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The WSJ got it wrong: It's this administration who has a Jim Crow fantasy

ScoopUSA, Volume 66 - Number 21

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Scoop USA Newspaper

Instead of taking an objective look at the state of voting rights in this country, which is rooted in its history to exploit rather than provide equality, the Wall Street Journal’s editorial board came together to draft a piece titled “Democrats Have a Jim Crow Fantasy.”

- Marc H. Morial, President and CEO National Urban League

The WSJ got it wrong: It's this administration who has a Jim Crow fantasy

The piece suggests that the Supreme Court’s ruling in Louisiana v. Callais will likely have no meaningful impact on voting rights, arguing that Black voter turnout in midterms increased after Shelby v. Holder in 2013.

After cherry-picking statistics about midterm turnout in 2018 and 2022, the board had the audacity to state that “Many states in the South—including Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Virginia—have no-excuse absentee voting” while completely ignoring the fact that the administration is aggressively trying to limit absentee voting ahead of this year’s midterms.

It also failed to mention that since 2020, an election with record voter turnout because of mail-in ballots, states responded by passing a record number of voter suppression laws with tactics that include: enforcing strict voter ID laws, shown to impact lower-income voters, purging voter rolls disproportionately, and in many majority Black communities, literally removing ballot boxes.

المزيد من القصص من Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

Here We Go Again

For the past few weeks, we’ve been bombarded by the mainstream media about a supposedly “new” lethal virus in tones that actually contradict themselves.

time to read

3 mins

ScoopUSA, Volume 66 - Number 22

Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

Family planning in an age of anxiety

“Why so few babies?” asked a New York Times essay that sounded oddly familiar to me.

time to read

3 mins

ScoopUSA, Volume 66 - Number 22

Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

Remembering Malcolm X... excerpts from the Ballot or the Bullet

As we celebrate the birth of Malcolm X on May 19, we must recognize the impact he had on our lives before his passing and even more so after his death.

time to read

5 mins

ScoopUSA, Volume 66 - Number 22

Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

Summer fest activities for the family

We’ve got local and national entertainment news. A lot is going on, so get your pen or pad out to take notes.

time to read

4 mins

ScoopUSA, Volume 66 - Number 22

Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

It's do or die time. Go Vote!

Primary Election Day is May 19... Vote!

time to read

5 mins

ScoopUSA, Volume 66 - Number 22

Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

When reflection becomes praise: Jonathan Nelson's "When I Think, I Thank" inspires a grateful generation

Something powerful happens when memory meets gratitude.

time to read

2 mins

ScoopUSA, Volume 66 - Number 21

Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

Student advocate highlights rising deportation orders while planning future in politics

Activism is deeply personal for Eastern Regional High School senior Emilio Cordova.

time to read

2 mins

ScoopUSA, Volume 66 - Number 22

Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

A Note from the Publisher

It has been a couple of years since I wrote a Publisher’s Note, and it is long overdue.

time to read

2 mins

ScoopUSA, Volume 66 - Number 21

Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

Without a Song

Songs play a significant role in people’s lives. There is a song somewhere that is suited to all occasions. Out of the joys, sadness, problems, and prosperity of people, songs were born.

time to read

3 mins

ScoopDigital, Vol. 7, No. 14

Scoop USA Newspaper

Scoop USA Newspaper

Dr. Ethel D. Allen

Dr. Ethel D. Allen boldly described herself as ‘BFR—a black female Republican, an entity as rare as a black elephant and just as smart.’

time to read

3 mins

ScoopUSA Volume 66 - Number 20

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