Thursday, October 20, 2011

South Carolina Democratic Party - Non-Whites Are Too Inferior To Manage To Get Photo ID For Voting

Study: South Carolina voter ID law hit black precincts hardest


I have to accept that there are two mutually exclusive bodies of thoughts on the subject of the fundamental purpose of the expression of the Black Community's Permanent Interests - as expressed in the American Political Domain.

I have stated before that the penultimate tool that the forces of "Black Inferiority" have is the avoidance of the "Proportionality Filter". 

In the context of making their indictment - they choose to find a "little old lady without a drivers license" who was denied the ability to register to vote until she gets her papers in order.

They are loathed to do investigative reporting of the greater disenfranchisement of the interests of the Black Community - the areas where the "Equal Black Ballot" is allowed to flow unchallenged while the "favorable people in power" fail to deliver and face no rebuke as the congregation agrees to hold an external force at fault for the problems.

I can't mandate that anyone change their views.  I can only make analysis of the consequences of certain strategies and how they are out of line with any possible chance that our fortunes will comprehensively improved by following this track.

Standing along side those forces who do not want "The Black Vote" to register - are the forces on the same field that want to get as many of these INVESTORS into the pool as possible because they also understand that this Black vote is a means to their end.  Their goal is to make 'their end' YOUR END, while looking past the fact that you remain disproportionately as part of "The Least Of These" despite them controlling your key institutions.


The AP found that many voters in predominantly black counties in South Carolina do not have proper identification — and the percentage of minority voters without the required identification is higher in those areas than other precincts statewide.
For example, in Richland County, there are 11,087 nonwhite voters without ID, and in Orangeburg County, there are 4,544. The AP study said that means half of those impacted in Richland are nonwhite voters. In Orangeburg, that equals 73 percent of nonwhite voters hit by the law.
The AP’s analysis of the state’s 2,135 precincts reveals there are 10 precincts where almost all of the people impacted by the new law are minority voters.
“This is electoral genocide,” the state’s Democratic Party Chairman Dick Harpootlian told the AP. “This is disenfranchising huge groups of people who don’t have the money to go get an ID card.”
Similar laws exist in Indiana and Georgia, while four other states also passed new measures this year requiring photo identification in order to cast a ballot. In South Carolina, if someone goes to the polls without proper ID, that person is still able to vote absentee or use a provisional ballot, the AP noted.
The state is also giving free IDs to those that need them.

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