Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

DIVIDED WE STAND (BOSTON UNFIT FOR BLACKS - The Kerry/Kennedy Legacy)
Boston Magazine ^ | November 2002 | Doug Most

Posted on 03/30/2004 6:42:24 AM PST by Enduring Freedom

click here to read article


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-28 next last
BOSTON: UNFIT FOR BLACKS

The Kerry/Kennedy Legacy.

No rational black American would vote for Kerry.

1 posted on 03/30/2004 6:42:24 AM PST by Enduring Freedom
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
Did you catch the footage of Kerry participating in a black church service over the weekend? He actually looked more out of place than Gore, if you can believe that's even possible.
2 posted on 03/30/2004 6:45:51 AM PST by freeperfromnj
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
What does skin color have to do with it?

No one with a brain would vote for Kerry.

Leave race out of it.
3 posted on 03/30/2004 6:46:40 AM PST by Steely Glint ("Communists are just Democrats in a big hurry.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
Like to see an article where a white woman goes into a black bar followed by two white men. The results would not be as pretty or as peaceful...
4 posted on 03/30/2004 6:47:06 AM PST by 2banana
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
Everyone is racist.
5 posted on 03/30/2004 6:48:01 AM PST by biblewonk (The only book worth reading, and reading, and reading.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Steely Glint
What does skin color have to do with it?

I think it's important to note that Kerry has been a member of congress and the senate for decades and has done nothing to improve race relations in Boston.

6 posted on 03/30/2004 6:49:26 AM PST by freeperfromnj
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
"When he launched an event called First Fridays, 20 people came, then 200, then eventually 1,500. 'They are starving for places to fit in,' he says."

Which, in the bizarro language of diversity, must mean only black people and no white people.

If a certain group feels unwanted at a particular venue or institution, is it the fault of the institution or the fault of the group? How can someone say he feels unwelcome at the syphony, for example? It's music, for chrissakes! Music isn't inerested in your melanin content.

7 posted on 03/30/2004 6:56:28 AM PST by Gefreiter
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: freeperfromnj
I think it's important to note that Kerry has been a member of congress and the senate for decades and has done nothing to improve race relations in Boston.

Oh please. Setting aside Kerry for a moment (I'd like to set him aside for a lifetime) I have to wonder if people really read this article, which presents a fair and nuanced view of race relations in Boston. The bottom line is that the African-American population in Massachusetts is small and not strong enough to develop independent economic and political power, but the trends are self-defeating and lead to a continuation of the status quo where African-Americans feel invisible. What would you have any federal legislator do about it?

I grew up in NJ and moved to Boston and I'll be damned if anyone from a state created by informal segregation will sneer at Boston. We don't have anything in this state to rival the isolated cities cheek-by-jowl with wealthy, homogeneous towns. There are real problems here, as with everywhere in America, it's just the local details that change.

I'd like to share an anecdote of my own. A few years ago, a friend of mine of mixed African-American and Latino background asked me to pick her up at the dentist after she'd been medicated for minor surgery and couldn't drive. My office was near the dentist's, so I said yes. I'm white and when I showed up at the dentist's office, all the nurses assumed I was her boyfriend. They beamed at me and at us because they thought we were a happy couple and I was so chivalrous to take time off from work to drive her home. (They were white.) At some point I said I was just a friend, and they got a little embarrassed. The experience speaks volumes about the sort of abuse Boston takes from people in other parts of the country with awkward histories in the civil rights struggle on this board.
8 posted on 03/30/2004 6:59:17 AM PST by HostileTerritory
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: HostileTerritory
Well, here's another story. One of my friends is a Baptist minister (female) from Alabama. She started talking to a young black man on the street, who was also from 'Bama, and had recognized her accent. He was starved to talk. He had never experienced such blatant racial separatism in his life, and he wanted to go home.

And I lived in Charleston all through the 90's, one of the neighborhoods violently involved in the Garrity school busing order, and the Townies still hated blacks, and showed it. It was reciprocated.

9 posted on 03/30/2004 7:08:21 AM PST by MoralSense
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
Sounds like Boston has been victimized for too long by the
"Ku Klux Kerrys."

10 posted on 03/30/2004 7:12:37 AM PST by Perseverando
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
Not a surprise as far as segregating themselves. A major US city has done it (Atlanta) Not sure of anything beyond that.
11 posted on 03/30/2004 7:14:55 AM PST by NotchJohnson
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
Will the media ever tire of the subjects of race & homosexuality?

