<p>"I was proud to sign S.B. 202 to ensure elections in Georgia are secure, fair, and accessible. I appreciate the hard work of members of the General Assembly to make it easy to vote and hard to cheat," <a href="//twitter.com/GovKemp/status/1375223667504914436" target="_blank">Kemp tweeted</a> on Thursday, sending out a photo that drew immediate comparisons to an infamously repugnant 1960s era Alabama governor. </p>
<div class="rm-shortcode" data-rm-shortcode-id="1d013e8c0b64ffad31672d4f5dc7b086" id="4d659"><blockquote class="twitter-tweet twitter-custom-tweet" data-partner="rebelmouse" data-twitter-tweet-id="1375254465612238850"><div style="margin:1em 0">George Wallace, Brian Kemp. //t.co/w4tcmdHfkk</div> — Adam Green (@Adam Green)<a href="//twitter.com/AdamGreen/statuses/1375254465612238850">1616721190.0</a></blockquote></div>
<p>There is, of course, no evidence of voters cheating in Georgia elections, or that the new law — which imposes onerous restrictions on voting, makes it easier to challenge the eligibility of voters, and opens the door to GOP takeovers of election boards — in any way addresses fraud. The law does ban <em>handing out water</em> to people waiting in line to vote, however. Of course, that's not about preventing cheating but making sure voters are physically unable to handle the long lines in certain neighborhoods that were created by previous assaults on voting access. "Cheating" — like "fraud" — is one of those Trumpian code words to smear Black voters and imply there's something inherently illegitimate about people of color having the franchise.</p><p>While Kemp would undoubtedly deny the racist intent of the law if asked outright, the visuals behind his signing photo were unmistakeable. As <a href="//twitter.com/JillFilipovic/status/1375272893450498052" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">journalist Jill Filipovic pointed out on Twitter</a>, "a photo of all white men signing a bill that cements their political power by disenfranchising Black voters" is "not a gaffe," but "a deliberate message." In case anyone was missing the message, another set of visuals drove it home: State Rep. Park Cannon, a Black Democrat, <a href="//twitter.com/AriBerman/status/1375221522307104773" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">being arrested for asking to attend the signing ceremony</a>. </p>
<div class="rm-shortcode" data-rm-shortcode-id="72cfe20c7d9e1f89f2078123b661a796" id="bd33f"><blockquote class="twitter-tweet twitter-custom-tweet" data-partner="rebelmouse" data-twitter-tweet-id="1375250323321856010"><div style="margin:1em 0">Rep. Park Cannon was arrested for knocking on Brian Kemp’s door as he was signing an egregious voter suppression bi… //t.co/qbNyFOLVeJ</div> — Ben O'Keefe (he/him) (@Ben O'Keefe (he/him))<a href="//twitter.com/benjaminokeefe/statuses/1375250323321856010">1616720202.0</a></blockquote></div>
<p>It might be hard to accept that Georgia Republicans, in the year 2021, would be actively trying to draw comparisons to segregationists and white supremacists of old. It's often assumed in the media people universally view the George Wallaces and Bull Connors as villains that no one would want to emulate or be likened to. But the grim truth is that Donald Trump's continuing popularity with the Republican base sends a clear signal to GOP politicians that their voters want their racism raw and unvarnished, not swaddled in the winks and code words that Republican leaders have long clung to for plausible deniability. So it's likely that Kemp is not only aware that the visuals from Thursday's signing, but that was what he was going for, knowing that the same ugly urges that fueled the pro-segregation movement in the 60s are fueling the Republican party now.</p><p>For further evidence, look to Tennessee, where Republicans in the state legislature are waging an all-out battle to preserve and honor the memory of the Ku Klux Klan's first Grand Wizard.