Wednesday, March 31, 2021

The Rich-Poor Gap in America Is Obscene. So Let's Fix It - Here's How The Bern would do it.

 Bernie Sanders. (photo: Mary Altaffer/AP)  

It's time for the 1% to feel The Bern!

Bernie Sanders. (photo: Mary Altaffer/AP)

 

By Bernie Sanders, Guardian UK

30 March 21

readersupportednews.org

While working people toil, the richest have never have it so good. It’s time to fight back – our democracy depends on it

he United States cannot prosper and remain a vigorous democracy when so few have so much and so many have so little. While many of my congressional colleagues choose to ignore it, the issue of income and wealth inequality is one of the great moral, economic and political crises that we face – and it must be dealt with.

The unfortunate reality is that we are moving rapidly toward an oligarchic form of society, where a handful of billionaires have enormous wealth and power while working families have been struggling in a way we have not seen since the Great Depression. This situation has been exacerbated by the pandemic.

Today, half of our people are living paycheck to paycheck, 500,000 of the very poorest among us are homeless, millions are worried about evictions, 92 million are uninsured or underinsured, and families all across the country are worried about how they are going to feed their kids. Today, an entire generation of young people carry an outrageous level of student debt and face the reality that their standard of living will be lower than their parents’. And, most obscenely, low-income Americans now have a life expectancy that is about 15 years lower than the wealthy. Poverty in America has become a death sentence.

Meanwhile, the people on top have never had it so good. The top 1% now own more wealth than the bottom 92%, and the 50 wealthiest Americans own more wealth than the bottom half of American society – 165 million people. While millions of Americans have lost their jobs and incomes during the pandemic, over the past year 650 billionaires have seen their wealth increase by $1.3tn.

The growing gap between the very rich and everyone else is nothing new.

Over the past 40 years there has been a massive transfer of wealth from the middle class and working families to the very wealthiest people in America.

In 1978, the top 0.1% owned about 7% of the nation’s wealth. In 2019, the latest year of data available, they own nearly 20%.

Unbelievably, the two richest people in America, Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk, now own more wealth than the bottom 40% of Americans combined.

If income inequality had not skyrocketed over the past four decades and had simply stayed static, the average worker in America would be earning $42,000 more in income each year. Instead, as corporate chief executives now make over 300 times more than their average employees, the average American worker now earns $32 a week less than he or she did 48 years ago – after adjusting for inflation. In other words, despite huge increases in technology and productivity, ordinary workers are actually losing ground.

Addressing income and wealth and inequality will not be easy, because we will be taking on some of the most powerful and well-financed entities in the country, including Wall Street, the health insurance industry, the drug companies, the fossil fuel industry and the military-industrial-complex. But it must be done. Here is some of what Congress and the president can do in the very near future.

We must raise the minimum wage from the current starvation wage of $7.25 an hour to a living wage of at least $15 an hour. A job should lift workers out of poverty, not keep them in it.

We need to make it easier, not harder, for workers to join unions. The massive increase in wealth and income inequality can be directly linked to the decline in union membership in America.

We need to create millions of good-paying jobs rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure – our roads, bridges, wastewater plants, sewers, culverts, dams, schools and affordable housing.

We need to combat climate change by fundamentally transforming our energy system away from fossil fuels towards energy efficiency and renewable energy which will also create millions of good paying jobs.

We need to do what virtually every other major country does by guaranteeing healthcare to all people as a human right. Passing a Medicare for All program would end the absurdity of us paying twice as much per capita for healthcare as do the people of other countries, while tens of millions of Americans are uninsured or under-insured.

We need to make certain that all of our young people, regardless of income, have the right to high quality education – including college. And that means making public colleges and universities tuition free and substantially reducing student debt for working families.

And yes. We need to make the wealthiest people and most profitable corporations in America start paying their fair share of taxes.

Growing income and wealth inequality is not just an economic issue. It touches the very foundation of American democracy. If the very rich become much richer while millions of working people see their standard of living continue to decline, faith in government and our democratic institutions will wither and support for authoritarianism will increase. We cannot let that happen.

Sooner, rather than later, this issue must be addressed.

