Friday, January 8, 2021

Black Voters Understood What the Stakes Were

 

Black Voters Understood What the Stakes Were

For those who remember the history of disenfranchisement, what happened in Georgia was especially poignant.

TomDispatch
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Clint Smith at The Atlantic on the Black Georgians who secured Warnock and Ossoff's victories.
—Erika
Chiseled into the side of Stone Mountain, a quartz monzonite dome in Georgia that arches nearly 1,700 feet toward the sky, are the likenesses of three Confederate leaders—President Jefferson Davis and Generals Robert E. Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson. Each is shown holding his hat over his heart, and each rides on the back of a horse whose body melts into the stone. This is the largest Confederate memorial in the country, an homage to treasonous white supremacists who fought a war to maintain the institution of slavery. Its construction began in 1916. It was completed in 1972—more than a century after the cause that it celebrates was officially defeated.
I have been thinking about Stone Mountain—the misguided veneration etched into its quartz face, the cross that Simmons and his cohorts set afire at its base—because it is in DeKalb County, a majority-Black county in north-central Georgia whose votes seemed to secure victories for the Democratic Senate candidates Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff. Their victories, along with Vice President–elect Kamala Harris’s tie-breaking vote, will give their party a majority in the U.S. Senate and transform the possibilities for what a Joe Biden presidency might look like.
Seeing the extraordinary leads that Warnock and Ossoff ran up in DeKalb—as of yesterday, Warnock had received 84 percent of the vote and Ossoff had received 83.4 percent—I began thinking of the Black people in that county, and across Georgia, who voted in this election but were alive when casting such a vote was not possible.
The Voting Rights Act of 1965, which outlawed the racist, discriminatory voting practices of states in the former Confederacy, was signed only 55 years ago. Hundreds of thousands of Black Georgians, and millions of Black people across the South and across the country, remember when the idea of voting was simply that: an idea.
There are Black people still alive today who couldn’t register to vote without the threat of violence hanging over them. There are Black people still alive today who couldn’t vote, because of poll taxes. There are Black people still alive today who couldn’t vote, because of spurious literacy tests. To prevent Black people from having access to the franchise, some election officials quizzed them about how many bubbles are in a bar of soap or asked them to count the pieces of candy in a jar. There are Black people still alive today who cannot forget that era.
As I was watching what the Black voters of Georgia did Tuesday night, I couldn’t stop thinking about all the history that preceded that moment—the history that’s not just in textbooks or in black-and-white documentary-film footage, but that’s alive in people’s bones and in their memories. A history of oppression, a history of having been made into a lower, legally disenfranchised caste in the American hierarchy. Georgia didn’t simply enact voter disenfranchisement; in some ways, the state pioneered it.



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West Virginia REPUBLICAN Del. Derrick Evans, R-Wayne, charged federally for role in Trump mob insurrection

 

West Virginia Del. Derrick Evans, R-Wayne, charged federally for role in Trump mob insurrection



WASHINGTON (WV News) — West Virginia Delegate Derrick Evans, R-Wayne, has been charged with entering a restricting area and entering the U.S. Capitol, federal officials in the District of Columbia said Friday.

"We have just, I just received word that we have a signed complaint ... against a delegate who serves in the West Virginia Legislature," said Ken Cole, first assistant for the U.S. Attorney's Office in the District of Columbia.

Evans, who was elected to the House of Delegates in November and was sworn-in Dec. 14, posted multiple videos of himself to social media showing him entering the Capitol alongside fellow supporters of President Donald Trump.

“Derrick Evans is in the Capitol,” he can be heard saying multiple times in a since-deleted video.

Four people died as a result of what occurred Wednesday and more than a dozen others were injured.

A report published Thursday by The Daily Beast, which identified individuals who stormed the Capitol Complex as including prominent white nationalists, neo-Nazis and followers of the conspiracy theory QAnon, referred to Evans as an “anti-choice activist.”

The lawmaker posted a statement to his personal Facebook page Wednesday afternoon, claiming to have been in Washington “simply as an independent member of the media to film history.”

Evans' actions have met with strong bipartisan rebukes from throughout West Virginia political circles.

The complaint against Evans was referenced amid a news conference in which authorities announced 15 federal cases had been filed in the Trump mob insurrection Jan. 6 at the U.S. Capitol.

In addition to Evans, announced another suspect was charged after he was found afterward with 11 Molotov cocktails, some filled with homemade napalm; two handguns; and an M-4 assault rifle.

And, another individual, Richard Barnett, 60, of Gravette, Arkansas, was among those charged; he's accused in connection with entering the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, where he was photographed at her desk.

The government is continuing to investigate and is seeking tips at 1-800-CALLFBI or fbi.gov/uscapitol, according to FBI Assistant Director in Charge of the District of Columbia Field Office Steven M. D'Antuono.

