The radical rightwing Supreme Court of the United States is
about to hear a case that could turn back the clock back 50 years on civil
rights in our country. The case has to do with the idea that the federal government
does not treat all sovereign states equally. A section of the Civil Rights Act of
1965 (Section 5) requires Department of Justice review of state level decisions
that might affect a persons rights to vote. The requirement applies only to states
that have a history of making racially motivated decisions. From the inception of
America, everyone knows the laws were written to prevent black people from
voting—including the Constitution. There was a bifurcation born out of a sense
of the incorrectness of one person owning another person verses the sense of
equal treatment under the law. Thomas Jefferson, a slave owner, believed all
men were created equal but was totally convinced they could not live as equals.
Black people would have to go somewhere else. It is no coincidence that the people
of Liberia named their capital Monrovia after U.S. President James Monroe. The
recent movie Lincoln caused the
subject to reemerge as a dinning room conversation piece. The various
succeeding governments passed numerous laws, which made it clear our choice was
that we would live in a system of integration verses segregation; separate but
equal was discarded early in that process.
Most of us can only shake our heads in disbelief that such
old arguments concerning the merits and demerits of separate, or even “separate
but equal” would reemerge. The political party background is that plantation
owners; thus, slave owners were Democrats. When President Lyndon Johnson signed
the civil rights act, a shift of party loyalty occurred; white people shifted en masse from the Democratic Party to
the Republican Party. The reality of politics in a democracy is that “the
person with the most votes wins”. Suddenly, with emancipation, white people
went from being a majority to a being a minority; nevertheless, Republicans as
the economic elite, were able to controlled state government, just as they controlled
the nomination of extreme conservative Justices. However, as an integrated
society, the black majority gained political power—it is a sign of social maturity.
We can never go back. I don’t remember where the idea arose
but I think it is a good analogy. Take a cup of coffee and carefully pour a
layer of cream on top, then sir the coffee 100 times clockwise to mix in the
cream in to the coffee and then stir the coffee 100 times counter clockwise to
get the cream layer back on top. It will not work anymore then it will work to attempt
to separate the races. The Supreme Court
could make a huge mistake and try to stir 150 years backwards.
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