</p><p><span></span>Slave trader and Confederate leader Nathan Bedford Forres is an infamous figure, even by the standards of his fellow Confederate generals. Before he helped start and lead the KKK, he spearheaded one of the ugliest war crimes of the Civil War, <a href="//www.washingtonpost.com/history/2018/10/28/civil-war-massacre-that-left-nearly-black-soldiers-murdered/" target="_blank">the Fort Pillow massacre</a>, in which captured Union soldiers, most of them Black, were murdered rather taken prisoner. Forrest was revived as a "hero" in Tennessee in the 1960s and 1970s by segregationists who were lashing out at the gains made by Black Americans in the civil rights era. A <a href="//www.tennessean.com/story/news/politics/2019/07/12/tennessee-nathan-bedford-forrest-day-gov-bill-lee-signs-proclamation/1684059001/" target="_blank">holiday honoring Forrest started in 1969</a> and a bust of his head <a href="//talkingpointsmemo.com/news/tn-gopers-push-to-sack-commission-that-voted-to-remove-kkk-leaders-bust" target="_blank">was erected in the state capitol in the 1970s</a>.</p><p>Democrats in recent years have understandably been trying to end the holiday and get rid of the statues honoring Forrest since these continued traditions are the moral equivalent of Germany having an annual Hitler Day and putting up statues honoring goose-stepping Nazis. But these efforts have met an unbelievable amount of resistance from Republicans. They <a href="//abovethelaw.com/2021/03/tennessee-legislature-cancel-cultures-historical-commission-for-crime-of-canceling-klan-wizard-nathan-bedford-forrest/?rf=1" target="_blank">are whining about "cancel culture"</a> as if that is somehow worse than celebrating a racist war criminal and terrorist. </p><p>But despite <a href="//talkingpointsmemo.com/news/nathan-bedford-forrest-day-still-observed-in-tn-after-leg-stands-up-for-slave-trader-again" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">an emotional presentation on Tuesday by Democratic Rep. London Lamar</a>, in which she pointed out that Forrest "would rape me" and "take me away from my family" if "he was alive today," the Republican-controlled general assembly refused to take the annual Nathan Bedford Forrest Day off the calendar. </p><p><span></span>The battle over the bust in the capitol building is even nastier. In 2013, 2016, and 2017, Republicans in the assembly passed a laws meant to <a href="//www.tennessean.com/story/news/2017/08/17/why-removing-confederate-monuments-tennessee-not-easy-process/573067001/" target="_blank">make it significantly harder for both state and local governments</a> to remove statues honoring Confederate leaders. Despite the obstacles, however, the state historical commission successfully voted earlier this month to remove the bust of Forrest in the state capitol. In response, <a href="//www.newschannel5.com/news/bill-would-remove-all-members-of-the-historical-commission" target="_blank">state senators are moving to replace</a> nearly the entire commission with lackeys who will keep the bust in place.</p><p><span></span>There is, of course, the usual lip-smacking from Forrest defenders about how this isn't racism but "preserving history." No one should buy that excuse, as there are ways to preserve history — perhaps honoring Forrest's many victims? — without treating a KKK leader like a state hero. The likelier story is the simpler one: Republicans in the state are super racist and want to honor the first Grand Wizard of the KKK to celebrate white supremacy.</p><p><span></span>Same story in Georgia. There's no point in tying ourselves in knots trying to find some more flattering story for what Kemp and his fellow Republicans are up to. They know they look racist. They're likely counting on it.</p>
<div class="rm-shortcode" data-rm-shortcode-id="7879e15b59a4c66155e27b095d0a750b" id="59de9"><blockquote class="twitter-tweet twitter-custom-tweet" data-partner="rebelmouse" data-twitter-tweet-id="1375413475883819009"><div style="margin:1em 0">not a stretch to imagine playbook covering Jim Crow //t.co/5ika6N6yCX</div> — Elon Green (@Elon Green)<a href="//twitter.com/elongreen/statuses/1375413475883819009">1616759101.0</a></blockquote></div>
<p>新浪棋牌普可能已经消失,但他的总统宣传的课程明确将徘徊。共和党政治家认为,一点无耻的种族主义就是他们的基础激励和激活,坦率地说,他们可能在这一信念中纠正。进步人员需要通过在反种族主义活动中的努力下努力来回应,并注册颜色人民投票。种族主义被击败的唯一方法是一种压倒性的政治力量,因为清楚地,吸引了较好的白色保守派的天使't working.</p>
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