citizens.
Since the Post is behind a paywall, here it is.
The Rev. William J. Barber II is president of Repairers of the Breach and co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival.
Following news that Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam’s social life in the mid-1980s included parties where white people dressed in blackface, a stream of offensive photos from fraternity parties in the late 1970s and early 19 80s has emerged, implicating not only a few bad apples but also white elites across social and ideological lines. To African Americans who have survived the status quo of American racism, this is hardly a surprise. But it does raise again in our common life the question of what it means to repent of America’s racist past and pursue a more perfect union.
Like for any African American, this is personal for me. When my father challenged Jim Crow’s inequality in Georgia in the 1950s, a white man put a gun in his mouth and told him what he planned to do to him if he didn’t stop talking. When I was a young man in the 1970s, the Ku Klux Klan burned a cross in my uncle’s yard because he had married a white woman. My uncle sent me to the back door with a shotgun and told me to shoot anything that moved. When you know in your body the violent backlash that is inevitable whenever white supremacy is challenged, you cannot take its cultural symbols lightly.
But as angry as I can become at those who mock black people and culture to justify their own sense of superiority, I also know that mockery, fear and hatred of black people are the result of a racial caste system, not its causes. White supremacy did not emerge in the United States because of some innate human understanding that black people are inferior to white people. It was an economic choice that Americans of European descent then created an ideology to explain. “I was taught the popular folktale of racism,” American University scholar Ibram Kendi writes, “that ignorant and hateful people had produced racist ideas, and that these racist people had instituted racist policies. But when I learned the motives behind the production of many of America’s most influentially racist ideas, it became obvious that this folk tale, though sensible, was not based on a firm footing in historical evidence….”
If Northam, or any politician who has worn blackface, used the n-word or voted for the agenda of white supremacy, wants to repent, the first question they must ask is “How are the people who have been harmed by my actions asking to change the policies and practices of our society?” In political life, this means committing to expand voting rights, stand with immigrant neighbors, and provide health care and living wages for all people. In Virginia, it means stopping the environmental racism of the pipeline and natural gas compressor station Dominion Energy intends to build in Union Hill, a neighborhood founded by emancipated slaves and other free African Americans.
Scapegoating politicians who are caught in the act of interpersonal racism will not address the fundamental issue of systemic racism. We have to talk about policy. But we also have to talk about trust and power. If white people in political leadership are truly repentant, they will listen to black and other marginalized people in our society. They will confess that they have sinned and demonstrate their willingness to listen and learn by following and supporting the leadership of others. To confess past mistakes while continuing to insist that you are still best suited to lead because of your experience is itself a subtle form of white supremacy.
At the same time, we cannot allow political enemies of Virginia’s governor to call for his resignation over a photo when they continue themselves to vote for the policies of white supremacy. If anyone wants to call for the governor’s resignation, they should also call for the resignation of anyone who has supported racist voter suppression or policies that have a disparate impact on communities of color.
While we must name and resist white supremacy, we can also recall that we are never alone in this work. During the 19th century, there were anti-racist abolitionists — black and white — who worked to subvert and transform a system that considered some people chattel. In the new dawn of Reconstruction, black and white men worked together in statehouses across the South to reimagine democracy. During the 20th century’s movements for labor unions, women’s suffrage, and civil, human and environmental rights, fusion coalitions of black, white, brown, Native and Asian worked together to pursue a more perfect union that both acknowledges our original sin and holds on to the hope that we might yet live up to the better angels of our nature. Whenever we ask what repentance means, we don’t have to start from scratch. We have a long tradition to draw on, full of examples of what true repentance must look like.
In his 20s and 30s, Democrat Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia was a recruiter for the Ku Klux Klan, serving as the exalted cyclops of his local chapter. He continued to support the Klan into the 1940s, but Byrd later said joining the Klan was his greatest mistake. He demonstrated what repentance can look like by working with colleagues in Congress to extend the Voting Rights Act in 2006 and backing Barack Obama as his party’s candidate for president in 2008. “Senator Byrd and I stood together on many issues,” wrote Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), who nearly died fighting for voting rights in Selma, Ala. In our present moral crisis, we must remember that real repentance is possible — and it looks like working together to build the multiethnic democracy we’ve never yet been.

Who is Governor Ralph Northam?
Well, Northam is a LOT more than a yearbook photo taken in the late 1970s or early 1980s when he was in his twenties. Did I mention he was in his early 20s? Should I keep repeating that Northam was in his twenties back then?
Do you have any idea what twenty-year-olds are like because of the way their brain works until they are at least 25 (you know, TWENTY-FIVE)? For more than a decade up to 25, young people do a lot of stupid things they should not be judged for later as a mature adult.
“This pruning process begins in the back of the brain. … Because the prefrontal cortex is still developing, teenagers might rely on a part of the brain called the amygdala to make decisions and solve problems more than adults do. The amygdala is associated with emotions, impulses, aggression and instinctive behaviour.” …
“The rational part of a teen’s brain isn’t fully developed and won’t be until he or she is 25 (TWENTY-FIVE) years old or so. In fact, recent research has found that adult and teen brains work differently.Dec 17, 2018”
https://www.stanfordchildrens.org/en/topic/default?id=understanding-the-teen-brain-1-3051
Next, read the Ballotpedia Candidate Survey
https://ballotpedia.org/Ralph_Northam
Discover Ralph Northam’s Ratings and Endorsements (And you can learn a lot more if open all the folders at Vote Smart for Ralph Northam
https://votesmart.org/candidate/evaluations/90253/ralph-northam#.XF3oWNJ7mUk
By the way, back to his age in 1984 — he turned TWENTY-FIVE in 1984.
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Brett K. was 7 or 8 years younger than Northam at the time of their respective yearbooks. Do we let Brett off the hook too?
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Who is Brett K?
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You mean there is no difference between dressing up in a costume as someone of another race and using your yearbook to personally trash the reputation of a specific young woman over and over again?
There is no difference between the bad judgement of wearing an offensive costume one night and the bad judgement of attempting to rape a young woman?
And Northam’s reaction was to immediately apologize and note that dressing in blackface was wrong and saying he had to make amends, and Kavanaugh’s reaction was to say that what he did to Renate was to honor her as if she should be GRATEFUL.
And the actions of Northam and actions of Kavanaugh since those incidents prove that one has kept lying and the other one has not.
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There is this difference: attempted rape is a crime. Wearing blackface is offensive but not a crime.