"We will continue to investigate all allegations of criminal activity and work with our partners at DOJ, and DC US Attorney's Office and bring charges and prosecute those responsible for the horrific activity that happened here in our nation's capitol. I want to stress this: Just because you left the D.C. region, [you can expect] a knock on the door if you were part of the criminal activity at the Capitol," D'Antuono said. "Bottom line on this: The FBI is not sparing any resources in this investigation."

A lot of stress because because folks, knock on the door. You were part of the criminal activity at the Capitol.

"This investigation has the highest priority of the Department of Justice. We literally have hundreds of prosecutors and agents, working from three command centers, in what is really a 24/seven operation," Cole said.

"It is active, it is fluid and evolving. So we're just really giving you the information that we have available at this," Cole said.

On the death of the U.S. Capitol police officer Brian D. Sicknick, Cole said "felony murder's always in play in something like this. But until we get all of the facts," they're "not in a position to comment on it."

Officials said they had no indication of a conspiracy to frame Trump supporters for the violence at the Capitol.

Cole also was asked about the "possibility that the president or the people who were on the stage with him at that rally could face potential charges related to inciting violence, and also some early insurrection charges against people who were inside the Capitol Building."

Cole replied: "Obviously, we don't expect any charges of that nature."

LINK

West Virginia lawmaker posts — then deletes — video of himself storming Capitol


A newly elected West Virginia lawmaker posted video of himself among the crowd that stormed the Capitol building on Wednesday — prompting calls for his resignation.

Republican Delegate Derrick Evans has since deleted the video showing him and a throng of Trump supporters breaching the building in protest of President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.

“We’re in, baby!” he says in the clip, copies of which are still circulating on Twitter.

Evans can also be seen inside milling about the Capitol Rotunda in a helmet, yelling, “No vandalizing.”

The first-time officeholder was elected in November to represent Wayne County.

In a Facebook post, he called himself “an independent member of the media to film history” while on a bus traveling home to West Virginia, West Virginia Metro News said.

“I want to assure you all that I did not have any negative interactions with law enforcement nor did I participate in any destruction that may have occurred,” Evans added.

Democratic leaders in West Virginia have already called on Evans to resign and “be prosecuted to the fullest extend of the law.” About 10,000 people have signed an online petition calling for his removal from office.

Roger Hanshaw, the speaker of the state House of Delegates, said Evans will need to “answer to his constituents and colleagues regarding his involvement in what has occurred today.”

Derrick Evans, a newly elected GOP lawmaker in West Virginia, posted video of himself among the crowd that stormed the Capitol building on Wednesday.
Republican Delegate Derrick Evans
Perry Bennett/West Virginia Legislature via AP

Hanshaw suggested Evans could be criminally charged.

“While free speech and peaceful protests are a core value of American society, storming government buildings and participating in a violent intentional disruption of one of our nation’s most fundamental political institutions is a crime that should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” he said in a statement.

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Tarnished by Trump: National security officials struggle to find new jobs

 

EMPLOYERS, REPUBLICAN DONORS and anyone who contributed to or supported the ARMED WHITE DOMESTIC TERRORIST COUP needs to be put on alert!

YOU ENABLED TREASON, SEDITION, INSURRECTION and will pay for what you supported.