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

'Owning the libs' isn't really funny, but it is a telltale hallmark of fascism

Lauren Boebert, the Republican candidate for the US House of Representatives seat in Colorado's 3rd Congressional District, addresses supporters during a campaign rally in Colona, Colorado on October 10, 2020. - Boebert's meteoric rise into politics began in September 2019 when she confronted US Democratic presidential candidate Beto ORourke at a campaign rally and stated "Hell no, youre not!" to his proposed  mandatory buyback of both AR-15 and AK-47 semi-automatic weapons. With her "Pro-Freedom, Pro-Guns, Pro-Constitution, Pro-Energy, Pro-Life, Pro-Colorado, Pro-America" platform, Boebert defeated 5-term incumbent US Rep. Scott Tipton in Colorado's GOP primary, and is now challenged by former Colorado state lawmaker Democratic candidate Diane Mitsch Bush. A win by Boebert in the November election, would keep Colorado's 3rd Congressional District in the GOP hands. Colorado's 3rd Congressional District which encompasses 29 counties and represents 47 percent of Colorado's geographic territory is the 15th-largest district in the US. (Photo by Jason Connolly / AFP) (Photo by JASON CONNOLLY/AFP via Getty Images)
Move over Paul Gosar.  Make room for rootin' tootin', gun totin', rabble rousin' Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert

When Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert decided it would be a good political move to issue a histrionic email—declaring “I told Beto ‘HELL NO’ to taking our guns. Now we need to tell Joe Biden”—only hours after the news broke about the latest horrific mass shooting in a Boulder grocery store, many people took her to task for the callousness she demonstrated in self-promoting and fundraising off a tragedy.

That criticism was valid, but it misses a more relevant point. Boebert did this intentionally, calculating that the blowback she received would be proportionately less than the credit and acclaim she’d get for her insouciant disregard of human life. In fact, the blowback is what she counted on. After all, the desired effect was accomplished: she’d provoked the “liberal media ” into a wholly predictable response. In other words, she “owned the libs”—at least in the eyes of the people who will continue to vote for her. 

Boebert knew she’d be criticized, and that the criticism would be deserved. But by intentionally baiting her own excoriation, she was reaching for what has now become the sole arrow remaining in the entire Republican quiver. As expressed cogently by Derek Robertson writing for Politico, “owning the libs” is not necessarily a political victory over Democrats, but rather a demonstration of “a commitment to infuriating, flummoxing or otherwise distressing liberals with one’s awesomely uncompromising conservatism.”

Robertson’s worthwhile take on the subject, which promises to be a kind of dissection of the psychology underlying the “own the libs” phenomenon now ubiquitous within Republican Party ranks, still suffers from a facile sugarcoating of the concept by his Republican sources. He quotes Helen Andrews, editor of The American Conservative, who ennobles the process of “owning the libs” by elevating it to a virtue: “’Owning the libs’ is a way of asserting dignity,” she says. “‘The libs,’ as currently constituted, spend a lot of time denigrating and devaluing the dignity of Middle America and conservatives, so fighting back against that is healthy self-assertion; any self-respecting human being would … Stunts, TikTok videos, they energize people, that’s what they’re intended to do.”

That’s not really true, though. Whatever outrage that liberals direct toward “conservatives” is usually based on plain-old empirical evidence. If we tend to categorize Donald Trump’s supporters as racist, for example, it’s because they either affirmatively endorsed (or turned a blind eye to) racism by voting for Trump, who clearly demonstrated his own embrace of racism, over and over. We don’t seek to “devalue” their dignity, because we don’t recognize any “dignity” there to begin with; their actions are reprehensible, they hurt other people and they should know better. If “dignity” is even implicated, it’s cognizance of their own lack of it—their anger at their sorry-assed selves being revealed—that compels them to respond with a defensive, mocking nihilism.

Still, to his credit, Robertson traces the origins of this phenomenon back to the McCarthy era. Then, conservatives would justify Sen. Joe McCarthy’s worst excesses by intoning that “at least he stood for something,” whereas his opponents allegedly had no similar certitude of purpose. But while McCarthyism may have been the historical precedent to what we see spewed ad nauseum in virtually all conservative media content today (particularly since Trump, who elevated the heinous and offensive to an art form), it now seems that that “owning the libs” has become the entire rationale for a Republican Party singularly bereft of any ability to perform its supposed intended function of governing on behalf of the American people.

Politico’s Robertson also quotes Marshall Kosloff, who comes closer to the truth.

“It basically offers the party a way of resolving the contradictions within a realigning party, that increasingly is appealing to down-market white voters and certain working-class Black and Hispanic voters, but that also has a pretty plutocratic agenda at the policy level.” In other words: Owning the libs offers bread and circuses for the pro-Trump right while Republicans quietly pursue a traditional program of deregulation and tax cuts at the policy level.

So “owning the libs” is, at the very least, a scam, a feint, a mask for the Republican Party’s utter indifference to the real-life concerns of their constituents, for whom elected Republicans have had absolutely nothing to offer. It’s distracting entertainment substituted as policy. But is it more than that?

As the Biden administration enters its third full month, it’s useful to recount exactly what Republicans have done in the interim. Thus far, the only reaction from the right to the progressive measures being instituted on an almost-daily basis by the new administration has been an exercise in outrage politics. From the truly ridiculous, such as the saga of Dr. Seuss and Mr. Potato Head, to the truly dangerous—such as anti-immigrant racism and Fox News’ over-hyped “border crisis” or the simplistic hatred of anti-transgender bias.

All of these tactics have something in common: They’re performative exaggerations of social and cultural shifts that in reality have little or no tangible impact upon the daily lives of Republican constituents. Show me a Republican whose lives have actually been affected by an undocumented immigrant (few Republicans know any, and fewer still aspire to the “jobs” they fill), by a children’s book few if any Republicans have ever read, or by a transgender child playing sports (few Republicans have ever encountered one). These are all red herrings—shiny objects for the right to hold up and point to with one hand, while the other hand is busy with more substantive goals, such as impeding people of color from voting.

But they’re also symptomatic of a party that has completely abandoned “policy” as a governing principle. Instead, what we see is a Republican Party that has committed itself to one goal only: maintaining its grip on power by totally committing itself to inflammatory cultural issues. In its drive to maintain power, the GOP has adopted the same tactics of far-right parties in Europe, stoking grievances with apocalyptic, xenophobic rhetoric against immigrants and LGBTQ people, whom it attempts to marginalize as “social deviants” who are a threat to the “purity” of the population.

As was observed by Thomas Mann and Norman Ornstein last year, the modern Republican Party now closely resembles the neo-Nazi and white nationalist parties now emergent in Europe, such as Germany’s AfD and Hungary’s Fidesz, both in its ideological makeup and tactics, as it relentlessly tacks rightward.

The GOP has become an insurgent outlier in American politics. It is ideologically extreme; scornful of compromise; unmoved by conventional understanding of facts, evidence and science; and dismissive of the legitimacy of its political opposition.

What we see in the behavior of these proto-fascist European parties is another, peculiarly European version of the “own the libs” approach, by mocking the Holocaust, for example, as reported by the BBC

The party's leader in the eastern state of Thuringia, Björn Höcke, once described Berlin's Holocaust memorial as a "monument of shame" and called for a "180-degree turnaround" in Germany's handling of its Nazi past. Picking up the same theme, Alexander Gauland trivialised the Nazi era as "just a speck of bird's muck in more than 1,000 years of successful (German) history."

Similarly, those who resist or object to these tactics are drummed out of the party apparatus altogether.

The AfD has managed to attract voters from the centre right and even the centre left but in the words of Verena Hartmann, a moderate MP who left the party in January 2020 because it was becoming too extreme: "Those who resist this extreme right-wing movement are mercilessly pushed out of the party."

Sounds strangely familiar, doesn’t it?

Writing for Salon, Heather Digby Parton shrewdly documented this phenomenon at CPAC this year, in which Republicans, hoping to take up the coveted mantle of Donald Trump, spent nearly all their energies playing up to the crowd’s laundry list of hot-button grievances. Seldom if ever venturing into policy matters, the tone and tenor of those speaking reflected the prevailing sentiment of the attendees: “They don't care if these people are right or wrong, it's their unwillingness to back down no matter what that they admire.”

Parton cites Soviet-born author Masha Gessen, who shows how the “own the libs” phenomenon has its counterpart among the far-right parties that have arisen in former Communist states such as Hungary, as well as Western European countries now under siege by right-wing “populism.” In particular, Gessen quotes Balint Magyar, who characterized the appeal of such parties as “an ideological instrument for the political program of morally unconstrained collective egoism."

