I have seldom seen tears come to his eyes. But there was Rev.
Jesse Jackson, Sr., sitting in front of Detroit Rep. John Conyers,
expressing his pain at the indignity of having to fight to legitimize
the right to vote all over again, urging the Congressional Black Caucus
to go to Ohio and hold hearings on the massive evidence coming out of
voter disenfranchisement coming out of that state. To his credit, Rep.
Conyers not only responded, but was somewhat ahead of Jackson by
calling the hearing in the first place. And he also committed himself
and the CBC to going to Ohio and other places to continue the
fact-finding role they were pursuing. The hearing was packed with
individuals, many of whom had important information on the degree of
voter disenfranchisement. Jackson's tears should be our tears, to such an extent that we become
resigned to turn our pain into power. How can we do that? We should
de-legitimize this election by making noise about the stealing of
elections in America. Isn't it strange that -- and there was testimony
to the fact -- that most of the voting irregularities have been about
people who tried to vote for John Kerry, or Al Gore, but were prevented
from doing so. Well, they fooled us once, shame on them, and now they
have fooled us again, shame on us. Shame on us for believing that all
of this is accidental. Shame on us for allowing the people we vote for
to turn their back and walk away from challenging the system to count
our votes. Shame on us for not mounting a means to protest loudly what
has happened in our name and most importantly in the name of Democracy.
Shame on us for allowing the massive double-standard to exist, where
the American president stands before the world and criticizing the
result of elections in the Ukraine, when his own house is filthy. And
just shame on us for having the audacity to call people out to vote and
then allow the system to corrupt the innocence faith they have invested
in the political system to work in a fair and unbiased manner. [more]
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