Tag Archives: civil rights

Say it loud, Senators: Stop Sessions!

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Last night, the Republican majority in the U.S. Senate voted to silence Senator Elizabeth Warren. Her offense? She read a 1986 letter from Coretta Scott King opposing the nomination of Senator Jefferson Beauregard Sessions. King wrote about the 1986 nomination for a federal judgeship, which the Senate voted down. Warren spoke to the 2017 nomination to Attorney General. The Republican Senators not only want to put this anti-civil rights Senator in charge of enforcing civil rights laws: they want to silence voices speaking the truth about him. And it’s time for Democratic Senators to stand up and show the world just how despicable the Republican support for Sessions is. Here’s how:

Today, before the vote on Sessions, every single Democratic Senator should stand up on the floor and read the same Coretta Scott King letter that got Senator Elizabeth Warren silenced. Let the Republicans show their true colors by silencing every voice of opposition, one at a time. Make them show their shameful behavior to the world.

Republican majority leader, Senator Mitch McConnell, used an archaic Senate rule, Rule 19, to shut up Elizabeth Warren. The rule says

“No Senator in debate shall, directly or indirectly, by any form of words impute to another Senator or to other Senators any conduct or motive unworthy or unbecoming a Senator.”

It was passed after a fistfight broke out between Senators on the floor of the Senate. Senators usually ignore the rule, as Vox observes:

 “Senate Republicans appear to have violated the rule on multiple occasions, one of which occurred less than a week ago — with no apparent consequences.

“On February 1, Sen. David Perdue (R-GA) took to the Senate floor to directly attack Minority Leader Chuck Schumer after Schumer cried at a press conference about Trump’s executive order. ‘The minority leader’s tear-jerking performance over the past weekend belongs at the Screen Actors Guild awards, not in a serious discussion of what it takes to keep America safe,’ said Perdue in a speech on the floor.

“Additionally, Republican Sen. Tom Cotton used the Senate floor to attack the ‘sad, sorry legacy’ of former Minority Leader Harry Reid on May 25, 2016. On July 24, 2015, Sen. Ted Cruz accused McConnell of a ‘flat-out lie.’”

Moreover, as Senator Chris Murphy pointed out on Twitter: “Rules against criticizing other Senators cannot apply when you are DEBATING THE NOMINATION OF A SENATOR!”

I’m attaching the PDF of Coretta Scott King’s letter. Here’s an excerpt:

“Mr. Sessions has used the awesome powers of his office in a shabby attempt to intimidate and frighten elderly black voters. For this reprehensible conduct, he should not be rewarded with a federal judgeship. …

“The irony of Mr. Sessions’ nomination is that, if confirmed, he will be given a life tenure for doing with a federal prosecution what the local sheriffs accomplished twenty years ago with clubs and cattle prods. …

“We still have a long way to go before we can say that minorities no longer need be concerned about discrimination at the polls. Blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans and Asian Americans are grossly underrepresented at ever level of government in America. If we are going to make our timeless dream of justice through democracy a reality, we must take every possible step to ensure that the spirit and intent of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Fifteenth Amendment of the Constitution is honored. …

“I do not believe Jefferson Sessions possesses the requisite judgment, competence, and sensitivity to the rights guaranteed by the federal civil rights laws to qualify for appointment to the federal district court.

It was true in 1986 – Sessions was unfit to be a federal judge. It’s true now – he is unfit to be Attorney General.

And it is unfitting for the U.S. Senate to deny Elizabeth Warren, or any other Senator, the right to say so.

What you can do:

Call your Senators. Tell them to read the Coretta Scott King letter on the Senate floor today. Tell them to stand up to Mitch McConnell and not allow the silencing of debate. Tell them to vote against the Sessions nomination.

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Because this is OUR country: Myrlie Evers Williams on Martin Luther King Day

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Myrlie Evers-Williams at the Missouri Theatre in 2015. Photo by Mark Schierbecker, published under Creative Commons license.

She heard the shots ring out, that long-ago summer night. Inside the house, she heard her husband’s car pull up, and then the shots that killed him. One of the bullets came through the living room window, into the house where she and their three small children waited for a father who would never walk in the door again.

At today’s Martin Luther King Day breakfast, Myrlie Evers Williams recalled that night, Continue reading

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Latest on Standing Rock

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Click here for edited 90-second video from November 20 police attack on water protectors at Standing rock. 

 

Lots of news from the water protectors at Standing Rock, so here’s a quick update on:

  • police repression
  • continuing encampment
  • Army Corps of Engineers actions (okay, this is more of an educated guess – I doubt that the Corps itself knows what it’s doing)
  • three calls you can make

Continue reading

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Convention-al wisdom: 1948

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Collection: International Ladies Garment Workers Union Photographs (1885-1985) Repository: The Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives in the ILR School at Cornell University is the Catherwood Library unit that collects, preserves, and makes accessible special collections documenting the history of the workplace and labor relations. http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/library/kheel

In 1948, after 16 years of Democratic presidency, the Republicans controlled both houses of Congress, and the prospects for a Democrat to win the presidential election did not look good. The Democratic convention divided over civil rights: a minority report urged the Democrats to adopt a pro-civil rights platform, but neither President Harry Truman nor the strong white southern wing of the party wanted anything more than the vague generalities of previous platforms. President Harry Truman had already sent a strong civil rights message to Congress in February 1948, but with Republicans controlling Congress, civil rights legislation had no chance of passage. Continue reading

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Turning points for hope: Ferguson and Stanford

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In 2014, the police shooting of Michael Brown brought young people pouring into the streets. Their anger, their courage, their commitment quickly flowed beyond Ferguson and police to challenge multiple forms of institutionalized and structural racism of this country. A new generation marched into the streets. Rage and grief sparked their activism, conviction and solidarity sustain them.

On June 2, Judge Aaron Persky gave Brock Turner, the Stanford rapist a slap-on-the-wrist sentence of six months in jail, which means he’ll probably serve three. An eloquent 12-page statement from the Stanford rape victim sparked outpourings of anger and support. Rather than marches in the street, protest took the form of women telling their own stories of sexual assault, of a million-signature judicial impeachment petition, of at least 10 prospective jurors refusing to serve under Judge Persky in other cases, and of statements of solidarity including an open letter from Vice President Joe Biden. Continue reading

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Plans, not resolutions: Walking, reading, writing ahead

IMG_5972I plan to walk more in January, despite icy sidewalks. I plan to read more and have a stack of poetry and novels and nonfiction to tackle. I plan to write more, too — on a variety of topics, personal and political, local and global. That includes recycling contracts in St. Paul, Glendale public housing in Minneapolis, solar greenhouses and winter gardens across Minnesota, and bad bus stops in my neighborhood. Continue reading

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Why I keep writing about Black Lives Matter

 

Black Lives Matter 1Sometimes it seems like I’m talking – and writing – about Black Lives Matter all the time. Let me explain why.

Back in 1903, W.E.B. DuBois wrote The Souls of Black Folk. He began the book with these lines:

“HEREIN lie buried many things which if read with patience may show the strange meaning of being black here in the dawning of the Twentieth Century. This meaning is not without interest to you, Gentle Reader; for the problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color-line.”

Today, despite all of the organizing, all of the marching, all of the blood shed and people martyred in the civil rights movement of the 20th century, the problem of the color line is still the problem of our time, the problem of the 21st century, in the United States and around the world. And today, Black Lives Matter embodies the challenge of the new civil rights movement. Continue reading

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April 4: The struggle continues

This file was posted to Flickr by the Minnesota Historical Society and is licensed under Creative Commons.

King speaking to an anti-war rally on University of Minnesota campus in 1967.  This file was posted to Flickr by the Minnesota Historical Society and is licensed under Creative Commons.

“April 4,” the young lady at the gym said as I signed my name to a form and stopped to think of the date. April 4, which will always mean just one day to me, that day 47 years ago when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated. I still remember the tears that would not stop and still feel the impact of his life and his death.

I was seventeen years old, finishing my first year at the University of Chicago, full of the excitement of the university and the city and the tension between being a student on the south side and learning community organizing on the north side, praying Sunday mornings at St. Dominic’s Catholic masses in Cabrini Green and Saturday mornings at soulful, prayerful, songful Operation Breadbasket meetings at Chicago Theological Seminary. Continue reading

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Ferguson report: Perversion of court system, rampant racism

Screen Shot 2015-03-10 at 8.16.24 PMJust about a week ago, the Department of Justice issued its scathing 102-page report detailing the racist and unconstitutional practices of Ferguson courts and cops. I read some of it at the gym, some on buses and trains, and finally finished it tonight. The report is as appalling as it is important, and it should be required reading and study in criminal justice classes, especially for future police officers. (Click on link at end of article for full report.)  Continue reading

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From Selma to the ‘fierce urgency of now’

Reverend Dr. Barbara Holmes, now president of United Theological Seminary in Minnesota

Reverend Dr. Barbara Holmes, now president of United Theological Seminary in Minnesota

“The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends inexorably toward justice.” So preached Martin Luther King, Jr. and abolitionist Unitarian minister Theodore Parker before him. The Selma anniversary celebrations this weekend showed both the importance of activism in moving the arc over the past 50 years and of the urgency of continuing protest and pressure. Diane Nash’s protest was inspiring,President Obama’s speech was eloquent, and Rev. Barbara Holmes brought home her personal story and continuing witness.  Continue reading

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