Magyar suggested reading the definition backward to better understand it: "The egoistic voter who wants to disregard other people and help solely himself can express this in a collective more easily than alone." The collective form helps frame the selfishness in loftier terms, deploying "homeland," "America first," or ideas about keeping people safe from alien criminals. In the end, Magyar writes, such populism "delegitimizes moral constraints and legitimizes moral nihilism."

The whole point of “owning the libs” is to project an in-your-face disregard to norms of decency and morality that most people have grown to expect from our civil society. In this mindset, “Fuck your feelings” becomes a litmus test of moral nihilism toward others, a requirement to confirm one’s party loyalty and be part of the “club.” 

The difference between the Unites States and Europe, however, is that unlike Europe, the U.S. political landscape is essentially limited to a two-party system. The Republican Party has moved so far to the right that the American public is now left with a choice between a relatively moderate Democratic Party and an extreme, far-right Republican Party, with nothing at all in between. Because our American electoral system unduly favors low-population “conservative” states, providing them equal representation in the U.S. Senate, and because of partisan gerrymandering ensuring that the GOP maintains rough parity with, if not domination of, Democratic voters who tend to be clustered in metropolitan and suburban areas, these two parties are afforded equal time and attention by the traditional media and the political process.

But they are not equal, in numbers or motivation. One party represents far more voters, as shown in the national popular vote in election after election for the past 20 years, while the other represents a dwindling and aging voter base. One party represents inclusion and social progress,  the other openly embraces xenophobia, racism, and voter suppression. With its new penchant for denying the legitimacy of elections, and its now-open embrace of paramilitary organizations and white supremacy, the Republican Party is rapidly moving toward the textbook definition of fascism, if it has not already arrived there. 

“Owning the libs” may seem funny, and even harmless, to those who practice it or profit by it. The reality is that a party whose messaging now relies solely and exclusively on establishing a “litmus test” that deliberately and intentionally abandons moral constraints and human decency is hardly breaking new ground. In fact, it’s following a tired and familiar path, conditioning its followers to dehumanize those who oppose them politically, while instead embracing autocracy and, ultimately, fascism.

If this doesn't say it all...

Monday, March 29, 2021

Trump Officials ignored Biden transition team warnings about urgent space crisis for immigrant kids

WILMINGTON, DE - NOVEMBER 24:  President-elect Joe Biden (R) and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris (L) prepare to introduce key foreign policy and national security nominees and appointments at the Queen Theatre on November 24, 2020 in Wilmington, Delaware. As President-elect Biden waits to receive official national security briefings, he is announcing the names of top members of his national security team to the public. Calls continue for President Trump to concede the election as the transition proceeds. (Photo by Mark Makela/Getty Images)
Then-President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris

The Associated Press questions in a March 20 article if the Biden administration “should have been better prepared” to shelter larger numbers of unaccompanied children arriving to the U.S. in search of safety. It appears it had been trying to do just that, as it joined career officials during the transition to warn the prior administration of the need to increase Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) capacity.

NBC News says in its new report that while officials with the Biden transition team “began sounding an alarm” in early December, then-HHS Secretary Alex Azar did not begin “the multiweek process of surveying and choosing new sites” until just days before President Joe Biden’s inauguration, on Jan. 15. “They were sitting on their hands,” the report quotes a transition official saying. 

NBC News reports that the recommendations from the transition team last year were “based on a growing trend of unaccompanied minors crossing the border that began to emerge in the late fall, and it was communicated to Trump officials in multiple meetings, multiple times a week.” But the report said that the previous administration was apparently confident it didn’t need to increase HHS capacity.

That administration had for most of 2020 been using the novel coronavirus pandemic as an excuse to block unaccompanied children from their asylum rights, in a Stephen Miller-pushed policy that was subsequently blocked by a federal judge in November. Pandemic restrictions also lowered capacity limits at HHS facilities, but the administration “did not account for Covid-19 social distancing restrictions that would keep facilities from using every bed available,” the report said.

Continued warnings went unheeded, with one official telling NBC News it was "irresponsible of the Trump administration not to listen to us when we were throwing up red flags." But while that former administration was also sitting on its hands, it’s not hard to believe that it was also setting the stage to point fingers.

