Saturday, December 31, 2011

Standing up against new voter suppression tactics

December 14th, 2011


By Benjamin Todd Jealous


Our voting rights are under attack. In legislatures across the county, misguided state politicians have proposed, and in too many cases have passed, laws that create obstacles to voting. That is why, in honor of International Human Rights Day, we are taking a principled stand for freedom to let the world know that we will not sit back and let our right to vote be taken away.


Over the last 12 months, 34 states have introduced voter suppression legislation, with laws passing in 14 of those states and bills pending in eight. These suppressive laws take many forms, but in each case they disproportionately impact people of color, working women, blue-collar workers, students, seniors, and immigrants.


In some states like Wisconsin and Ohio, lawmakers are limiting access to the polls by cutting or even eliminating early and Sunday voting opportunities. These significant cuts force parents, blue-collar workers, students and seniors who do not have the luxury of a flexible schedule to stand in polling lines for as many as eight hours.


In states like South Carolina, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and Texas, politicians have used the threat of voting fraud to move bills requiring voters to acquire government-issued photo identification before they cast a ballot. However, studies show that a person is more likely to be struck by lightning than to impersonate someone in the polling booth. Moreover, while states are required to provide photo identification for free, the underlying instruments needed to obtain the identifications, like a certified copy of a birth certificate, can in fact be very expensive. In this way, the new laws become a sort of poll tax for certain individuals.


Other creative voter suppression measures are making their way into law across the country. They include bills stripping voting rights from rehabilitated criminal offenders, eliminating same-day voter registration or voting, and targeted purging of African Americans and Latinos on registered voter rolls.


These attacks on voter participation mimic those used nearly a century ago in the lead up to the Jim Crow era. The lesson we learned then surely applies today - that an attack on voting rights is merely a gateway to further restrictions on our rights, including our right to organize, our right to clean air, our right to negotiate, and even our right to privacy.


Our democracy is too important to allow self-serving politicians to suppress the vote. We must defend our rights. We must have our voices heard.


Benjamin Todd Jealous is President and CEO of the NAACP.

Copyright 2006-2011 The Hudson Valley Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Friday, December 30, 2011

VOTE

The People who vote win. Vote suppression can change who votes. Zealots vote, do you, do your friends? Fight for automatic voter registration at the age of 18. Fight against voter apathy. Any one who thinks that the religious, conservative voters are winning or gone is commenting on the extent to which they think these people are going to vote as a cohesive group. T-vangelists live in fear and ignorance and they fight with fear and ignorance. Don't be afraid and don't be stupid. VOTE!

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Dear Ms Vowell

Ms Vowell, I think you are amazing (I bet you’ve never heard that before). I have watched you on TV and the shit you say cracks me up. I’m just finishing The Partly Cloudy Patriot and I came across something that may explain why I find your writing so comforting.

I doubt that I would have ever bought one of your books. I’m more of a Michener, Tolkien, tome, the more volumes the better, kind of guy. I pick my reading by weight as much as anything else (I got through most of Proust’s In Search of Lost Time and I’ll finish it some day). And I like unusual authors, I am waiting for the last three volumes of Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events come out in paperback.

While I am waiting for paperbacks to be published and then sold to and resold at Powel’s, I picked up The Partly Cloudy Patriot from my wife’s reading pile. She is waiting to read it on our next airport excursion. I’ll probably go with something non fiction but not one of her American presidents, early American history biographies.

If you have read this far I hope you don’t stop now. Some years back, maybe seven or eight years ago, on or about the 4th of July I came home to find a flag stuck in my lawn, sound familiar? Someone had put flags in every lawn along the street. Most were still standing but some were listing dramatically. Over time, some most were taken in but a few ended up in the gutter. I picked up some but didn’t make it a mission to police the entire street. I should have. The next year it happened again. Disrespect of the flag really increases my blood pressure. The people at the mall, who give out those little flags, on oversized toothpicks, to passing children who then unceremoniously drop them on the ground to be trampled on and then eventually thrown in the garbage, should be jailed!

On the stick holding flag, that I pulled from my front yard, was a business card from a local real-estate agent. I called them and informed them that I thought that not only were they disrespecting the flag by using it as an advertising tool, they were also contributing to the desecration of the flag by treating it as a lawn ornament. And they had no right to believe said lawn ornament would be respected as the symbol of our nation. I also let them know that I would do everything I could to make sure they never represented a household in my neighborhood unless they came and retrieved every flag they had placed. And they better do it before the flags were soiled.

They were taken aback by my outrage and assured me that they had gotten a ‘very positive response’ from every one else. And to this day they have not advertised their company in my neighborhood by abusing the flag.

Obviously I am not the wonderful writer you are. Thank you for, in part, telling my story with much more depth and clarity then even I have lived. God I wish I could just think your thoughts even if I could never communicate them to another living being. Reading your words helps me think thoughts I didn’t know existed.

Thank you, thank you, thank you,

PS I just found out that you were born on my 11th birthday, sorry.