Black women will not be deterred by the GOP’s voter suppression tactics
http://shareblue.com/black-women-will-not-be-deterred-by-the-gops-voter-suppression-tactics/Black voters have been denigrated, harassed, and disenfranchised by GOP partisans during this election season. But we are undeterred and voting in significant numbers to propel Hillary Clinton to victory.
FULL TEXT
By Ginger McKnight-Chavers |
NOVEMBER 2, 2016
When the First Lady uttered that now famous phrase, when they go low, we go high, it was not some empty campaign slogan. It came from her core.
At the time, I wrote about how my Harvard Law School classmate Michelle Obama so perfectly articulated why America is the greatest nation on earth, full of promise and hope, in stark contrast to Donalds dystopian distortion.
But her words cut deeper than that. They reflected the depth of our shared experience as Black women, the true grit of our parents and ancestors in the face of unfathomable struggles, and their unwavering refusal to be bowed or deterred by the worst of America.
I remember the First Ladys dedication in protesting South African apartheid and other injustices while we were students at Harvard. So I immediately thought of her and her words at the DNC Convention when I read An Elderly Black Woman Voted in Texas Today at Daily Kos:
The first person to vote in my precincts polling place was an elderly African American woman who had been standing in line on her cane for at least an hour We black women do not take our votes lightly.
Most people assume that my home state of Texas is too red for the liberal-leaning votes of its Black minority to make a difference.
Additionally, there is the specter of aggressive voter suppression efforts in Texas and other states that are still giving rise to court challenges on the eve of the election.
And we cannot forget the Trump campaigns illegal tactics to intimidate Black voters and other Democrats.
2016 has been a banner year for going low by the GOP at the expense of Black voters.
But we know better. Like the author of the Daily Kos piece, I was not surprised by the diligence of this elderly Black woman in Texas.
This is all I knew growing up in Dallas.
Starting at a young age, my friends and I were instructed to hand out campaign flyers, put up lawn signs, and attend rallies with our parents.
We stood in voting booths with them and watched them pull the levers.
My mother even sent me to my predominantly white, conservative elementary school with a large McGovern button pinned on my shirt collar every day.
Unbowed. Undeterred.
Our community knows the value of showing up and refusing to give up.
People like this elderly voter and my mother elected the first Black congresswoman from the Deep South, Barbara Jordan of Texas.
They obliterated Jim Crow.
They made the improbable election of Americas first Black president a reality.
And despite misleading headlines that suggest we are not turning out to the polls, the Black vote is surging.
An older black woman voting is not an anomaly. Living in places like Texas, or Mississippi or North Carolina doesnt dissuade us. We know that the stakes are too high, and we dont believe that the price paid for our right to vote was in vain.
Short & honorable..a good read ~
Response to misterhighwasted (Original post)
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misterhighwasted
(9,148 posts)niyad
(113,526 posts)misterhighwasted
(9,148 posts)Wooosh...
niyad
(113,526 posts)sheshe2
(83,855 posts)They vote and we vote.
We are women!
VOTE!
calimary
(81,435 posts)Their fathers, brothers, cousins, husbands, sons, and nephews were granted the right to vote FIFTY YEARS before they won that right, themselves. The 15th Amendment to the Constitution was finally ratified in 1870. It applied only to Black MEN. Black women had to wait FIFTY MORE YEARS for the right to vote - when all other women finally gained that right in a specific Amendment. The 19th Amendment, guaranteeing the right of all women, regardless of skin color, to vote wasn't ratified til 1920.
SunSeeker
(51,658 posts)Cracklin Charlie
(12,904 posts)The very last voter I would pick to suppress would be a black woman. I'd kinda like to keep all my body parts intact.
March On, Black Women Democrats!