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Selma 40 Years Later - By Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr.

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Kevin Spidel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-01-05 01:09 AM
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Selma 40 Years Later - By Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr.
This weekend in Selma, Alabama, marchers will commemorate the 40th anniversary of the march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in that city. The violence unleashed by Southern sheriffs and racial vigilantes on that day galvanized President Johnson to push through the Voting Rights Act, giving blacks the right to vote in the South for the first time since the brief reconstruction period after the Civil War.

Now 40 years later, that right to vote is once more at risk. When President Bush met with the 43 members of the Congressional Black Caucus, Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. - I report with some pride - asked him if he would support extension and strengthening of the Voting Rights Act when it comes up for renewal in 2007.

President Bush responded that he did not support voting rights for the District of Columbia. Rep. Jackson said that was not what he asked; he asked about extending the Voting Rights Act. Bush replied that he was not aware of the act and would look at it when it got to his desk. The president's passivity would enable House Majority leader Rep. Tom "the Hammer" DeLay to torpedo the act, just as he has real voting-rights reform.

The president has been eloquent in promoting democracy across the world. He said he would tell Russian president Vladimir Putin that democracies should be founded on "the rule of law, and respect for human and rights and dignity." The president has argued that democracy is so important in Iraq that it alone is worth Americans' dying and killing for. The interim Iraqi constitution protects the rights of women and minorities to vote.

But in America, the president and his party are undermining the right to vote - and the right to have one's vote counted. The glaring contrast between the president's rhetoric abroad and his record at home raises deep questions here and there about his true intentions.
When Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act, he predicted that there would be a fundamental upheaval in the South, and that Democrats might well lose that region for a generation. He got that right. Those who fought against equal rights for African-Americans shifted parties, but they did not shift their views. Republicans became the party of white sanctuary, using racial fears and cultural insecurities to attract votes. And a solid South built on Jesse Helms' tactics remains the foundation of Republican majorities in Congress today.

Now in this divided nation, the undermining of voting rights - and the unwillingness of the majority party to defend them - is spreading. We saw it in Florida in 2000, where a partisan secretary of state, head of the Bush campaign in Florida, intentionally purged qualified black voters from the voting lists. Then intimidation tactics were rolled out in black districts and, in the final instance, a five-person, right-wing majority in the Supreme Court prohibited a full count of the vote, while ruling that the Constitution does not give Americans the right to vote in national elections.

We saw it once more in 2004, in Ohio. Once more the secretary of state in charge of the election was a rabid partisan and co-chair of the Bush election campaign. Once more, African-American voters were disqualified improperly. Machines without paper records, manufactured by companies headed by pro-Bush partisans, were adopted for use. When black registration went up, the number of machines in black districts went down, creating lines that lasted for hours. The tactics of Southern crackers were adopted for the key swing state in the North.
In the midst of these outrages, the White House is absent without leave. Legislation has been introduced at the national level to require machines that provide a paper record, and to insure that election officials are nonpartisan, rather than partisan operatives like J. Kenneth Blackwell of Ohio. The president is silent on the legislation. The Republican leadership in the Congress has already indicated that legislation will not go forward.

A constitutional amendment to guarantee the right to vote, to insure that residents of the District of Columbia have the same right to vote as residents of Baghdad, and to set up federal rules for fair elections has been proposed. The president is silent. The Republican leadership in the Congress has already indicated its opposition.
And now the Voting Rights Act - which President Bush knows well as a former governor of Texas - must be renewed and strengthened. The president claims ignorance. The Republican leadership in the Congress, dependent on its strength in the South, will determine its fate.

Dr. Martin Luther King knew that progress towards equal rights depended on gaining the right to vote. But today, Republicans are shameless in their disregard for that right and Democrats are too passive in defense of it. It will require a renewed movement of concerned citizens to revive the right to vote in this country.
In Selma, Ala., 40 years later, we will mark the anniversary of the march that forced Congress to act. Now once more fierce resistance to voting rights is growing and it will take fierce popular pressure to defend the right to vote in this country, even as our troops die to provide that right in Iraq.
- -
03-01-05 © Tribune Media Services

------------------------

Download a Voting Rights Amendment Kit at http://www.pdamerica.org and tell your network about this kit! It is on the front page!
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Moderator DU Moderator Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-01-05 01:32 AM
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1. kevin_pdamerica
DU's copyright rules require you to post only 4 paragraphs from the original source, plus a link back to the original source. Thank you.
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Kevin Spidel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-01-05 01:39 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. this was not published yet
was forwarded to me from Rev. Jackson to post on the blogs prior to the Chicago Tribune to run with it tomorrow. I got the go ahead to post from Butch Wing of Rainbow/PUSH.

