Kerry running on Urban Mythology

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  • cosmo
    Gold Gabber
    • Jun 2004
    • 583

    Kerry running on Urban Mythology

    Before Kerry plays the race card, he should check the facts in his deck.

    By Peter Kirsanow

    Senator John Kerry made a fantastic statement while speaking to a predominantly black audience in Indianapolis last Tuesday. Admonishing the Bush administration for calling "[the Kerry campaign] pessimists for speaking truth to power," he stated: "Don't tell us disenfranchising a million African Americans and stealing their votes is the best we can do. This time, in 2004, not only will every vote count ? we're going to make sure that every vote is counted."

    Kerry's statement came just a few days after a dozen members of the U.S. House of Representatives, led by the immediate past chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, Eddie Bernice Johnson (D., Texas), sent a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan requesting that the U.N. provide election observers to monitor the 2004 U.S. presidential election. The representatives contend that U.N. involvement is necessary to prevent a repeat of "the nightmare of the 2000 presidential election."

    The representatives cite as the basis of their request certain alleged findings of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights that countless Floridians were denied the right to vote in 2000 and that "the disenfranchisement of Florida's voters fell most harshly on the shoulders of black voters and in poor counties."

    The theme of massive black disenfranchisement and stolen votes has been repeated ad nauseam since 2000, and has become more pronounced and hysterical during the current election cycle. (In December 2000, Rep. Johnson asserted on the floor of the House that there was overwhelming evidence that George W. Bush had lost the Florida popular vote.) John Kerry referred to alleged voter harassment and intimidation while speaking to a Rainbow/PUSH Coalition audience last week.

    The allegations that a million African Americans were disenfranchised, harassed, and intimidated from voting, and thus had their votes stolen, are utterly false. The allegation that George W. Bush lost the popular vote in Florida is also completely false.

    The six-month investigation of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights found absolutely no evidence of systematic disenfranchisement of black voters. The investigation by the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice also found no credible evidence that any Floridians were intentionally denied the right to vote in the 2000 election.

    Many Florida voters, irrespective of race, spoiled their ballots by mistake. But voter error is not the same thing as "disenfranchisement" and it certainly isn't evidence of a nefarious plot to steal black votes.

    In fact, Florida 2000 was not a startling anomaly. Ballot-spoilage rates across the country range between 2-3 percent of total ballots cast. Florida's rate in 2000 was 3 percent. In 1996 it was 2.5 percent.

    Glitches occur in every election. Some glitches are massive, others not. This is not to downplay the problem, but to put it into perspective. For example, the number of ruined ballots in Chicago alone was 125,000, compared to 174,000 for the entire state of Florida. Several states experienced voting problems remarkably similar to those in Florida. But the closeness of the 2000 election in Florida, and the attendant electoral implications, placed the state at the fulcrum of a remarkable opportunity for racial demagoguery.

    The myth that President Bush lost the popular vote, even though a million black Democrats were supposedly disenfranchised, has also become a verity. This, despite the fact that every single vote count ? including those conducted by various media ? unequivocally establishes that Bush won. In fact, the Miami Herald election 2000 report notes that had the looser count standards sought by Al Gore been employed, Bush's margin would've increased. Moreover, contrary to popular belief, in counties using punch-card voting, mismarked ballots were more likely to affect Bush than Gore.

    The toxic claim that countless blacks were denied the right to vote isn't simply irresponsible, it dangerously undermines public confidence in the integrity of the electoral system. It's compounded by a host of other pernicious urban legends that filter through the black electorate each election cycle, such as the perennial claim that the Voting Rights Act is about to expire, stripping all black Americans of the right to vote.

    These cynical efforts may succeed in stirring up the base, but at the expense of inflaming racial resentment and suspicion. Yet those who once obsessed over the incendiary effects of the Willie Horton ad don't seem equally concerned about politicians who traffic in tales of massive disenfranchisement on a third-world scale. At this writing, a quick Nexis scan shows not one challenge to Senator Kerry's outlandish claims.

    Kofi Annan, not surprisingly, rejected the congressmen's appeal for election monitors. But if Annan changes his mind, the investigations of both the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and the Department of Justice reveal where the U.N. may wish to send its observers: Under Florida law, responsibility for the conduct of elections falls upon county supervisors.

    The Justice Department found that three Florida counties committed violations of the Voting Rights Act during the 2000 presidential election. (The infractions were that some poll workers had been hostile to Hispanic voters and bilingual assistance hadn't been provided to some Haitian and Hispanic voters.)

    The next time Senator Kerry tells a black audience about massive disenfranchisement, he might also inform them that in none of the offending counties was the county supervisor a Republican ? and in 24 of the 25 counties with the highest ballot spoilage ? er, disenfranchisement ? rates, the county supervisor was a Democrat. (In the remaining county, the supervisor was an independent.) Perhaps then he'll better appreciate the consequences of playing the race card.

    ? Peter Kirsanow is a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.
  • delirious
    Addiction started
    • Jun 2004
    • 288

    #2
    Re: Kerry running on Urban Mythology

    Everyone knows what happened in Florida in 2000.

    There's a reason the majority of "blacks" don't vote Republican.

    Comment

    • cosmo
      Gold Gabber
      • Jun 2004
      • 583

      #3
      Re: Kerry running on Urban Mythology

      There's a reason the majority of "blacks" don't vote Republican.


      Of course there is a reason:

      They are misled into thinking that the Rep's are racist, thanks to the NAACP.

      Comment

      • delirious
        Addiction started
        • Jun 2004
        • 288

        #4
        Re: Kerry running on Urban Mythology

        Originally posted by cosmo
        There's a reason the majority of "blacks" don't vote Republican.


