Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i'm tired of so much winning.
Lol. I see a Repubublican revolt against Trump coming very soon.
I think Republicans will lose seats in 2018. I also think Trump may not win re-election in 2020.
Trump is only slightly more popular than diahrrea now. If Dems field someone halfway decent and likable (ie someone without Hillary's decades of baggage), they should win easily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Further evidence that voter suppression is counterproductive to democracy and damaging to the country as a whole. If black voters had not gotten out in great numbers and funded their own efforts to get on the ground and ensure African-American voters got registered and were not deterred at the polls then Roy Moore would be celebrating today. This victory for Doug Jones speaks volumes of why it is so important for white people to not simply shrug their shoulders and say, “Meh” about issues like gerrymandering and police intimidation at polling stations and insufficient equipment and staffing causing long lines at polling stations and biased voter ID laws...white people cannot afford to tolerate the existence of these forms of systemic racism that inhibit African-Americans from exercising their Constitutional right because voter suppression affects white folks too. Had the Black Belt in Alabama been suppressed like they usually are, had black grassroots organizations not put forth the energy and effort to make sure black voices were heard this Alabama Senate race would have had an entirely different outcome.
#BlackVotesMatter
Voter ID isn’t voter suppression. If there is voter suppression, it needs to be quelled immediately. I didn’t hear anyone complaining about the purged Brooklyn voters in last year’s primary but, that was Hillary v Bernie. And F Bernie amirite????
Your petty nitpicking doesn’t detract from the overall advisory. The prohibition and/or opposition of African-Americans exercising their Constitutional right to vote has very damaging consequences that extend well beyond the black citizens being denied. Voter suppression in all its forms is counterproductive to democracy and damaging to the country as a whole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i'm tired of so much winning.
Lol. I see a Repubublican revolt against Trump coming very soon.
I think Republicans will lose seats in 2018. I also think Trump may not win re-election in 2020.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Further evidence that voter suppression is counterproductive to democracy and damaging to the country as a whole. If black voters had not gotten out in great numbers and funded their own efforts to get on the ground and ensure African-American voters got registered and were not deterred at the polls then Roy Moore would be celebrating today. This victory for Doug Jones speaks volumes of why it is so important for white people to not simply shrug their shoulders and say, “Meh” about issues like gerrymandering and police intimidation at polling stations and insufficient equipment and staffing causing long lines at polling stations and biased voter ID laws...white people cannot afford to tolerate the existence of these forms of systemic racism that inhibit African-Americans from exercising their Constitutional right because voter suppression affects white folks too. Had the Black Belt in Alabama been suppressed like they usually are, had black grassroots organizations not put forth the energy and effort to make sure black voices were heard this Alabama Senate race would have had an entirely different outcome.
#BlackVotesMatter
Voter ID isn’t voter suppression. If there is voter suppression, it needs to be quelled immediately. I didn’t hear anyone complaining about the purged Brooklyn voters in last year’s primary but, that was Hillary v Bernie. And F Bernie amirite????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i'm tired of so much winning.
Lol. I see a Repubublican revolt against Trump coming very soon.
Anonymous wrote:i'm tired of so much winning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Further evidence that voter suppression is counterproductive to democracy and damaging to the country as a whole. If black voters had not gotten out in great numbers and funded their own efforts to get on the ground and ensure African-American voters got registered and were not deterred at the polls then Roy Moore would be celebrating today. This victory for Doug Jones speaks volumes of why it is so important for white people to not simply shrug their shoulders and say, “Meh” about issues like gerrymandering and police intimidation at polling stations and insufficient equipment and staffing causing long lines at polling stations and biased voter ID laws...white people cannot afford to tolerate the existence of these forms of systemic racism that inhibit African-Americans from exercising their Constitutional right because voter suppression affects white folks too. Had the Black Belt in Alabama been suppressed like they usually are, had black grassroots organizations not put forth the energy and effort to make sure black voices were heard this Alabama Senate race would have had an entirely different outcome.
#BlackVotesMatter
Voter ID isn’t voter suppression. If there is voter suppression, it needs to be quelled immediately. I didn’t hear anyone complaining about the purged Brooklyn voters in last year’s primary but, that was Hillary v Bernie. And F Bernie amirite????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Further evidence that voter suppression is counterproductive to democracy and damaging to the country as a whole. If black voters had not gotten out in great numbers and funded their own efforts to get on the ground and ensure African-American voters got registered and were not deterred at the polls then Roy Moore would be celebrating today. This victory for Doug Jones speaks volumes of why it is so important for white people to not simply shrug their shoulders and say, “Meh” about issues like gerrymandering and police intimidation at polling stations and insufficient equipment and staffing causing long lines at polling stations and biased voter ID laws...white people cannot afford to tolerate the existence of these forms of systemic racism that inhibit African-Americans from exercising their Constitutional right because voter suppression affects white folks too. Had the Black Belt in Alabama been suppressed like they usually are, had black grassroots organizations not put forth the energy and effort to make sure black voices were heard this Alabama Senate race would have had an entirely different outcome.
#BlackVotesMatter
Voter ID isn’t voter suppression. If there is voter suppression, it needs to be quelled immediately. I didn’t hear anyone complaining about the purged Brooklyn voters in last year’s primary but, that was Hillary v Bernie. And F Bernie amirite????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:#Dear Alabama black folks— thanks for saving our butts.
+1
Sorry you have so many white a-holes near you.
No shortage of black a-holes in this country, either. Or am I not allowed to say that because it's racist? (I notice we're only allowed to make denigrating remarks against whites.)
Anonymous wrote:Further evidence that voter suppression is counterproductive to democracy and damaging to the country as a whole. If black voters had not gotten out in great numbers and funded their own efforts to get on the ground and ensure African-American voters got registered and were not deterred at the polls then Roy Moore would be celebrating today. This victory for Doug Jones speaks volumes of why it is so important for white people to not simply shrug their shoulders and say, “Meh” about issues like gerrymandering and police intimidation at polling stations and insufficient equipment and staffing causing long lines at polling stations and biased voter ID laws...white people cannot afford to tolerate the existence of these forms of systemic racism that inhibit African-Americans from exercising their Constitutional right because voter suppression affects white folks too. Had the Black Belt in Alabama been suppressed like they usually are, had black grassroots organizations not put forth the energy and effort to make sure black voices were heard this Alabama Senate race would have had an entirely different outcome.
#BlackVotesMatter