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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neocon who wrote (75383)11/15/2000 10:39:12 AM
From: microhoogle!  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
I cannot understand your die hard belief that Colin Powell will win. Trust me, he will not make through primaries if he chose to run as a republican. Colin's presidency is nothing but a distant mirage. He himself has said in his book that Southern white male is not ready for his (black) presidency. He himself lambasted at GOPs lip service to minorities. If he were to run, he would be clobbered by GOP stalwarts like Jesse Helms, Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell. Make no mistake about it.

Neocon, I will let you in on a secret. Many folks think that they have come a long way and are proud that they have done away with slavery and there has been lot of progress in civil rights. Everything is hunky dory so far. The problem is now we witness a sub concious violation of civil rights and the proof is in statistics of less minorities in jobs (certainly very few in upper echelons of white collar jobs) and disproportionately large number of them are incarcerated. Amusingly, some of them came up with Bell Curve theories and other theories to explain why blacks are not doing well.



To: Neocon who wrote (75383)11/15/2000 11:58:18 AM
From: microhoogle!  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 769670
 
Bush wants to win on a literacy test.

In the 1850s, Connecticut and Massachusetts imposed literacy tests on disfavored Irish immigrants. The Deep South built on those tests in the 1890s and early 1900s to disenfranchise African-Americans who had gained significant political power after Reconstruction.

African-Americans who went to register to vote were suddenly asked to recite, word for word, state constitutions or the US Constitution. While states used grandfather clauses to keep two-thirds of white voters on the rolls, 90 percent of African-Americans voters were knocked out of the booth by 1912.

Once knocked out, black folks were kept out in the South until the civil rights movement. During the Virginia constitutional convention that led to the elimination of black voters in 1902, one delegate declared that the ''great underlying principle'' was ''the elimination of the Negro from the politics of this state.''

In the 1940s, a local Democratic Party official said in South Carolina, ''If a coon wants to vote in the primary, we make him recite the Constitution backward, as well as forward, make him close his eyes and dot his t's and cross his i's.'' Registrars in Mississippi asked black people seeking to register, ''How many bubbles are in a bar of soap?''

Today, we may have ended literacy tests, but Bush is punishing 19,000 voters for their inability to read a confusing ballot. This is in the face of many possible election irregularities for black voters in Florida, ranging from discriminatory requests for IDs, intimidating police roadblocks, lack of Creole intepreters, and polls shutting down black precincts despite long lines. Jewish precincts had a suspiciously high number of double-punched ballots, and another lost its computerized votes altogether when a poll worker accidently erased them.

''The thing that hurts so bad is, we got our right to vote and it still doesn't count!'' said the Rev. Griffin Davis of Riviera Beach. ''There's no answer for throwing out 19,000 votes in Palm Beach County. It's a disgrace before God.''

It is also a disgrace before history. Bush supporters say there is no problem because a Democrat approved the Palm Beach ballot. But when 19,000 people make the same mistake, it should be the customer, not the candidate, who is right.

This nation once punished black people who could not count the bubbles in a bar of soap. Now, 19,000 voters face disenfranchisement because they could not tell which spot to punch on a confusing ballot. That test of a voter's literacy is unfair. A candidate who ignores such unfairness a century after such travesties divided this nation and who would twist literacy to his own ends will surely not be a fair president.

If Bush has an ounce of the compassion he says he does, he will recite the Voting Rights Act backward as well as forward and let the votes be counted until all the t's are dotted and the i's crossed. If he does not, he will be remembered as the president who won on the underlying principle of eliminating thousands of Americans from the voting booth.

boston.com