I guess not.

12 posted on 03/30/2004 7:15:31 AM PST by skeeter
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
Hmmmm...Massachusetts is one of the few states where 90% of the white people vote for the Democrats. The same people would be in power if not a single black voted.

Perhaps, under the circumstances, the Democrats are free to show their true upper-class colors. No riffraff allowed.
13 posted on 03/30/2004 7:18:47 AM PST by proxy_user
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
"There are so few clubs that cater to the African-American urban professional..."

This is the perfect business opportunity slapping them in the face.

Why do they have to force people to love them?

Why doesn't someone open an Africa-American club for urban professionals and make it so wonderful that whites will be pounding on the door to get in?

This is just about unmotivated, unsightful, unself-reliant people.

This isn't about integration. It's about search and destroy. "Since we can't or won't do for ourselves, we will destory the success of others".

Pathetic.

14 posted on 03/30/2004 7:34:26 AM PST by twas
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: MoralSense
I don't doubt that there's plenty of racism here. Every place in the country has some neighborhoods that are going to delineate themselves that way. The thing is that Charlestown and S. Boston are not the whole of Boston, and they are certainly not Massachusetts. Somerville and Cambridge are much more integrated.
15 posted on 03/30/2004 7:37:43 AM PST by HostileTerritory
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: proxy_user
The Democrats and Democratic areas they singled out here for racism are uniformly working-class. People in S. Boston, Quincy, and Charlestown are not elitist by any stretch of the imagination.
16 posted on 03/30/2004 7:39:57 AM PST by HostileTerritory
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
I recall several NBA players in the 80's referring to Boston as the most racist city in the league.
17 posted on 03/30/2004 7:44:39 AM PST by sharktrager (Kerry is like that or so a crack sausage)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: proxy_user
[Liberal] blacks have been unable to break the hold [liberal] whites have in Boston politics
After all their effort to join the middle class, maybe those professional blacks would do well to consider joining the party of the middle class.

Instead of sticking with the party of the patronizing rich and the patronized poor . . .


18 posted on 03/30/2004 8:42:43 AM PST by conservatism_IS_compassion (No one is as subjective as the person who knows he is objective.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: Enduring Freedom
Missing from the story:

The way Ted Kennedy totally trashed his black opponent, Jack E. Robinson, in his last election to the Senate.

A very recent (a month maybe?) of how the Democrat ruled State Legislature, under the thumb of Democrat Tom Finneran, gerrymandered their districts to totally disenfranchise blacks. A judge had to admonish them and order them to undo the gerrymandering to restore voting power to blacks in Boston.

Gotta love those Dems!! They totally take blacks for granted, and do not hesitate to steamroller one who gets "uppity" enough to challenge their rule.
19 posted on 03/30/2004 8:50:35 AM PST by SpinyNorman
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SpinyNorman
Here is the gerrymandering story. The Democrats were actually sued by a group representing blacks!!

from http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2004/02/25/bostons_districts_must_be_redrawn/

Boston's districts must be redrawn
House map is ruled to be racially unfair

By Raphael Lewis, Globe Staff, 2/25/2004

A panel of federal judges ordered Massachusetts House leaders yesterday to redraw the Boston legislative map, determining that the plan crafted by House Speaker Thomas M. Finneran and his lieutenants was designed to protect their own political futures at the expense of black voters' constitutional rights.
ADVERTISEMENT


The ruling gave House leaders six weeks to come up with a new map before the court creates a plan for them. The decision also barred the state from holding elections in the 17 House districts until the map is approved by the court.

The long-awaited ruling effectively throws this year's legislative campaigns into chaos, Secretary of State William F. Galvin said yesterday, because redrawing the districts may require changing dozens of adjacent districts. The decision also adds another divisive issue to a legislative agenda that includes the debate over gay marriage and the annual fight over the state budget.

In a ruling that chastised House leaders, the three-judge panel criticized "the House's willingness to turn a blind eye to the racial implications of its single-minded effort to protect incumbents at virtually any social cost."

The House Redistricting Committee "made African-American incumbents less vulnerable by adding black voters to their districts and made white incumbents less vulnerable by keeping their districts as `white' as possible," the Boston-based panel, led by Judge Bruce M. Selya, said in its ruling. "Its actions evinced a willingness to move district lines simply to safeguard incumbents' seats, without regard to other objectives. This course of conduct sacrificed racial fairness to the voters on the altar of incumbency protection."