"Kevin, you can site tribune media services.....rev does a weekly column for them. - butch"
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dzika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-01-05 01:34 AM
Response to Original message
2. Video & History - Martin Luther King, Jr's march from Selma to Montgomery
Edited on Tue Mar-01-05 01:36 AM by dzika
EDIT: Mod, I am the source on this. Thanks.

After the murder of Jimmie Lee Jackson during the voter registration drive by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) it was decided to dramatize the need for a federal registration law. With the help of Martin Luther King and Ralph David Abernathy of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), leaders of the SCCC organised a protest march from Selma to the state capitol building in Montgomery, Alabama. The first march on 1st February, 1965, led to the arrest of 770 people. A second march, led by John Lewis and Hosea Williams, on 7th March, was attacked by mounted police. The sight of state troopers using nightsticks and tear gas was filmed by television cameras and the event became known as Bloody Sunday.

Martin Luther King led another march of 1,500 people two days later. After crossing the Pettus Bridge the marchers were faced by a barricade of state troopers. King disappointed many of his younger followers when he decided to turn back in order to avoid a confrontation with the troopers. Soon afterwards, one of white ministers on the march, James J. Reeb, was murdered.

President Lyndon B. Johnson now decided to take action and sent troops, marshals and FBI Agents to protect the protesters. On Thursday, 25th March, King led 25,000 people to the Alabama State Capitol and handed a petition to Governor George Wallace, demanding voting rights for African Americans. That night, the Ku Klux Klan killed Viola Liuzzo while returning from the march.



A rare video of the march from Selma to Montgomery
Real Media (low quality):
http://www.edwardsdavid.com/BushVideos/MarchFromSelma650321-25.rm

Martin Luther King Jr. speech starts about 4 minutes into the video

"How long? Not long"

The threat of the free exercise of the ballot by the Negro
and the white masses alike resulted in the establishing of a segregated society.
They segregated Southern money from the poor whites;
they segregated Southern churches from Christianity;
they segregated Southern minds from honest thinking;
and they segregated the Negro from everything.
...
They told us we wouldn't get here.
There are those that said that we would get here
only over their dead bodies.

All the world today knows that we are here
and we are standing before the forces of power
in the state of Alabama saying
"We ain't gonna let nobody turn us around."

Today I want to tell the city of Selma,
today I want to tell the state of Alabama,
today I want to say to the people of America
and the nations of the world:

We are not about to turn around.
We are on the move now.
Yes, we are on the move and no wave of racism can stop us.

The burning of our churches will not deter us.
The bombing of our homes will not dissuade us.
The beating and killing of our clergymen and young people will not divert us.
The arrest and release of known murderers will not discourage us.

We are on the move now.

Like an idea whose time has come,
not even the marching of mighty armies can halt us.
We are moving to the land of freedom.
...
I know you are asking today, "How long will it take?"

Somebody's asking "How long will presidents blind the visions of men?"

I come to say to you this afternoon
however difficult the moment,
however frustrating the hour,
it will not be long,
because truth pressed to earth will rise again.

How long? Not long,
because no lie can live forever.

How long? Not long,
because you shall reap what you sow.

How long? Not long.
Because the arm of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice.

How long? Not long,
because mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord,
trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored.
He has loosed the fateful lightning of his terrible swift sword.
His truth is marching on.


On 6th August, 1965, Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act. This removed the right of states to impose restrictions on who could vote in elections. Johnson explained how: "Every American citizen must have an equal right to vote. Yet the harsh fact is that in many places in this country men and women are kept from voting simply because they are Negroes." The legislation now empowered the national government to register those whom the states refused to put on the voting list.

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