As far back as the summer of 2020, former acting Immigration and Customs Enforcement director Thomas Homan was on state television warning about a so-called “Biden effect.” BuzzFeed News immigration reporter Hamed Aleaziz on Wednesday also noted that a court filing from ORR’s former acting director was “basically predicting that capacity would be an issue back in November.”

Months later, former unlawfully appointed acting Department of Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf is chastising the Biden administration in a deeply flawed report from The Washington Post, saying, “[t]hey should have been better prepared.” Unlawful Chad claimed in the report that there were meetings with transition officials, but also admits he didn’t participate in them. Maybe he was too busy avoiding discussing the threat of white supremacist violenceOr maybe busy trying to prevent the violent insurrection of Jan. 6?

Per recent numbers from CBS News, about 11,000 unaccompanied children were in HHS custody as of last weekend. Another 5,000 children were in Customs and Border Protection (CBP) waiting to be transferred to HHS, with many being held beyond the legal time limit. In an effort to get kids out of these border facilities as quickly as possible while they wait to be placed with sponsors (who are often parents or relatives already here), the Biden administration has begun holding some in convention centers and so-called influx facilities. 

But because they’re unlicensed, advocates have urged that they be used only when there are no other options, and for as short a time as possible. “When government custody is the only option, children should be placed in small, licensed, non-profit shelters or foster care,” Katy Murdza writes for Immigration Impact. “Influx shelters should be a last resort.”

“To reduce the time children spend in ORR custody, measures can be taken to release them as quickly as possible to family members or guardians that meet the legal protections for child safety,” Murdza continues. “A positive recent example is ORR’s announcement that it would pay for a child’s flight to their destination if a sponsor’s ability to pay was delaying their release. But more measures must be taken.” The Biden administration also recently issued guidance intended to speed up the safe release of children who have parents or relatives who are already in the U.S.

“If this is successfully executed, it will have a great impact on the number of kids in custody,” tweeted Bridget Cambria, an immigration attorney and advocate for detained children.
Sorry Republicans, but Biden's transition team warned Trump officials of the need for more facilities to house migrant children.  This little girl, by the way, was photographed months ago when she was being held during Trump's administration.

Sunday, March 28, 2021

Americans Are Stubbornly Unmoved by Death

Women embrace next to a makeshift memorial outside a King Soopers grocery store on March 23, 2021 where multiple people, including a police officer, were killed in a shooting yesterday. (photo: Michael Ciaglo/USA Today)
Women embrace next to a makeshift memorial outside a King Soopers grocery store in Boulder, CO, on March 23, 2021 where multiple people, including a police officer, were killed in a shooting last week. (photo: Michael Ciaglo/USA Today)

By Robin Givhan, The Washington Post

24 March 21

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he scene looked heartbreakingly familiar: the rumble of tactical vehicles, the swarm of law enforcement officers, the long ribbons of yellow police tape and the eyewitness descriptions thick with residual terror. Monday evening’s deadly shooting in Boulder, Colo., which resulted in the deaths of 10 people, including a police officer, was the second mass shooting in a week.

A dreadful normalcy has returned. Muscle memory demands that we lament it — even as all evidence suggests that many of us are unmoved by death. It doesn’t cause behavior to change. It doesn’t shake people from their moorings at the center of their own universe. Death is not a deterrent.

In the days after a mass shooting, the nation mourns and those who died are named. The hearts of our elected officials have been broken so many times that surely they must be in shards by now. The flags are lowered to half-staff. And the president speaks. Joe Biden, a man who is expert at consoling, did the best that he could to say something true that did not sound like a cliche.

“I even hate to say it because we’re saying it so often: My heart goes out. Our hearts go out for the survivors, the — who had to — had to flee for their lives and who hid, terrified, unsure if they would ever see their families again, their friends again,” Biden said Tuesday afternoon from the State Dining Room. “The consequences of all this are deeper than I suspect we know. By that, I mean the mental consequences — a feeling of — anyway, it just — we’ve been through too many of these.”

The images from these shootings can be gut-wrenching. In video and still images, people see shellshocked survivors pouring out of the school, the night club and, this time, the grocery store. There’s blood in these images, sometimes even the blurred image of one of the deceased. There’s nothing sanitized about them. The shooting may happen behind closed doors, but the death is in the open. The terror rises off the survivors like a stench; the sound of fear reverberates.