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Brett IS off the hook. He’s sitting on the SCOTUS not about ready to resign. He will probably be on the SCOTUS for decades to come thus my vote for HRC.
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Brett K has a lifetime appointment.
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It took me a while to realize who Brett K was after Dienne77 challenged me in a comment yesterday that I did not answer. I know him (or think of him) as Kavanaugh — not Brett.
Anyway, I don’t think Kavanaugh is safe yet. He lied several times during his Senate confirmation hearings. Lies that the GOP majority in the Senate ignored. But what happens when the Democrats take back the Senate majority while they still hold the House majority — will they use those lies to impeach Brett K? I’ve read posts that hope the Democrats will do just that.
“The answer is yes.
“Kavanaugh now faces three named accusations of sexual assault and misconduct, all of which he has denied. But even before the allegations, former deputy assistant attorney general Lisa Graves called for Kavanaugh’s impeachment about an entirely different thing — she accused him of lying about stolen memos the Bush White House and congressional allies used in early 2000s judicial confirmation fights under oath.
“It’s unlikely a Republican-controlled House would act on such an impeachment, but if Democrats took control, they could pursue charges related to both sexual wrongdoing and lying about the memos, whatever happens to Kavanaugh.”
https://www.vox.com/2018/9/27/17910524/supreme-court-impeach-impeachment-brett-kavanaugh
CHANGE of TOPIC:
I also think it is a safe bet that Trump is pretty safe from losing his position as president through impeachment as long as the GOP holds the majority in the Senate, because the next chance to change that is 2020.
I also think the odds are much higher that once Trump is gone from the White House, he is going to be hounded to his grave with investigations and lawsuits that won’t stop. In fact, he might even end up a prison. When that happens and he slips on his first Orange Jumpsuit, will he look invisible?
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Lloyd Lofthouse: “In fact, he might even end up a prison.”
It would be a day of great cheering on the streets. This criminal deserves to finally be held accountable. He has swindled and hurt SO many people.
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Remember Trump’s lies about Muslim Americans dancing in the streets on 9/11?
“Trump’s recollection of events in New Jersey in the hours after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks flies in the face of all the evidence we could find. We rate this statement Pants on Fire.”
https://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2015/nov/22/donald-trump/fact-checking-trumps-claim-thousands-new-jersey-ch/
That probably won’t be a lie if Trump ends up in prison soon after he leaves the White House. In fact, I’ll dance a jig in the street that day. Maybe I’ll film my horrible jig and share it online. I’m sure it will be a horrid jig celebrating that lying crook getting strip searched before he slips into his Orange Jumpsuit and becomes an orange fog.
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Lloyd,
I’d love to see Kavanaugh impeached for the crime of perjury. Committing perjury to cover up improper political actions is much worse than perjury to cover up an embarrassing extramarital affair.
It would be hard to prove his attempted rape, but it is notable that the Republicans prevented the one witness to the crime from being called to testify – the friend whose affidavit was treated like it was the gold standard. (Neither Monica Lewinsky nor Bill Clinton were able to just submit an affidavit and have it be accepted as the absolute truth – they were cross examined by Republicans motivated to find a crime and not to cover one up because that is how you conduct a real investigation.)
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Someone here, I won’t mention their fake screen name, left a challenging comment to one of my comments on this Blog and in that challenge she made it sound like Kavanaugh’s alleged attempted rape accusations were equal to a young Northam who darkened his face in an attempt to look like Michael Jackson for a costume party when he was in college back in the first half of the 1980s.
This has been established through witnesses: In college, Kavanaugh was a heavy drinker who partied often and allegedly used date rape drugs and/or booze to soften up his female targets so he could have easy sex with young college-age girls. And Kavanaugh lied to the GOP dominated Senate that he wasn’t a heavy drinker and seldom went to wild parties even though he belonged to a Greek college boys club that partied and drank hard all the time. Kavanaugh’s accuser had to go into hiding because of death threats from the alt-right.
A photo appears on Northam’s yearbook page in one college yearbook (I think 1984) that shows a young man wearing blackface and someone in a KKK outfit stands behind that young man (I think this can actually be verified through face recognition software that police departments and the FBI use all the time). Northam says he wasn’t the blackfaced individual in that specific photo but admits he did wear blackface to a costume party in an attempt to look like Michael Jackson. This sounds like Northam admired Jackson and that’s why he decided to wear that costume. I don’t think there were any racist thoughts behind that choice.
How can these two allegations be equal?
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“This year, Ralph proposed a $6 million pilot program to provide long acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs) to women regardless of their ability to pay. A similar program in Colorado saw teen birth rates drop by 40 percent and teen abortions by 42 percent. This legislative session, Republicans stripped the funding at the request of right-wing anti-abortion groups despite the fact it used no state funding.”
I don’t understand the R wing group. Don’t allow contraceptives and don’t allow abortions. Then, don’t work to improve the quality of life after the fetus is born. [It’s too much governmental interference.] Even the improved statistics for teen birth rate and abortions didn’t make a difference. What gets through to these people?
Some R wing people are working overtime to get rid of Northam. THE photo first appeared on some R wing newspaper.
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The rich want the U.S. to be a feudal or colonialist society with abundant, cheap labor.
The people who vote Republican want to protect their wealth, are anti-social, are bigots, are stupid or prefer to relinquish their and their neighbors’ power to people they perceive to be their betters.
In other words, they are deplorables.
Chris Christie said anyone who thought when they voted for Trump that they were going to get something different than what they saw, were fooling themselves, in other words, they were stupid.
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A friend emailed this reply after I had emailed my written comment for the NYT. The wealthy and corporations got a big tax break and it did NOT trickle down to improve workers salaries nor did it create more jobs. Fox promotes the ‘socialism’ in Venezuela coming to America. Most jobs are in service industries and don’t pay well. How does one fight this ignorance?:
I would disagree with taxing the rich because they are the ones who own big companies that employ many, many people. Tax them more and they will have to draw the line on their companies, pull back, and lay off workers. We have a good tax system and we certainly do not want to move toward socialism, because we would have just what you experienced in Bolivia. Look at Venezuela and failed socialism as a real life example.
We must have a free-market economy which gives people the incentive to become excellent in what they do in life, hence create jobs.
………
Here was my article:
I lived for two years in a third world country. The wealthy lived in gorgeous palaces surrounded by high walls. There was usually a man with a huge gun sitting at the one entrance to the high wall.
Banks and jewelry shops had men with guns standing to protect customers.
Water sometimes came out of my home faucets a dirty brown color. When it rained, mud was so deep on some roads that taxis had mud almost covering the car wheels.
