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05 Jul 2013 17:39 #144452
by chairman
SANFORD, Fla. — Prosecutors wrapped their case against George Zimmerman on Friday afternoon after the mother and brother of teenager Trayvon Martin testified Friday that they believed the screams on a 911 call seconds before his death were his, not those of Zimmerman.
"I heard my son screaming," said Sybrina Fulton, who listened to the 911 tape of the final moments of his life on Feb. 26, 2012. Fulton said she had to listen to the tape only once to know it was her 17-year-old son. She also testified that she didn't think Trayvon was responsible for his own death.
Always tell someone how you feel because opportunities are lost in the blink of an eye but regret can last a lifetime.
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07 Jul 2013 12:36 #144626
by chairman
(CBS News) PHILADELPHIA, Miss. - The Voting Rights Act grew out of a decisive moment of the civil rights movement.
The Selma to Montgomery marches of 1965 were protests of poll taxes and literacy tests that prevented minorities from voting. Marchers led by Martin Luther King, Jr. and others were repelled by police, but they persevered. Months later, President Lyndon Johnson invited King to the Voting Rights Act's signing ceremony.
Our research department tells us that in 1965, there were no minority senators and no minority congressmen from the areas covered by the act. Today, there is one senator and 17 congressmen.
As Chief Justice Roberts said in his opinion, the country has changed, but a question asked by many today is -- how much?
Always tell someone how you feel because opportunities are lost in the blink of an eye but regret can last a lifetime.
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07 Jul 2013 12:36 #144627
by chairman
Philadelphia, Miss., has struggled with infamy since the summer of 1964. Three civil rights workers, who were registering blacks to vote, were murdered by the local Ku Klux Klan.
Jim Prince and LeRoy Clemons are part of the new South, and formed a multiracial coalition in 2004.
Prince runs the local newspaper. Clemons heads the county's NAACP. They have formed a multi-racial coalition in Philadelphia to help heal the city's wounds.
"My predecessors would have sat here and not trusted Jim at all," Clemons, who is black, said of Jim, who is white.
"Once we got to know each other and understand where the other was coming from. We made a lot more progress," said Prince.
Always tell someone how you feel because opportunities are lost in the blink of an eye but regret can last a lifetime.
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07 Jul 2013 12:37 #144628
by chairman
Clemons said that trust may not be as big as an issue as it was in the 60s and 70s, but power oftentimes gets in the way of progress.
"I think it's more about the people who are still in power, that want to stay in power," he said. "You loo at all these new voter suppression things -- voter I.D. laws . You see it happening all over the country."
African-Americans make up 35 percent of Mississippi voters, the highest percentage in the country. Twenty-nine percent of its state legislature is African-American -- that is also the highest in the country.
"There has been incredible change, basic, drastic change, rather than federal mandates," Prince said. "It's going to be getting to know one another and regaining and initiating trust."
Clemons said he doesn't think the U.S. has completely rid of discrimination, however.
"There are still people in positions of power and authority in Mississippi and in the South who are not ready to turn over control or share power with the minorities right now.
The weight of history on this community may be lighter, but it has not fully lifted.
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mapoui
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07 Jul 2013 13:05 #144632
by mapoui
they killed affirmative action..and now the gutting of the voting rights act culminates the taking back of all the achievements made by the civil rights movement that were on the books.
and the stunning thing is that under Obama all black people just stood around and let it happen. all knew what was afoot. but there was no organising against it, not even a demonstration somewhere I heard about. they all stood around and watched.
John Roberts is right..america has indeed changed...for the far worse...especially black people. black americans appear to be so degraded now they cant even act in their own defence.
this is worse than what I know of the past. black people used to fight all the way...from the slave ship to the cemetary. now they are as docile as sheep.
what a waste
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07 Jul 2013 16:14 - 16 Jul 2013 18:31 #144678
by chairman
Says Howard couldn’t handle the pressure of Los Angeles.
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Last edit: 16 Jul 2013 18:31 by
chairman.
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artemis
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09 Jul 2013 14:46 #145060
by artemis
Toronto floods photos show submerged streets, nearly floating GO Train, as ‘surprise’ deluge hits city
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