By LARA SELIGMAN, 01/08/2021
EXCERPTS:
They have been snubbed by potential employers, told they would be a “liability” and in one instance were even compared to the "Hitler Youth."
This is the job market many experienced national security officials who work for President Donald Trump are facing just days before a new president takes office and they will be out of work. Across the administration, national security officials have been struggling to find new employment, and conversations with seven former and current officials reveal that they have been tainted by their time working for Trump.
The problem became worse on Wednesday, after pro-Trump rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol, prompting several senior officials to resign in protest amid wide condemnation of Trump by Democrats and Republicans. “I’ve had conversations with people who’ve worked on the national security teams, many who are career intelligence officers, who are concerned about what happens next,” said Olivia Troye, a former Homeland Security and White House official who left in August and has been an outspoken critic of Trump’s response to the pandemic. “People who are hiring see everything that’s happened and have to question your morals and ethics — especially in terms of what continues to happen today — on why you chose to work for that environment," she said.
As lawmakers call for President Trump's removal from office after Wednesday's violent attempted coup, Trump is surrounding himself with an increasingly small circle of advisers.
Officials working in national security are particularly vulnerable to this challenge. Many are tied to controversial Trump policies and scandals, be it child separation at the border or the politicization of the military on display when top Pentagon leaders stood with Trump for a photo op after authorities forcefully cleared Lafayette Square of protesters. In some cases, the resistance that officials are meeting from would-be employers is extreme. One senior defense official, who has been looking for a new job for two years without luck, recalled a conversation in which they were told that they were considered part of the "Hitler Youth.”
“That attitude is not helpful,” the person said. The senior defense official broadly described a sense of “Trump administration animus” from potential outside employers, which is frustrating for officials who don't consider themselves "hardcore MAGA folks.”
During her own job search this summer, Troye was told directly by one potential employer that they could not offer her a job because she was a “liability.” “I can’t tell you how hurtful it was to hear that,” said Troye, noting that the incident was a reality check.
National security jobs are more difficult to get than most, as applicants need a security clearance and a specialized set of skills.
A career civilian rather than a political nominee, Troye said she took the White House job to “make a difference,” and fought against policies she thought were wrong. Yet the incident with the employer “showed me firsthand the repercussions of trying to navigate in that space,” she said.
Elizabeth Neumann, another former civil servant and Homeland Security official who worked on counterterrorism, said she did not directly face challenges in finding a new job after she resigned in April. But that was primarily because she immediately spoke out against Trump’s policies. Still, she recounted several instances during her job hunt in which she heard through her network that certain companies would never consider hiring her because she worked in the Trump administration.
While junior-level employees working on noncontroversial issues might not have problems finding new employment, anyone associated with controversial Trump policies, such as immigration, were blacklisted, Neumann said. “There is absolutely an effect of a number of organizations out there trying to blacklist anybody that worked on child separation," for example, Neumann said.
. . . . many Trump appointees who are now struggling to find jobs — everyone from junior staffers to Cabinet secretaries — are facing questions for not leaving sooner. Many of these officials are the same people who privately bemoaned Trump’s instability, but were “all too willing to enable it,” said another former senior official.
“They are finding that staying silent had a cost: to their consciences and to their careers,” the person said. “People knew Trump would be toxic, yet they hedged anyway in hopes that they might get four more years of job stability"....







Curt Schilling tweets his support for those who carried out attack on U.S. Capitol on Wednesday

 

Curt Schilling tweets his support for those who carried out attack on U.S. Capitol on Wednesday

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS 
JAN 08, 2021 
Curt Schilling — ex baseball great, turned failed entrepreneur, turned disgraced ESPN host — tweets his support for the pro-Trump mob attack on the Capitol.
The ultra-conservative right-hander keeps supporting the white supremacist rebellion.


Curt Schilling, the former baseball great, turned failed gaming entrepreneur, turned disgraced ESPN host, turned Twitter personality pivoted to his latest hobby: volunteer surrogate of a white supremacist rebellion.

The outspoken ultra-conservative right-hander tweeted his support of Wednesday’s right-wing coup attempt at the U.S. Capitol building.

Schilling began by slamming anti-police violence protests as an example of true criminality gone unpunished, despite the frequent arrests and use of suppressive and sometimes deadly force.

In this file photo, Curt Schilling watches the MLB game between the San Francisco Giants and Arizona Diamondbacks in 2018.
In this file photo, Curt Schilling watches the MLB game between the San Francisco Giants and Arizona Diamondbacks in 2018. (Jennifer Stewart/Getty Images)

“You cowards sat on your hands, did nothing while liberal trash looted rioted and burned for air Jordan’s and big screens,” Schilling wrote, slamming anti-police violence protests like the demonstrations that emerged as a response to the Minneapolis police officers that killed George Floyd while he was in custody.

“Sit back, [shut up] and watch folks start a confrontation for [expletive] that matters like rights, democracy and the end of [government] corruption,” Schilling then wrote of the mob attack, which resulted in five deaths — including a Capitol Police officer, a protester who was shot to death by Capitol Police and three others who died during the rioting.

Participants of the violent attack could be seen waving Confederate and Trump flags inside the Capitol, while another man was seen wearing a “Camp Auschwitz” sweatshirt.

Schilling, who is in his eighth year of eligibility for being voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown by the Baseball Writers Association of America (BBWAA), received 60.9% of the vote. A player needs to reach a 75% threshold for induction, a barrier Schilling believes he would have crossed were he not a Republican.

“Absolutely,” Schilling said in 2015, via Boston.com. “When human beings do something, anything, there’s bias and prejudice. Listen, nine percent of the voters did not vote for Pedro [Martinez]. There’s something wrong with the process and some of the people in the process when that happens.

“I don’t think that it kept me out or anything like that but I do know there are guys who probably will never vote for me because of the things I said or did. That’s the way it works.”

The 54-year-old backer of the latest eruption of a reanimated white supremacist movement was a good pitcher a long time ago. He won 216 games over 20 seasons with the Phillies, D-backs, Red Sox and Orioles, was a six-time All-Star and won three World Series titles. He’ll find out on Jan. 26 how many votes he picked up this time around.

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The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...