Journalists would publish anything the wealthy wanted because they could be bought off.
One young man killed someone and was sent off to college. By the time he came back home all had been covered up.
Stores didn’t have much to sell. Most clothing that was available was brought by the wealthy back to this country in suitcases. They would make money this way.
I visited a local school that had no textbooks. Kids had desks that looked like they were falling apart.
The local library was a big new brick building but no books would be lent out. They might not be returned.
Nobody wore expensive jewelry. It was a call to be robbed.
This is not the country that I want to live in. We must work for the common good. Roads, libraries, schools, the media, journalists and teachers all deserve much better than this. It is accomplished by higher taxes on those who can afford to pay.
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Conservatives love fetuses but don’t care about babies.
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Anti-abortionists are primarily men who want to control women. The MAGA- hat wearing jerks from an all-male high school who were in the news recently for their obnoxious behavior, went to D.C. to support legislation that would end their own mothers’ lives if their pregnancies were medically risky and, to make their sisters bear the children of their rapists.
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Your description of that place was very evocative, Carol, thanks for that. Some of those things were true of MX when I spent time there in late ’60’s (probably more so now). The contrast of rich to poor was in-your-face. Up on the hill where I took courses there was a think-tank & langsch w/ dorms, in a mansion-y nbhd (whose owners incl aging Hollywood stars) featuring a Michelin-starred restaurant. Walk down into town on market days: you’d be swarmed by little ones begging pennies; the mercado bathroom was a latrine-tent minus t.p. or even seating– just holes w/ footprints painted on either side.
I was also struck by the constant radio ads for lotteries, which I took to be ‘bread& circuses’, & took note back home: legal gambling spread here in direct proportion to hollowing out of lower-mid/wkg-class economy. [Still spreading: betting on football & baseball just became legal.]
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Sad to see Republican hypocrisy here. They know this is all just ridiculous nonsense, and they should just be saying “Grow up!” and then criticising, or supporting, the governor for his actual politics.
But so amusing to the see the Left eat its own. Keep it up!!!!
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doug1943: “But so amusing to the see the Left eat its own. Keep it up!!!!”
I don’t see anything amusing about this. Care to explain?
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Doug1943 is in moderation because he is a MAGA man.
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Northam’s Virginia should lead the change that the nation deserves and needs by ousting the influence of Koch and the Federalist Society at the PUBLIC George Mason University. Neither the Mercatus Center nor the falsely named Institute for Humane Studies belong at a public university within a nation founded as a representative democracy.
The number of school children with parents incarcerated is 2.7 million. The Koch’s ALEC played a significant role in making the U.S. the most imprisoned population in the world.
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I agree that if Northam actually wanted to repent of his yearbook actions, those are the steps he could take. But the question is, does he truly repent? Seems to me that if he truly repented, and not just repented because he got caught, he already would have been doing those things. Yet he’s been a leading champion of an awful lot of neoliberal policies that have hurt blacks the most.
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Ralph Northam’s first statement:
“Earlier today, a website published a photograph of me from my 1984 medical school yearbook in a costume that is clearly racist and offensive,” Northam said. “I am deeply sorry for the decision I made to appear as I did in this photo and for the hurt that decision caused then and now.
“This behavior is not in keeping with who I am today and the values I have fought for throughout my career in the military, in medicine, and in public service. But I want to be clear, I understand how this decision shakes Virginians’ faith in that commitment.”
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The black caucus of the VA legislature will determine Northam’s fate.
They just called on the Lt Gov to step down.
Thus far, they have not issued a statement about Northam.
If Northam, Fairfax and the AG step down, the state government will be turned over to conservative Republicans.
What does the black caucus want?
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Actions do speak the loudest. I 100% agree Barber is the best voice of morality. But I wonder if those that need to demonstrate all he asks can do it.
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Agree. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vnHxPOEnu28
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Northam is the best hope for Virginia. Considering that the lieutenant governor has been accused of sexual misconduct, and the attorney general also admits to an ’80s episode with blackface, the next person in line is the Republican speaker. I am against racism, but I also believe people evolve with age and experience. I also wonder if there is some type of racist culture of the South that would condone this type of behavior in the 80s. Most people in the North never would have found this behavior acceptable in college or otherwise during my lifetime, and I am older than Northam.
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Most people in the North?
Um, a major motion picture called “Soul Man” came out in 1986 in which the entire premise of the movie was a white person dressed in blackface to fool people into thinking he was African-American. People in the North went to see it.
And James Earl Jones was a co-star. And you will not convince me that James Earl Jones would choose to star in a racist movie for the money.
That movie WAS offensive and racist. Many people realized it at the time. But others did not and not every person associated with it or who went to see it did so because they were racists and wanted to watch a racist movie. They did so because they were ignorant of their own racist assumptions and wrongly believed that seeing the movie was okay. That doesn’t make it okay, but it is not the same as not voting for a candidate because you refuse to vote for any African-American, which is ALWAYS a racist action. Always.
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I agree that it is always racist, but I think normalized behavior is a cultural phenomenon. Perhaps this was something that was typical of many Southern frat boys in the ’80s. It seems strange to me that two men of similar ages engaged in the same bad behavior.
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I did not vote for Northam. I do not support his policies. But, I still believe that repentance and forgiveness, is part of our American character. I support our representative form of government. I hope that Northam can hang on, and continue to do the job that the majority of Virginians (not including me), elected him to do.
Give the man a break!
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Three short months ago a politician beloved of the same progressives now insisting that Northam dressing in blackface for a costume party 30 years ago can never be forgiven somehow completely ignored another white politician who said something that was one of the most offensive and racist statements made in recent history by a non-Republican:
“I think you know there are a lot of white folks out there who are not necessarily racist who felt uncomfortable for the first time in their lives about whether or not they wanted to vote for an African-American.”
This politician says it is NOT NECESSARILY RACIST to refuse to vote for an African-American candidate because he is African-American. Is there anything that says you are more racist than deciding that you will not vote for an African-American because you feel “uncomfortable” about his race? You have to be a racist yourself to insist that a person who refuses to vote for a candidate based on his race is not racist. Call me crazy, but I think those people are far more racist than people who dressed up as Michael Jackson 30 years ago.
But now we live in a twilight zone world where it is perfectly fine to insist that it isn’t racist to refuse to vote for a candidate because of his race. Racist people are the ones who dressed up as Michael Jackson 30 years ago, not the ones who a few months ago refused to vote for a candidate because of his race. After all, certain candidates beloved of progressives “understand” that those people who refuse to vote for African-American candidates aren’t all racists like the people who dressed up as Michael Jackson 30 years ago.
I guess that is why no one has been calling for Bernie Sanders to resign his Senate seat.
Hypocrites. Since when is what someone did 30 years ago far more important than the blatantly racist belief that there are “good” white people who aren’t racist when they absolutely refuse to vote for an African-American for the sole reason that he IS an African-American.
One of those men said something that revealed his racism NOW. And one of those men revealed his racism 30 years ago. Guess which one hypocrites are demanding resign and which one they insist should be allowed to be as racist as he wants?
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Would Hillary have received enough votes to win if she’d been a man?
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Hillary would have received enough votes to win if the Russians hadn’t meddled with our election.
Why? Because the Russians targeted Black voters in battleground states and the Kremlin’s Agent Orange won three of those states by a combined 77,744 votes while the percentage of Black voters dropped 7-percent after decades of Black voters increasing their numbers at a steady pace.
https://www.weeklystandard.com/john-mccormack/the-election-came-down-to-77-744-votes-in-pennsylvania-wisconsin-and-michigan-updated
If the same number of Black voters voted in 2016 that voted in recent previous elections, Hillary would have won the election. The polls were correct, but the polls did not take into account the Russians propaganda campaign to keep Black voters home.
“How did the Russians use these fake accounts? They spread disinformation designed to hurt Hillary Clinton. These sites spread false rumors that ‘Hillary received $20,000 donation from the KKK towards her campaign’ and advocated that Black voters stay home or vote for Jill Stein, the Green Party candidate. Russian intelligence exploited Americas’ racial divisions in an effort to keep African-Americans from the polls. This was done with the express intent of helping Donald Trump win.” …
“Almost 2 million fewer African-Americans voted in 2016. This is one of the biggest recent declines in turnout from one election to the next of any group. …
“In fact, the authors of the study concluded that Clinton would have won Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin (and just narrowly lost North Carolina and Florida) if Black turnout had reached 2012 levels. Clinton would be president had she carried those three states.”
https://www.ebony.com/culture/russians-target-african-american-voters-help-donald-trump/
Even if Mueller finds no direct link, collusion, with Russia’s meddling, he is going to go down in history as the first illegitimate president.
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Lloyd,
I agree with you, but also don’t forget that the Republicans couldn’t count on just the Russian propaganda to suppress the vote working.
Remember the Republicans spent a lot of time and effort “purging” the voting rolls by striking any names they claimed were fraudulent. That was targeted at African-Americans.
Meanwhile, somehow lots of prominent Republicans working for Trump managed to keep registrations in two different states and no one struck off their names despite it actually being the same person (and same middle initial). Steve Bannon. Tiffany Trump. Sean Spicer. Jared Kushner. Steve Mnuchin. All of them were registered to vote in 2 states in 2016. But apparently all that money Republicans spent to strike off people registered in 2 states and they missed all those prominent Republicans.
And then there’s Georgia, where the new Governor used his job as Secretary of State to make sure the election was just as “fair” as he wanted. Not accepting 50,000 voting registrations, closing polling places in African-American communities. It’s all fair game if you are a Republican.
Meanwhile we have progressives who should be focusing on making sure African Americans and all citizens can vote who are instead demanding the resignation of the perfectly good Governor who is standing between Virginia becoming the next Georgia. Because of a very offensive racist costume he wore to a party more than 30 years ago? Because his immediate acknowledgement that those costumes were racist and his apology were not enough?
I don’t think Bernie Sanders needs to immediately resign just because 3 months ago he revealed his racist belief that a white person can refuse to vote for an African-American politician because of the color of his skin and that doesn’t necessarily mean that white person is racist. Some people say stupid things even though everyone in America has known since at least the 1950s that refusing to vote for a politician because you feel “uncomfortable” with his race is the very definition of racism.
Isn’t it?
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NYC public school parent: Notice that the purging of the voter rolls was left up to the counties who didn’t have resources to do this. How accurate is this?
……………………………………………
Indiana purges nearly 500,000 from voter rolls
BY MAX GREENWOOD – 04/20/17 09:28 AM EDT
…”Updating these records will help us create a more accurate picture of voter turnout for the state, which has been reported as inaccurately low due to the large number of outdated registrations, while protecting the integrity of our elections.”
States are required by federal law to update and correct their voter rolls. But in Indiana, that process was handled almost exclusively at the county level, leaving the task, in some cases, to county offices without the funding or resources to manage the lists.
Lawson began the process of cleaning up the voter rolls in 2014, when her office sent a postcard to every registered voter in Indiana. If postcards were returned as undeliverable, Lawson’s office would send a second, forwardable postcard.
Those who did not update their voter records after receiving the second card were marked as inactive on the state’s list of registered voters. Voters who didn’t cast ballots in 2014, 2015 or 2016 were then purged from the rolls after the November contest.
https://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/329659-indiana-purges-nearly-half-a-million-from-voter-rolls
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I’ve read about the purging of black voters in some GOP controlled states. But did they purge black voters in those three battleground states that Trump won with less than 80k votes? I know the GOP purged black voters in Florida but I haven’t read they purged them in those battle ground states.
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It was Hillary’s campaign that (1) denied Black legislator Nina Turner her speaking time at the convention (2) invited Bloomberg to speak, which signaled abandonment of labor in favor of Republican cross-over votes (3) avoided building grassroots support at the county level preferring to send Washington elite campaign staffers to the states e.g. Ohio. (4) told media Hillary was going to win, knowing that Democratic voters are fair weather (5) ignored Michael Moore’s specific points about how they were going to lose the rust belt states.
Hillary’s campaign team from CAP watered down the public education issue making it as indistinguishable from the GOP as DFER and tech tyrants wanted.
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I was at the headquarters of a county Democratic office when a representative from Hillary’s campaign held meetings with locals. The contempt the person had for the state and county’s citizens was barely disguised.
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That Ebony article is a heart-breaker. But it also makes me very sad that HRC’s campaign read the signals so wrong. Forget the polls. Any layman could see Trump was pitching an ‘it’s the economy, stupid’ message to the working class, & trad’l-Dem rust-belters were still mired in their long econ slide despite 8 yrs’ Dem policies– in key electoral states. I’ll never get why she wasn’t in there countering Trump’s fairy tales & fighting for her political life.
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Hillary’s campaign message wouldn’t even include, “no cuts to Social Security”.
In Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 11/9, he singles out John Podesta (CAP’s founder) to ask who advised Pres. Obama to betray the citizens of Flint in the water crisis. NYC, if you haven’t seen the movie, I recommend it.
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“I think you know there are a lot of white folks out there who are not necessarily racist who felt uncomfortable for the first time in their lives about whether or not they wanted to vote for an African-American.”
I wouldn’t characterize this statement as ‘racist’. It’s an acknowledgement that racism exists in this country and that though people do not overtly behave like white supremacists, they are implicitly racist. Denying that white people are racists allows white people to ignore the fact that they benefit from white privilege. Even Obama has spoken about the effects of his African heritage on the electorate. In one instance he said he may have been elected at the wrong time.
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Linda,
Hillary made mistakes. It is easy in hindsight to blame one thing or another but frankly, she won the popular vote and it took some outside help — from James Comey and Russian propaganda and a concerted effort to make it very hard for African-American voters who wanted to vote to actually vote — for her to barely lose those states.
Remember, if she had squeaked out a victory in those states and had focused her time there, the Republicans would be thwarting her at every step and 2nd guessers would say it was Hillary’s fault for spending so much time in the midwest instead of other states to help get more support, since everyone knew she’d win the midwest.
I don’t think it is completely fair to expect a candidate to have perfect hindsight. People could say it was Bernie’s fault he lost the primary because he was so focused on white working racist voters in the midwest when he should have spent a lot more time campaigning to get those African-American voters in the southern states who went heavily for HRC. There is always some action a losing candidate could have done and there is always some action a winning candidate could have done, but people seem to only focus on the losing candidate.
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” though people do not overtly behave like white supremacists, they are implicitly racist.”
I agree. Too bad that Bernie Sanders does NOT agree, since he specifically said that those people were NOT NECESSARILY RACIST.
I’m really shocked you think that saying a white person who refuses to vote for an African-American is “not necessarily racist” is the same as saying that white person IS racist and benefits from white privilege.
You can’t say that one thing means exactly the opposite in order to make it less racist because you like the politician.
Bernie said a racist thing. Do I think he is racist? I think he has a bit of white privilege thinking and would never act in a way that is explicitly racist but like all most white people — myself included — still does not always realize that things he says or does are actually very racist. Furthermore, he didn’t exactly apologize and acknowledge the implicit racism of what he said, while Northam did.
We can only work to be aware of how our privilege might make us overlook the racist things we might inadvertently do. And apologize. And try to do better. That is what Northam did for his 30 year old racist act. It would be good if Bernie also acknowledged outright that what he said was racist and apologized instead of people trying to pretend that there is a way to justify that remark. There isn’t. But I’m certainly willing to forgive him based on everything else he has done in his life.
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NYC
I respect almost all of what you write at this blog. Your observations are insightful and well-informed. However, you paint Bernie in the worst possible light and you attempt to justify it. I don’t agree with your character assassination. Bernie pulled the party into topics and, AOC has picked up the same refrain, that are the path to future wins for Democratic socialists which I believe is the direction that will save the U.S. from oligarchy.
Regardless of the Bernie issue, the focus should be on the self-inflicted errors in the Hillary campaign so that they are not repeated. It is less productive to opine about outside influences that hurt Hillary because there are limitations on what can be done about external factors. Z-berg and men like him may well do nothing to stop external influences in the future.
All of our minds should be open to the possibility that the people at CAP, Podesta, Tanden, Palmieri,… cost Hillary the election. They were arrogant, incompetent and, IMO their first interest was serving tech and hedge fund interests. They had the better candidate, ample funding and yet, Trump won.
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Linda,
Thank you and I’m very sorry if I it appears I am painting Bernie in the worst possible light. I am a great admirer of Bernie and voted for him in the NY primary (although I liked Hillary as well and thought she was a perfectly fine 2nd choice, just thought Bernie’s ideas were better).
When it seems like I am bashing Bernie or painting him in the worst possible light it is only because I am trying to get people to understand that is what they do to other Democratic politicians and they should check their biases. Bernie is a great politician with wonderful ideas but he isn’t perfect. He sometimes says or does things that can be criticized. Just like all human being do. That doesn’t mean he is corrupt or intent on promoting racist policies to keep African-Americans down. It means like all people, he has some unintentional biases or has done things that perhaps had he thought more about it would not have done and if you wanted to destroy Bernie, you would exaggerate every misstep he has done and turn it into a character assassination in which his supposed moral failings and corruption is revealed. And that would be absolutely wrong.
I think people get that is wrong which is why the very same people who insist that Ralph Northam’s 30 year old yearbook demonstrated some huge moral failing and racism that his apology could never make up for just overlook Bernie Sanders’ very recent and entirely inappropriate statement that he never fully acknowledged was racist.
But if it is wrong for Bernie, it should be wrong for other Democrats, too. Elizabeth Warren isn’t a woman who should never be trusted because she lied about being a Native American. I believe it is absolutely clear that Warren did not “lie to get an undeserved job via affirmative action” but she identified as Native American because she loved her family stories and the fact that she was told one of her ancestors was part Native American. I feel positive that it never occurred to Sen. Warren that being proud of the ancestry that her grandparents told her she had would be used against her to imply that she had moral failings and was just an out and out liar never to be trusted. But that’s what the right wing propaganda wants the public to believe. The question is whether progressives will jump on the bandwagon to promote that character assassination of Warren or if they will not.
There is a similar jumping on of a right wing character assassination in the case of Northam. When I see progressives jumping on it, I bring up Bernie to remind them that every politician has things that can be looked at in the worst possible light and what they are doing to Northam is no different than taking Bernie’s attempt to justify or excuse the racism of white voters 3 months ago and saying it proves he is and always was racist. It was a mistake. Using that mistake to assassinate Bernie’s character – in the absence of any other reason or evidence to insist that he is an unrepentant racist — is wrong.
I hope that long explanation explains why I mention Bernie. Not to bash him but hopefully to get people to understand that jumping on the bandwagon to destroy a Democrat when there is very little evidence that the character assassination of this Democrat actually reflects who that politician is needs to end. And I hope if they consider what COULD be done to Bernie and what very likely WILL be done to Elizabeth Warren, they will not help the right wing do their dirty work and destroy another Democrat.
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^^^By the way I entirely agree with your comment:
“Bernie pulled the party into topics and, AOC has picked up the same refrain, that are the path to future wins for Democratic socialists which I believe is the direction that will save the U.S. from oligarchy.”