At one point during the redistricting process, House leaders boasted that they had created a minority-dominated Roxbury district with no sitting incumbent. But they altered the district on the House floor to help a white incumbent who was considering a run for reelection.

The 2001 redistricting process followed a 2000 Census that showed what the judges called "a burgeoning minority population" in Boston. But the plan devised by Finneran and other lawmakers was a step back from the plan in place during the 1990s, the ruling said, noting that the number of white-dominated districts increased by one after the 2001 redistricting. Voting rights groups that brought the case hailed the ruling, and said they plan to watch Finneran and his colleagues closely as they set about crafting a new redistricting plan for the state's capital city.

"Gerrymandering is alive and well in Massachusetts," said Pamela H. Wilmot of Common Cause Massachusetts.

James E. Cofield Jr. of the Black Political Task Force, which brought the suit with several other groups, said: "Now it's back to the drawing boards for the Legislature, and we will attempt to help them during their process, as opposed to just reacting after they finish, which happened the first time around. Hopefully, they will be attentive to our suggestions."

In 1987, the Black Political Task Force sued the Legislature in US District Court on similar grounds and also won, forcing lawmakers to redraw the district map in an election year, 1988. After much fiery debate, the new map was approved in time for Election Day.

In light of the two recent cases and a spate of similar rulings nationwide, Wilmot said her group will now urge passage of an amendment to the state constitution to take the redistricting process away from the Legislature and give it to an independent commission. Arizona, for example, has an independent commission in charge of legislative and congressional redistricting.

"We're constantly in courts going over redistricitng plans, and courts are redrawing lines time and again," Wilmot said. "It goes to the conflict of interest that people who benefit from the process are drawing the lines." On Feb. 10, a three-judge panel in Georgia ruled that state's House and Senate legislative districts violate the Equal Protection clause of the US Constitution. A similar ruling came down roughly a month earlier in Arizona, and congressional district maps have been thrown out in recent months in Colorado and Texas.

Finneran was described in the ruling as keeping the redistricting process "on a short leash," and he declined to comment yesterday.

Finneran's Redistricting Committee chairman, Representative Thomas M. Petrolati, issued a brief statement defending the ultimate plan enacted by the House. "While I respectively [sic] disagree with the Court's decision I will work with the members of the committee, with all due diligence, to meet the requirements of the court within the time the court has set," Petrolati wrote.

During the trial last fall, Finneran, a Mattapan Democrat, insisted that the redistricting plan did not unfairly divide minority neighborhoods, but he conceded that his aides tried to ensure that sitting representatives were not harmed by shifting demographics revealed by a new census.

When the lines were redrawn, Finneran's district shed three overwhelmingly minority neighborhoods and took on three that were at least 95 percent white, including areas of Milton. Even as Boston for the first time emerged as a "majority-minority" city in the 2000 federal census, Finneran's district went from 74 percent minority to 61 percent minority.

"The House was comfortable with manipulating district lines," the court ruled. "This sad fact speaks to the totality of the circumstances."

Finneran, on the stand and in written testimony, also told the court that he had nothing whatsoever to do with the process of redistricting, a stance that the three-judge panel found hard to believe, saying "the circumstantial evidence strongly suggests the opposite conclusion."

The court ultimately warned House leaders not to "rob Peter to pay Paul" by generating a new legislative map that would diminish other minorities' representation in order to help African-Americans.

Galvin held a press conference yesterday to urge prospective candidates in Greater Boston to cease collecting signatures for their nominating petitions until district lines are made clear. Under state law, a candidate must collect 150 signatures from registered voters inside the district and submit them to municipal clerks, which was to have taken place this year by April 27, Galvin said. The House has until April 6 to fashion a new map for the Boston districts, but Galvin said the process of collecting signatures should take only about two weeks. "The impact of this decision is quite dramatic," Galvin said. "We would hope the Legislature moves expeditiously to remedy the deficits found. . . . It's our hope that while the Legislature has been given a six-week period that they will in fact use a lot less time to create these new districts."

George Pillsbury of BostonVOTE, which was also involved in the lawsuit, said the process could move forward speedily if Finneran and his colleagues simply adopt the plaintiff's proposal, which would focus on the districts held by Finneran and representatives Shirley Owens-Hicks, Elizabeth Malia, and Marie St. Fleur.

"The case is really all about four districts," Pillsbury said. "This should not change the entire state map."
© Copyright 2004 Globe Newspaper Company.
20 posted on 03/30/2004 9:02:10 AM PST by SpinyNorman
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-28 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson