Zone1 Systemic Racism- Voting

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Systemic racism exists today. That's a fact.

New congressional maps dilute Black power in South, critics say​


When Press Robinson registered to vote in South Carolina in 1963, he was handed a copy of the U.S. Constitution and told to read it aloud and interpret it.

Robinson, then a college sophomore, wasn’t surprised. He heard stories from others in the South’s Black community who faced Jim Crow-era methods to suppress Black votes — literacy tests, poll taxes, the infamous “jellybean test" that required prospective voters to guess how many of the small candies were in a jar.

In 1965, the Voting Rights Act outlawed the discriminatory voting practices of many states in the South, where Jim Crow laws also restricted how and where Black people could live, work, eat and study.

Yet, nearly 60 years later, Robinson and civil rights activists say those gains are being eroded. In Alabama, Florida and Louisiana, new congressional maps that some judges have ruled dilute the power of Black voters are being used in upcoming elections.

In Florida, the GOP-led Legislature approved — and an appeals court upheld — a map created by Republican governor and potential 2024 presidential contender Ron DeSantis that would dismantle at least one district where Blacks have a strong say at the polls.

In Alabama, GOP lawmakers packed most Black voters into only one of seven congressional districts, even though 27% of the state’s population is Black.

In Louisiana, where nearly one-third of the state’s population is Black, GOP lawmakers approved a map containing five majority-white districts, all of which favor Republican incumbents. The 2nd Congressional District, held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Troy Carter, is the sole Black-majority district. I

 
Systemic racism exists today. That's a fact.

New congressional maps dilute Black power in South, critics say​


When Press Robinson registered to vote in South Carolina in 1963, he was handed a copy of the U.S. Constitution and told to read it aloud and interpret it.

Robinson, then a college sophomore, wasn’t surprised. He heard stories from others in the South’s Black community who faced Jim Crow-era methods to suppress Black votes — literacy tests, poll taxes, the infamous “jellybean test" that required prospective voters to guess how many of the small candies were in a jar.

In 1965, the Voting Rights Act outlawed the discriminatory voting practices of many states in the South, where Jim Crow laws also restricted how and where Black people could live, work, eat and study.

Yet, nearly 60 years later, Robinson and civil rights activists say those gains are being eroded. In Alabama, Florida and Louisiana, new congressional maps that some judges have ruled dilute the power of Black voters are being used in upcoming elections.

In Florida, the GOP-led Legislature approved — and an appeals court upheld — a map created by Republican governor and potential 2024 presidential contender Ron DeSantis that would dismantle at least one district where Blacks have a strong say at the polls.

In Alabama, GOP lawmakers packed most Black voters into only one of seven congressional districts, even though 27% of the state’s population is Black.

In Louisiana, where nearly one-third of the state’s population is Black, GOP lawmakers approved a map containing five majority-white districts, all of which favor Republican incumbents. The 2nd Congressional District, held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Troy Carter, is the sole Black-majority district. I

What is it called when white republicans get screwed by redistricting? Is that also racism?
 
Systemic racism exists today. That's a fact.

New congressional maps dilute Black power in South, critics say​


When Press Robinson registered to vote in South Carolina in 1963, he was handed a copy of the U.S. Constitution and told to read it aloud and interpret it.

Robinson, then a college sophomore, wasn’t surprised. He heard stories from others in the South’s Black community who faced Jim Crow-era methods to suppress Black votes — literacy tests, poll taxes, the infamous “jellybean test" that required prospective voters to guess how many of the small candies were in a jar.

In 1965, the Voting Rights Act outlawed the discriminatory voting practices of many states in the South, where Jim Crow laws also restricted how and where Black people could live, work, eat and study.

Yet, nearly 60 years later, Robinson and civil rights activists say those gains are being eroded. In Alabama, Florida and Louisiana, new congressional maps that some judges have ruled dilute the power of Black voters are being used in upcoming elections.

In Florida, the GOP-led Legislature approved — and an appeals court upheld — a map created by Republican governor and potential 2024 presidential contender Ron DeSantis that would dismantle at least one district where Blacks have a strong say at the polls.

In Alabama, GOP lawmakers packed most Black voters into only one of seven congressional districts, even though 27% of the state’s population is Black.

In Louisiana, where nearly one-third of the state’s population is Black, GOP lawmakers approved a map containing five majority-white districts, all of which favor Republican incumbents. The 2nd Congressional District, held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Troy Carter, is the sole Black-majority district. I

Its about politics not race.
You need help!
 
Systemic racism exists today. That's a fact.

New congressional maps dilute Black power in South, critics say​


When Press Robinson registered to vote in South Carolina in 1963, he was handed a copy of the U.S. Constitution and told to read it aloud and interpret it.

Robinson, then a college sophomore, wasn’t surprised. He heard stories from others in the South’s Black community who faced Jim Crow-era methods to suppress Black votes — literacy tests, poll taxes, the infamous “jellybean test" that required prospective voters to guess how many of the small candies were in a jar.

In 1965, the Voting Rights Act outlawed the discriminatory voting practices of many states in the South, where Jim Crow laws also restricted how and where Black people could live, work, eat and study.

Yet, nearly 60 years later, Robinson and civil rights activists say those gains are being eroded. In Alabama, Florida and Louisiana, new congressional maps that some judges have ruled dilute the power of Black voters are being used in upcoming elections.

In Florida, the GOP-led Legislature approved — and an appeals court upheld — a map created by Republican governor and potential 2024 presidential contender Ron DeSantis that would dismantle at least one district where Blacks have a strong say at the polls.

In Alabama, GOP lawmakers packed most Black voters into only one of seven congressional districts, even though 27% of the state’s population is Black.

In Louisiana, where nearly one-third of the state’s population is Black, GOP lawmakers approved a map containing five majority-white districts, all of which favor Republican incumbents. The 2nd Congressional District, held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Troy Carter, is the sole Black-majority district. I

Who cares?

Black people have WAY MORE representation in congress than 13%

Quit bitching.
 
Systemic racism exists today. That's a fact.
You’re right.

People talk about “white privilege” and “white rage” and “white fragility” and “parasitic whiteness” and every institution is discriminating more and more, and then there are people who lie about the very definition of racism to pretend that their racism isn’t racist.

We really do need to vote out these racist “anti-racists” and abolish anything related to their crazy CRT / intersectional nonsense, but that isn’t enough, we need to root it out in academia and in the board room.

Funny thing, why do I think you probably promote all of this actual systemic racism?

Maybe we can talk next about how black kids are disproportionately targeted for death by Planned Parenthood, another clear example of systemic racism by the definitions you and yours like to use?
 
Who cares?

Black people have WAY MORE representation in congress than 13%

Quit bitching.
Yup. Black folks are wildly over-represented in most aspects of our culture. And with shameless racial hiring quotas and racist affirmative action policies that is going to escalate.

And yet there is all this whinging about not having enough “diversity” and shoehorning even more “representation” and “inclusion.”

It is absurd nonsense. Everyone should be treated the same, but that doesn’t mean some kind of cockamamie, doomed-to-fail guarantee of equality of outcome.
 
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