That’s EXACTLY why I voted for Bernie. I absolutely agree that America needs to go in that direction and that we needed Democrats who would change the language of the debate. I absolutely love how AOC has presented the 70% marginal income tax in a way that makes it understandable to Americans. Northam is generally far more conservative on many issues than I am and I wouldn’t vote for him in a primary if he was running against a progressive who also supported public education (Northam was a strongly pro-education mainstream democrat running against a progressive who was a DFER favorite and pro-charter, so in that case, I preferred the pro-public education candidate).
I love that Bernie started changing the terms of discussion and AOC took it up after.
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The “sins” of the right wing are unequivocal. The “sins” of DINO’s are betrayal.
When polls showed that almost 60% of Black people in Virginia wanted Gov. Northam to remain in his position, and Cory Booker pronounced that he should resign, we all had confirmed for us that Booker is an enemy to all Americans on the left.
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To carolmalaysia up there at 4:05 PM: I agree w/you that this all started insofar as right-wing conservatives “out to get” Northam–having to do w/the 3rd trimester abortion bill in VA & Northam’s apparent support of the bill.
What the chain-of succession (if Northam, Fairfax & A.G. all resign) will result in is a Conservative Republican House Speaker as the next governor.
I’m glad that Rev. Barber supports the continued governorship of Northam, & he lays out the best-stated reasons, esp. in his third-to-last paragraph.
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Reverend Barber was exactly what I needed to read today. That was insightful. Thank you.
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Some years ago I used to sing in a choir with a wonderful fellow from down near the east coast. He was long past his “whisky tenor” voice, but loved to sing and loved everybody he was around. I never heard him use any racial slurs, denigrate any group, or support public policy designed to harm some group. But he wore blackface.
When he was a young man, he used to travel about putting on shows with a group of guys, white and black. There was a black quartet that would open the show, then the white guys would come out in blackface and sing songs they had learned from the black guys. It was part imitation part tradition.
Like other traditions, he was completely unaware of any hostility associated with his group of entertainers. He told me that when they were not singing on stage, they were singing together, black and white, teaching each other songs and enjoying everybody’s company. Perhaps the black guys he knew really did not like the situation and he never knew. But I think it was more that no one in the group ever questioned the way the world worked then. Working within the world as you know it is tricky. That is the theme of Fiddler on the Roof. That permeates the writing of Richard Wright. Most young people, however, are not brilliant authors and thinkers. They often do not stop to consider where they got their ideas. They just live, absorbing beliefs from culture like a sponge absorbes all liquid, and sounding like their culture. Most people never grow away from this, but continue in their life to hold basic beliefs they never question.
This tendency suggests the Christian doctrine of original sin, but it is better described as “the way folks are.” The Judeo-Christian concept of forgiveness and acceptance underlies the ideas that William Barber suggests. Those who call for the head of Northam need to keep their eyes on the prize rather than creating a political reign of terror that takes all politicians to the guillotine for all sins. Where does this all end?
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beautiful! thanks for sharing!
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If there was any doubt that Northam should stay in office, the hedge funders’ minions have cleared it up by coming out against him i.e. Cory Booker.
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This situation has been running around in my head for days. But here’s where the sticking point is for me. When I was 25, I, a white woman from Utah, knew that blackface was racist and unacceptable. I’m younger than Northam by about ten years, but I KNEW that this sort of thing was racist.
HOW did he not know? He may have done good things now, but his dissembling on the entire situation, and the fact that he didn’t say anything about this until he was caught, bother me. He wasn’t a “kid.” He’d been through 16 or 17 years of education, and he hadn’t figured out that blackface was wrong?
I see all of this justification for Northam, and I just don’t see the repentance that everyone else sees, I guess. He’s lying through his teeth about the situation, and he now only seems to have regret because he was caught. Honestly, what am I missing here?
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Did you read Northam’s very first statement. He acknowledged immediately he was wrong. That blackface was offensive and he apologized. He NEVER minimized it, which is something that the revisionists keep ignoring. In fact, he gave a model reply and everyone now saying he should have given a model reply was shouting “he needs to resign now”.
I believe Northam that he had no recollection of that photo because I have almost no recollection of photos I am in that appeared in my yearbook in high school and I did not even bother to buy my college yearbook and neither did at least half the class. I’m sure I looked through my college yearbook at some time, but I couldn’t tell you what photos I am in decades later.
After Northam gave what was PERFECT response that apologized and acknowledged the racism of that photo, he was excoriated and demanded he resign. So he decided to look further and I believe him when he says he doesn’t think it was him in the photo — especially as no one has yet come out to say it was him. Is he supposed to NOT say that if it is true? And because of the condemnation, he searched his recollection to make sure that there was not some other time where he could have dressed up in a way that was offensive and he remembered the Michael Jackson costume. Because if he had said that the photo wasn’t him but later someone remembered he had once dressed as Michael Jackson, they would have accused him of a cover up.
There is a lot of 20/20 hindsight going on by people who conveniently forget that they watched Saturday Night Live and laughed their heads off when Billy Crystal dressed up as Sammy David Jr.
Everyone who watched SNL during the Crystal years or has watched Crystal in another movie is obviously a racist, right?
Did you refuse to watch SNL back then because you knew that Billy Crystal was a racist and the entire show was racist? I bet you didn’t even think about it despite you “knowing” that anyone who did that was an ugly, ugly racist.
I hope you never saw When Harry Met Sally because you were condoning watching one of the most racist men in America and laughing at his jokes because you were a racist. Right?
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^^^1984 SNL episode clip of Crystal in blackface right here.
https://www.nbc.com/saturday-night-live/video/frank-and-sammy-cold-opening/n9230
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There is facial recognition software that could match that face in the photo to see if it was him. Why hasn’t anyone done that yet?
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^^^Also my point is that back in the 70s and 80s everyone knew that wearing blackface in order to specifically denigrate someone who was African-American was racist. Many white people did not realize that a white person dressing up as an African-American man under any circumstances whatsoever – like to be in a funny skit — was racist. That was SNL in the mid 80s, AFTER that photo of Northam.
That is an important distinction that gets lost here. I don’t know how is in that Northam photo, but the person dressed as the African-American is dressed like a well-off country club southern gentleman who happens to be African-American. Him having a drink with someone in a Ku Klux Klan person is a joke in bad taste — similar to a Halloween costume where someone dressed as a Hasidic Jew pairs with someone dressed as Hitler or in a Nazi outfit. I absolutely don’t condone those kinds of costumes. However, if I heard that a friend I had known for 30 years who had never shown an ounce of anti-Semitism had dressed up in grad school as a Hasidic Jew paired with Hitler, and the friend now acknowledged it was a terrible idea and they are sorry they were so ignorant, I would not decide they were an unrepentant neo Nazi who hated Jews. I would decide they had done something stupid decades ago that they did because they did not recognize the implicit anti-Semitism of what they were doing.