And still the deaths don’t spur action to make the guns harder to get, to make the guns less efficient. The president, some politicians and many activists cry out for “common sense” gun laws to stop the senseless death even as it seems that they are pleading with a country that’s engaged in a completely different kind of calculation.

Increasingly it seems that we simply do not care about the other person, that other family, someone else’s child. The self is everything. It’s freedom and liberty, whims and desires. Community doesn’t extend beyond one’s front door. Everything else is someone else’s concern.

Studies have shown that the human brain can lose the capacity to process death, to absorb the meaning of it, when the numbers of the dead begin to reach staggering levels. We have been told that the heart can go numb in response to such enormity. This is one of the explanations for why people have continued to engage in risky behavior during the coronavirus pandemic even as it has become ever clearer how best to protect our fellow Americans. The end is on the horizon, and if people simply wear a mask, social distance and persevere with patience, we might get there — not all of us, sadly, but most of us.

Yet unmasked revelers crowded onto the streets of Miami Beach. The very real possibility of death has not been a deterrent. The community didn’t matter as these partyers and tourists ostensibly shot a different kind of deadly slug into the Florida air.

More than 544,000 deaths in the United States due to the coronavirus have not sent everyone scurrying to protect their neighbor. To follow common sense recommendations. To center the community instead of the individual.

If that number is too big for people to grapple with, what is the right number? What number is small enough that each death touches the heart and therefore motivates people to act, to be better? Is it 58 — the number of people a man killed at a Las Vegas country music festival in 2017? Is it 49 — the number killed in a shooting at Orlando’s Pulse nightclub in 2016? Or perhaps the motivating number is nine, which accounts for those who were fatally shot in Charleston during a prayer meeting. Is it eight — the number who were killed in Georgia just last week? It surely can’t be one because there are singular deadly shootings in communities all too often and still nothing happens. Nothing.

We have not gone numb to death. To “go numb” suggests that once there was feeling, once there was sensitivity. When was that? Perhaps it was back in 1968 when, after the deaths of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, Congress passed gun laws that formed the basis of federal regulation that has been regularly eroded and only occasionally strengthened. We haven’t cared for a long time. Not when the dying were schoolchildren, people in the midst of prayer or contented folks just living quiet lives.

Today, some in this country argue against gun laws with a ferocity that moves beyond a right to hunt rabbits, or defend oneself against an assailant or one’s property in the face of an intruder. We refuse to relinquish the delusion that 21st-century America is a frontier town in which gunplay is a form of justice.

Many insist that the very real possibility of mass deaths does not outweigh a personal inconvenience or the setting aside of a myth. Give up large-capacity magazines. Wear a mask. These deaths matter.

We are not numb to death. We stubbornly, selfishly dismiss it. We shake it off. But there is always an assault that has the capacity to bring an individual low. Some bracing gut punch that stings and startles. The pain might finally register in a way that is deep and lasting. And that person begins to feel something.

But that may require death coming directly to their own doorstep, since that’s the only one that, for many of us, seems to matter.

Saturday, March 27, 2021

The optics of the Georgia voter suppression bill signing are even worse than they first appeared

Gov. Brian Kemp signs SB202 into law, with nearly 100 pages of new voter restrictions
Rep. Brian Kemp signs a legal monument to white supremacy, under a painting of another monument to white supremacy.

On Thursday, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed a viciously anti-voter law that would, among other things, penalize people for simply handing out water or snacks to people waiting in hours-long lines. (Lines that are long by design.) In fact, the bill is so blatantly designed to suppress the vote in Georgia that it includes nearly 100 pages of new voter restrictions.

There is no question these restrictions are racist in nature, from the first to the last. As Nsé Ufot of The New Georgia Project told Kos and Kerry Eleveld on an episode of The Brief, this bill and others like them are a “whitelash” response to the success of Stacey Abrams, The New Georgia Project, Fair Fight, and the campaigns of Sens. Reverend Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff. 

As bad as this bill is, there is another sinister element to this bill signing, which took place as six white men looked over the shoulder of Kemp. Philadephia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch noticed the painting behind Kemp and rattled off a Twitter thread about the historical significance of that painting and the plantation depicted in it. Buckle up, folks—this is going to be infuriating.

