Voting rights in America have never been a settled history, as Black Americans have faced systemic barriers including gerrymandering, literacy tests, poll taxes, and court decisions that weaken protections like the Voting Rights Act of 1965; these obstacles continue to shape political power through district maps, voter rules, and state-level restrictions, demonstrating that rights on paper do not automatically become rights in practice and that political power requires active protection.
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Jim Crow Never Fully Died It Adapted. #politics #politicalnews #realtalk #america #wakeupamerica本站添加:
Today we are talking about voting rights and people think voting rights in America are a settled history.
They're not because for black Americans voting has never just been about casting a ballot. It's about surviving systems.
Systems that were to design to limit that ballot from even counting equally.
If we talk about Louisiana and Tennessee right now, these aren't random political stories.
They're modern examples of an old pattern.
In Louisiana they're having fights over congressional district maps.
And it's showing how representation can be shaped long before anyone votes. When districts are are drawn in ways that weaken black political power, that's called gerrymandering.
And it directly impacts who gets resources, which are the schools, funding, and protection underneath the law.
And in Tennessee, debates over voting access and political power shows another layer. And this is how laws, rules, and state decisions can still shape who participates in democracy.
Especially in communities already impacted by incarceration and historical exclusion.
None of these things started today.
After slavery ended the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments technically, and I'm going to say technically, changed the Constitution. But Jim Crow still rose anyways.
There were literacy tests, poll taxes, violence, and you know, intimidation, which is, you know, always a strong tactic. All of these were used to block black political power without ever rewriting the Constitution.
So, what What this tell us?
It tells us that rights on paper don't automatically become rights in practice.
Even after the Voting Rights Act of 1965, protections have been challenged and weakened over time, including court decisions that reduce federal oversight of discriminatory voting.
That That was a real big one. And that's why these fights keep coming back in different forms.
They have district maps, voter rules, access laws, and state-level restrictions. So, this isn't just history. It's a structure, and if history teaches us anything, it's that political power is never permanent unless people actively protect it.
Voting is not the finish line.
It's one part of a much longer struggle over who gets to shape this country.
Going to do a full dive into this on Straight from the Crate, so you guys come and check it out. Also, remember to like
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