On the other hand, one could dress as a Hasidic Jew holding bagfuls of money or as an African-American doing some negative stereotype that racists use and that is very different and obviously reveals something that is more racist and anti-Semitic.
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Yes, he was right to say that the photo was racist. But, in my opinion, he then ruined his argument in that press conference. HE WANTED TO DEMONSTRATE THE MOONWALK, and would have done so if his wife hadn’t intervened.
Doesn’t sound like repentance to me…
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PS: I am a little to young to have seen Billy Crystal when the blackface happened on SNL, but when I saw it on video later, I was horrified. I’ve never been a fan of SNL, partly because of sketches like that.
Once again, how could someone like me, who didn’t meet an African American my age until high school (this was Utah in the 80s after all) know that blackface was wrong, and somehow Northam didn’t? How did NONE of my friends think that dressing as an African American was funny, and yet Northam, just five or six years earlier, did?
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Billy Crystal also did a short comic film on SNL around that same time in which he and Christopher Guest portrayed — in blackface — two elderly former Negro Leagues baseball players. I watched it at the time and thought it was absolutely hilarious.
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TOW,
When you say “how could someone like me know that blackface was wrong and Northam didn’t”, you aren’t addressing the fact that not only did Billy Crystal appear in blackface years after Northam’s photo, but that people who DID NOT CONSIDER THEMSELVES RACIST actually watched those sketches.
I would be very surprised if all of your friends who watched SNL in the mid-1980s considered Billy Crystal an unrepentant racist. You are right that sketches like that are offensive. But that did not mean that all people who did not consider themselves racist realized at the time that they were racist. Many people DID realize it but that doesn’t mean that it was common belief.
Do you think Billy Crystal is racist? Would you believe that in 2012 — 2012 !!!!! — Billy Crystal revived that character in a skit on the Academy Awards. It was widely criticized as it should have been. But there were still people who in 2012 did not realize how racist it was. That’s 30 years after Northam.
Here is a quote from the Hollywood Reporter from when Crystal revived that in 2012:
“Plenty of people found the bit uncomfortable, as Twitter reflected almost immediately, but one person who didn’t take offense was Tracey Davis, the late singer’s daughter with his second wife, actress May Britt. “I am 100 percent certain that my father is smiling,” Davis tells The Hollywood Reporter, adding that it wasn’t Crystal’s first time paying homage to the Rat Packer, who died in 1990. In fact, the iconic crooner was among Crystal’s most popular impersonations during the 1980s (see a clip from a 1986 HBO special below). “Billy previously played my father when he was alive, and my father gave Billy his full blessing,” she continues, noting that Saturday Night Live gave the imitation “legendary status.”
What Billy Crystal did was a racist action but that doesn’t necessarily mean that Billy Crystal is an unrepentant racist.
I didn’t see your opinion about Bernie Sanders comment about white voters who felt “uncomfortable” voting for an African-American politician not necessarily being racists. Now THAT is a racist statement. I don’t think there is any way you can possibly characterize a white person who feels uncomfortable so won’t vote for a politician only because he is African-American as anything other than racist!! Do you?
I don’t think Bernie Sanders is a racist. I do not. Sanders is not racist. That does not mean that he is immune from saying things or doing things that make it clear he is unaware of his own racist biases. I am not saying that to bash Sanders. I am saying that make people who still love Sanders understand that they seem to be holding Northam to a standard based on something he did 30 years ago that does not reflect the entirety of who he is. And the fact that Billy Crystal was performing as Sammy Davis Jr. for years after Northam’s yearbook photo should tell you that not everyone who dressed up in blackface in the 1980s was doing so because they wanted to be racist and denigrate African-Americans. Of course they absolutely need to acknowledge that what they did 30 years ago was racist, just like Northam did. But I suspect people are mis-remembering a bit and back then, if you had a friend who did watch SNL and laugh you did not automatically knew your friend was an unrepentant racist.
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You did not live in Virginia, the birthplace of the Confederacy. The Mormons were struggling with overt racist policies up until at least the late 70’s. Just because the rules changed doesn’t mean unconscious racism disappeared even if overt expression was discouraged. I know that I have probably offended people of other races simply because of the unconscious assumptions of white privilege and the stereotypes we grew up with about people who were not us. I know that I have grown in the last thirty years past some of the prejudices that were common in my youth. We all have past sins that if we are lucky have taught us how to do better now. Sometimes I think we are too quick to judge people without considering the context of time and place. I don’t know Northam well enough to comment on how his past actions represent who he is today. My overall impression was that he was a positive force for equity in VA. The words of the Rev. Barber resonate with me.
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You were in Utah back then. I was in NYS. I don’t know about Utah, but even in the backwoods near my rural village, there was no cultural tradition for blackface. Heck there were hardly any black people. KKK presence was a blip in the 1920’s. That doesn’t mean there was no racism, it just didn’t have much heat/ cultural expression, due to demographics. Divisive social interchange was more around JBirchers v liberals, plenty of ethnic slurs for non-WASPs, bikers vs longhairs. I don’t think it makes sense to compare offensive cultural traditions from one region to another. Halloween: Blackface/ kkk robes & the n-word in VA, big-nose-w/glasses plus immigrant slurs in upstateNY– what’s the diff?
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You’re probably right. And although Mormons didn’t baptize blacks until 1978, the area I was in never bought the racist crap that some Mormons had spewed. I know the context was different, but it still just boggles my mind that an area with a lot of black people, unlike where I was, didn’t realize how racist what they were doing was.
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TOW,
It was the area where there was the greatest concentration of African Americans–the South–that had the legacy of slavery, racial subjugation and racism.
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GOOD! He can get more done by keeping his job.
…………………………..
The Washington Post
Democracy Dies in Darkness
News Alert Feb 9, 12:39 PM
Va. Gov. Northam, in first interview since racist photo emerged, says he’ll finish term and pursue agenda of racial reconciliation
In a sit-down with The Post, Gov. Ralph Northam (D) still could not explain how the photograph of a person in blackface and another in KKK robes wound up on his yearbook page, or why he initially took responsibility for it. But the governor said he would spend the rest of his term addressing issues of inequality.