1. You've probably seen this picture of Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and his gaggle of white men signing the state's voter suppression law -- the new, new Jim Crow. But there's a shocking angle to this story that you haven't heard. Sit down for this one...
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2. Notice the antebellum-style portrait behind Kemp as he signs the suppression law? Thanks to Twitter crowdsourcing and particularly I can report the measure to limit Black voting was signed under the image of a notorious slave plantation in Wilkes County, GA
Replying to
3. If you scroll about halfway down this PDF link, you can see that the painting is clearly "Brickhouse Road -- Callaway PLNT" (PLNT for "Plantation...subtle, right?) by artist Olessia Maximenko from Wilkes County, GA gaarts.org/wp-content/upl
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Rep. Park Cannon (D-Atlanta) is placed in handcuffs by Georgia State Troopers after being asked to stop knocking on a door that lead to Gov. Brian Kemp's office while Gov. Kemp was signing SB 202 behind closed doors at the Georgia State Capitol Building in Atlanta, Thursday, March 25, 2021. (Alyssa Pointer/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP)
Democratic Rep. Park Cannon of Atlanta is placed in handcuffs by Georgia State Troopers.

While Republican Gov. Brian Kemp was signing Georgia Republicans’ sweeping voter suppression bill into law, in a private ceremony behind closed doors and surrounded by white men, a Black legislator was being cuffed and dragged away by law enforcement because she knocked on that closed door. Rep. Park Cannon faces two felony charges for doing her job, representing her constituents whose vote Kemp and his fellow Republicans are determined to strip away. 

Those felony charges are legally questionable, because the Georgia constitution says legislators are "free from arrest during sessions of the General Assembly," but that didn't stop the state troopers from arresting her or apparently authorities from charging her. Her offense was trying to throw some sunlight on what clearly Kemp wanted to keep hidden: His signing the blatant voter suppression into law while seated under a painting of Callaway Plantation, a notorious slave plantation. Because of course that's what all those white Republican men revere.

The law itself attacks voting rights in nearly every way possible. It requires registered absentee voters to submit a driver's license or other documentation to check their identity, replacing the signature—the one thing that every voter has—matching process. There are more than 200,000 Georgia voters who do not have a driver's license or state identification number. The deadline for absentee ballot requests is set 11 days before the election, so people experiencing an emergency or other situation in those 11 days that might prevent them from voting on Election Day are out of luck.

Early voting for runoff elections, like the one that sent two Democrats to the U.S. Senate, has been reduced from three weeks to as little as one week, and requires runoffs to be held four weeks after the general election, giving little time for early voting. The new law gives the State Election Board the unilateral power to remove county election boards and replace them with their own managers, and counties will have to provide election results in 6 days instead of 10. It forces election workers to count ballots all in one go, now allowing them to stop until all ballots are finished.

It also limits ballot drop box locations. Georgia Republicans have done everything in their power to force voters to stand in long lines on Election Day, and then to cap it all off, made it illegal for members of the public to give food or water to those voters standing in line.

President Joe Biden is right. "What I'm worried about is how un-American this whole initiative is," Biden said in his news conference Thursday. "It's sick."

Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock, joined Cannon. He is her pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church. "Today is a very sad day for the state of Georgia," he said. "What we have witnessed today is a desperate attempt to lock out and squeeze the people out of their own democracy."

Elections lawyer Marc Elias, the lead attorney who beat back the ridiculous flurry of law suits from Donald Trump and Republicans over November's election, has filed suit in federal district court, charging that the new law violates the U.S. Constitution and the Voting Rights Act. He filed that suit on behalf of the New Georgia Project, Black Voters Matter, and the student organization Rise.

This bill, Elias told MSNBC's Rachel Maddow, "shows the ingenuity of the Republican Party to find ever-new ways to attack voting and attack democracy. … [T]hese laws are all aimed at disenfranchising Black voters and also young voters," he said. "The role of the Courts are to protect fundamental rights when politicians fail them, and right now Republican politicians around the country are failing voters and failing democracy and we have to turn to the courts."

There's also Congress, where those Republicans aren't failing voters. They're blatantly helping suppress them. The For the People Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act have not yet come to the Senate floor, but Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is promising they will and soon. So in that sense, Georgia might just have done voting rights a favor. They've made the issue as crystal clear as it could be.
 

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