Trump Timeline ... Trumpocalypse

NATIVE SUPPRESSION
https://claytoonz.com/2018/11/05/native-suppression/

One political party wants as many Americans to vote as possible. The other wins when fewer people vote. That should tell you who to vote for.

The Republican Party doesn’t just discourage more Americans from voting, they work to suppress votes. From cumbersome voter ID laws, to tricks like moving places where black Americans can get photo IDs, providing the wrong address to list on the IDs of college students, to removing minorities from voter rolls, to moving voting locations outside city limits, to invalidating thousands of Native Americans in North Dakota, Republicans cheat.

In 2012, fewer than 3,000 votes decided the Senate election in North Dakota and sent a Democrat to Washington. Republicans who run the state decided they can’t allow that to happen again, so they changed some rules. They targeted the Native American citizens of their state who tipped the scales and sent Heidi Heitkamp to the Senate.

Native Americans who live on reservations in North Dakota don’t have street addresses. The Post Office delivers to P.O. boxes so that’s what’s on their IDs. The state made a new law that for an ID to be accepted for voting, that it must have a street address. The Supreme Court upheld it refused to overturn it. Last week, Native Americans sued the state in U.S. District Court to prevent the law from taking effect in counties with reservations, The judge denied their request.

He expressed concerns in his denial and wrote, “The allegations in the complaint, the motion for a temporary restraining order, and the attached affidavits give this Court great cause for concern. However, a further injunction on the eve of the election will create as much confusion as it will alleviate.”

So, confusion is a legal standard? Confusion is a greater threat than suppression, than denying voting rights? I’m confused.

The real irony is that Native Americans have to prove to descendents of immigrants that they’re eligible to vote in this nation.

Republicans, who are already lying about the issues and their positions, don’t want honest elections because fewer Americans vote for Republicans.

You and I need to vote. We’re not just voting for ourselves. We’re voting for those Republicans are suppressing. I wrote it last week but I’m going to say it again.

To win, we need more of us to participate honestly than there are Republicans cheating.

cjones11062018.jpg
 


Washington Post reporter Aaron Blake tweeted that the source of the fake poll touted by Trump came from Fox columnist citing a Rasmussen poll in a recent column. A Fox News spokesperson also confirmed to Talking Points Memo that Trump was referring to Rasmussen.

This may explain why Trump erroneously attributed the poll to Fox, but even so, Rasmussen https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2018/08/17/no-one-third-of-african-americans-dont-support-trump-not-even-close/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.1255d9db1627 (has been characterized as an outlier), and other polling firms have measured Trump’s African-American support as much lower. YouGov/Economist most recently reported Trump’s approval rating among black Americans at 17 percent. Reuters clocked it at 16.7 percent.
 
New thread: The racial tensions being stoked this election reach into every segment of society. The most heartbreaking story I encountered while reporting The Apprentice involved the 10-year-old granddaughter of Trump’s lawyer, John Dowd. (1 of 5)

Dowd is a devoted father of adopted children of mixed race who now have children of their own. Dowd came home after lunch with Trump last year and found two of his grandchildren swimming in the pool. (2 of 5)

The children began asking him what it was like to be lawyer to the president. Dowd, a big Trump fan, sang the president’s praises while splashing in the pool with his grandchildren. (3 of 5)

But then Dowd’s granddaughter asked whether Trump “knows about us.” Dowd said that Trump knows that his lawyer has a big family and loves children. But Dowd had failed to catch the meaning in his granddaughter’s question and she repeated it: “Does he know about us.” (4 of 5)

The 10-year-old girl meant does the president know that her skin is brown. The racial unease in the United States had become so pervasive that even the granddaughter of the president’s own lawyer felt vulnerable. (5 of 5).

Thread by @gregpmiller: "New thread: The racial tensions being stoked this election reach into every segment of society. The most heartbreaking story I encountered w […]"
 
The Trump effect: Marching band members use instrument covers to spell out “COON” at high school football game. Neither the article nor the source say, but I imagine the opponent school in Georgia was predominantly black.

 
Top