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Is the word I’m looking for ….. juxtaposition? Somebody help me out here.
UNC leaders denounce blackface in 1979 yearbook photo that is sparking viral outrage
https://www.newsobserver.com/news/local/article225916010.html
Catholic diocese backs closing Durham school amid rumored protest over LGBTQ speaker
https://www.newsobserver.com/news/local/article225979690.html
Alston, an Immaculata alumna, was invited by the school’s African-American Heritage Committee to speak about her life of public service on Friday during Black History Month.
“In Ms. Alston’s work at the Center for Death Penalty Litigation, she educated the public about North Carolina’s unfair capital punishment system, advocated against the death penalty and helped to exonerate a person wrongfully convicted and on death row,” the heritage committee wrote.
“She is a champion for fair and equitable housing in our rapidly changing city, and a voice for just and compassionate policy in an era of instability and fear among our immigrant families,” the letter said. “She is the Immaculata Way of Life. Sadly, a few expressed concerns about Ms. Alston’s presence at our school. Questions were raised about her sexual orientation and her public stance in support of gay marriage as contrary to Catholic doctrine.”
“Bishop [Luis Rafael] Zarama continues to support the recent decisions [the Rev. Christopher VanHaight] made in this matter and looks forward to further supporting him in inviting constructive dialogue with the school, parish and broader community,” the statement says.
The committee was “stunned, frustrated and extremely disappointed,” when the event was canceled, the letter continued.
https://www.newsobserver.com/news/local/article225979690.html
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Instead of an understanding that reflects WWJD, there are Catholics who choose authoritarian decrees backed by big money.
Decency and democratic values are mocked by Catholic advocacy for charter schools at the same time that church leaders are buried in reports of pedophilia at their schools and, in reports about institutionalized cover ups at the highest levels.
Christ himself is mocked by Catholic universities that take strings-attached money from social Darwinists like the Koch’s, while pretending to care about social justice.
Women are targeted for subjugation when Catholic high schools send young men to D.C. to promote legislation that would force the loss of their mothers and sisters’ lives in risky pregnancies. When those young men wear MAGA hats, the message is subjugation of minorities.
Spewing Truth, thank you for posting about Catholic intolerance for the LBGT community.
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The Washington Post
Democracy Dies in Darkness
News Alert Feb 9, 6:03 PM
Virginians are split on Gov. Ralph Northam’s fate amid blackface scandal, Post-Schar School poll finds
Virginians are deadlocked over whether Northam (D) should step down after the emergence of a photo on his yearbook page depicting people in blackface and Ku Klux Klan robes: 47 percent say he should stay in office, and 47 percent say he should step down, according to a new Washington Post-Schar School poll.
By wide margins, African Americans and Democrats say Northam should remain in office despite the offensive image, while white residents are more evenly divided. More African Americans (58 percent) say he should remain in office than those who say he should resign (37 percent).
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Trump works harder than almost any past president. Does he have any idea what actual work looks like? I can’t imagine teaching and starting at 11:00am because I needed to read the paper, watch TV, call friends and maybe have someone visit for an hour.
…………
More Trump Schedules Leaked—Dominated by ‘Executive Time’
Axios, which obtained three months of Trump’s private schedules last week in a leak that infuriated Trump and White House officials, has published four more of the president’s private schedules from last week. Trump is believed to use his “executive time” watching television, tweeting, calling friends, and reading newspapers. He defended his use of time Sunday, saying in a tweet: “When the term Executive Time is used, I am generally working, not relaxing… In fact, I probably work more hours than almost any past President.” The newly leaked schedules show that Trump typically starts his day with three hours of “executive time” between 8-11 a.m. and doesn’t tend to have any professional engagement lasting more than an hour. he new leak comes despite the White House’s launch of an internal hunt to find the source.
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There are a lot of people who believe that Northam’s comment about abortions is infanticide. I still think that is the major force that started this whole thing…get rid of Northam because he wants to kill babies. Notice that this was reported on Fox.
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Gov. Ralph Northam: Blackface Scandal Helped Me Learn What White Privilege Is
Says he’s also learned this week why blackface is offensive.
Speaking on CBS This Morning on Monday, the embattled governor was asked what he’s learned and replied: “Well, several things, starting with I was born in white privilege and that has implications to it. It is much different the way a white person such as myself is treated in this country versus…” Interviewer Gayle King interrupted to ask if he didn’t know he was born into white privilege before, and he replied: “I knew I was, Miss King, but I didn’t realize really the powerful implications of that. And again talking to a lot of friends that has come crystal clear to me this week. I have also learned why the use of blackface is so offensive and yes I knew it in the past.”..
https://www.thedailybeast.com/gov-ralph-northam-blackface-scandal-helped-me-learn-what-white-privilege-is?source=email&via=desktop
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Ben Sasse calls out Gov. Northam’s ‘morally repugnant’ comments on killing infants
JANUARY 31, 2019
Senator Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) condemned the controversial comments from Democratic Governor of Virginia Ralph Northam on whether an infant can be killed even after they are born under certain circumstances.
“What the Governor of Virginia said was morally repugnant,” said Sasse to Fox News’ Dana Perino on Thursday.
“I mean this wasn’t the old Democratic party argument fifteen or twenty years ago that abortion should be safe, legal and rare,” he explained.
“What he was actually talking about,” Sasse continued, “was a little baby girl being born alive and him saying well let’s try to comfort the baby a little bit while the mom and the doctors have a debate and whether a whole bunch of doctors get together and say, ‘yeah we think infanticide is ok.’ That’s actually what he was talking about.”
“It’s breathtaking stuff,” he added.
“And if he can’t say that protecting a little baby girl who has survived an abortion is something that we as a society all believe in together,” he emphasized, “he really should get the hell out of office.”..
https://www.theblaze.com/ben-sasse-calls-out-gov-northams-morally-repugnant-comments-on-killing-infants
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Quote from The Patriot Post: YOU LIVE IN A LAND RUN BY IDIOTS WHEN IT IS ILLEGAL TO KILL UNHATCHED BALD EAGLES. IT IS LEGAL TO KILL UNBORN HUMANS”. This quote, sent to me by a protesting Fox watcher, was accompanied by a photo of a bald eagle egg and the photo of a tiny infant in a hand.
This makes me sick. Care only about fetuses until they get born and then let them die from lack of decent food, no healthcare, unlimited number of unlicensed guns and live in households with no money for a decent housing or the ability to pay for the heating bill. All Repubs care about is the fetus, not the baby. That is a land run by idiots.
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