        Of course there is a reason:

        They are misled into thinking that the Rep's are racist, thanks to the NAACP.
        The majority of blacks in the US are misled into voting Democratic by the NAACP?

        What, does the NAACP have magical powers of national persuation or can't blacks think for themselves?

        "This is an impressive crowd, the have and the have mores.
        Some people call you the elite, I call you my base."
        - George W. Bush

        Comment

        • devon
          Addiction started
          • Jun 2004
          • 362

          #5
          Re:: Kerry running on Urban Mythology

          What about the police roadblocks set up in poorer negihborhoods on election day in certain Florida counties? Under the curtain of "cracking down on crime" they in a round about way intinmiated a community already weary of the police to stay in their homes.

          Of cousre you will never be able to link it back to Jeb Bush (republicans are good at covering up their trail) and his agenda but just because you can't see it doesn't mean it didn't happen.
          i really wish the floor would stop moving!

          Comment

          • delirious
            Addiction started
            • Jun 2004
            • 288

            #6
            Re:: Kerry running on Urban Mythology

            Originally posted by devon
            What about the police roadblocks set up in poorer negihborhoods on election day in certain Florida counties?
            And, for two elections in a row, produced a flawed fellon list that would've prevented thousands of mainly black people from voting?

            No! They're being misled by the NAACP! It's not just because they oppose Republican policies!

            Comment

            • Nekrolicious
              Fresh Peossy
              • Jul 2004
              • 9

              #7
              Re:: Kerry running on Urban Mythology

              I really wish that those who hope for Bush to lose the upcoming election would research their facts - and stick to them - half as well as the person who started this thread. Don't they realize that half-assed, belligerent and downright slanderous accusations and statements only make them look stupid and discredit the demographic that they intend to represent???

              I mean, their typical response to a well-thought-out, well-researched report that presents facts they don't want to admit...is to resort to name-calling and cite wildly unsubstantiated rumor...many of which allude to the archetypical "vast shadow government conspiracy" about which countless schizoid urban transients have been ranting for decades.

              I really, really, REALLY don't want Bush to win. I am neither Democrat nor Republican...I am someone who disagrees with the idea of jerking the political steering wheel of the nation as far as it will go, in the direction of my choice. Liberals respond to conservative agendas with more extreme liberal agendas. Conservatives become ultraconservatives when confronted with facts and ideas they refuse to even consider.

              If the USA were an SUV, and the Democrat and Republican parties were the people sitting up front, yanking the steering wheel to one direction or the other, we'd be upside down in a ditch or frantically dodging oncoming traffic by now.

              Comment

              • Civic_Zen
                Platinum Poster
                • Jun 2004
                • 1116

                #8
                Re:: Kerry running on Urban Mythology

                Originally posted by Nekrolicious
                cite wildly unsubstantiated rumor...many of which allude to the archetypical "vast shadow government conspiracy" about which countless schizoid urban transients have been ranting for decades.
                That is exactly right too, die hard liberal's are all conspiricy theorists. They sit around thinking of these things while they have nothing better to do I guess. People honestly believe Bush knew about 9/11, please ...... and allowed it to happen, citing various reasons, its just rediculous.

                I really, really, REALLY don't want Bush to win. I am neither Democrat nor Republican...
                So I guess that means your voting for Kerry?? Do you honestly think Kerry is a better choice? I am neither Democrat nor Republican either, but if you actually vote and feel like your making a difference in this country, then you have to lean one way or the other come election time. Which is when you need to decide who the lesser of the two evils are, in your opinion. Because face it, until something radical changes, this country will always be a two party system.

                You know me, you know that I don't vote, and you know this year will probably be no exception. Part of the reason I don't is because of that two party, two choice system, which I could care less about. Often times the lesser is only marginally less evil, such a minute amount that voting is completely irrelevant. However, I have a pretty firm understanding as to who I find to be that lesser of two evils this election.
                "The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws." - Tacitus (55-117 A.D.)
                "That government is best which governs the least, because its people discipline themselves."
                - Thomas Jefferson

                Comment

                • delirious
                  Addiction started
                  • Jun 2004
                  • 288

                  #9
                  Re:: Kerry running on Urban Mythology

                  Originally posted by Civic_Zen
                  Originally posted by Nekrolicious
                  cite wildly unsubstantiated rumor...many of which allude to the archetypical "vast shadow government conspiracy" about which countless schizoid urban transients have been ranting for decades.
                  That is exactly right too, die hard liberal's are all conspiricy theorists. They sit around thinking of these things while they have nothing better to do I guess. People honestly believe Bush knew about 9/11, please ...... and allowed it to happen, citing various reasons, its just rediculous.

                  I really, really, REALLY don't want Bush to win. I am neither Democrat nor Republican...
                  So I guess that means your voting for Kerry?? Do you honestly think Kerry is a better choice? I am neither Democrat nor Republican either, but if you actually vote and feel like your making a difference in this country, then you have to lean one way or the other come election time. Which is when you need to decide who the lesser of the two evils are, in your opinion. Because face it, until something radical changes, this country will always be a two party system.

                  You know me, you know that I don't vote, and you know this year will probably be no exception. Part of the reason I don't is because of that two party, two choice system, which I could care less about. Often times the lesser is only marginally less evil, such a minute amount that voting is completely irrelevant. However, I have a pretty firm understanding as to who I find to be that lesser of two evils this election.
                  Ignorance is bliss.

                  Comment

                  • sheryar
                    Getting Somewhere
                    • Jul 2004
                    • 167

                    #10
                    bush is an idiot, and what happened in 2000 doesnt matter now. i think everyone should think about what they want the state of the world to be in, say, 20 years.
                    sheryar

                    - - - - - - - - - -
                    http://www.sheryarhyatt.com

                    Comment

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