[Vision2020] The word "ringers"

Joan Opyr auntiestablishment at hotmail.com
Thu Oct 28 13:20:00 PDT 2004


Dear Visionaries:

Time for a little plain speaking, as Rose would say.  I have been profoundly disturbed by the GOP's well-publicized election day plans to challenge newly registered voters in largely minority precincts.  The GOP claims to be concerned about potential fraud; I'm concerned that the Republican Party is now spelling fraud "J-i-m C-r-o-w."

For your outrage/edification, I'm forwarding an excellent piece by Harold Meyerson published yesterday in The Washington Post.  Below that is my letter in response to Mr. Meyerson.  It's long past time to start calling this shovel a spade.  What the GOP is up to is a disgrace; let's name and shame.

Yours sincerely,
Joan Opyr/Auntie Establishment


>From  

washingtonpost.com  
The GOP's Shameful Vote Strategy  

By Harold Meyerson

Wednesday, October 27, 2004; Page A25  
With Election Day almost upon us, it's not clear whether President Bush is running a campaign or plotting a coup d'etat. By all accounts, Republicans are spending these last precious days devoting nearly as much energy to suppressing the Democratic vote as they are to mobilizing their own.
Time was when Republicans were at least embarrassed by their efforts to keep African Americans from the polls. Republican consultant Ed Rollins was all but drummed out of the profession after his efforts to pay black ministers to keep their congregants from voting in a 1993 New Jersey election came to light.
For George W. Bush, Karl Rove and their legion of genteel thugs, however, universal suffrage is just one more musty liberal ideal that threatens conservative rule. Today's Republicans have elevated vote suppression from a dirty secret to a public norm.
In Ohio, Republicans have recruited 3,600 poll monitors and assigned them disproportionately to such heavily black areas as inner-city Cleveland, where Democratic "527" groups have registered many tens of thousands of new voters. "The organized left's efforts to, quote unquote, register voters -- I call them ringers -- have created these problems" of potential massive vote fraud, Cuyahoga County Republican Chairman James P. Trakas recently told the New York Times.
Let's pass over the implication that a registration drive waged by a liberal group is inherently fraud-ridden, and look instead at that word "ringers."
Registration in Ohio is nonpartisan, but independent analysts estimate that roughly 400,000 new Democrats have been added to the rolls this year. Who does Trakas think they are? Have tens of thousands of African Americans been sneaking over the state lines from Pittsburgh and Detroit to vote in Cleveland -- thus putting their own battleground states more at risk of a Republican victory? Is Shaker Heights suddenly filled with Parisians affecting American argot? Or are the Republicans simply terrified that a record number of minority voters will go to the polls next Tuesday? Have they decided to do anything to stop them -- up to and including threatening to criminalize Voting While Black in a Battleground State?
This is civic life in the age of George W. Bush, in which politics has become a continuation of civil war by other means. In Bush's America, there's a war on -- against a foreign enemy so evil that we can ignore the Geneva Conventions, against domestic liberals so insidious that we can ignore democratic norms. Only bleeding hearts with a pre-Sept. 11 mind-set still believe in voting rights.
For Bush and Rove, the domestic war predates the war on terrorism. From the first day of his presidency, Bush opted to govern from the right, to fan the flames of cultural resentment, to divide the American house against itself in the hope that cultural conservatism would create a stable Republican majority. The Sept. 11 attacks unified us, but Bush exploited those attacks to relentlessly partisan ends. As his foreign and domestic policies abjectly failed, Bush's reliance on identity politics only grew stronger. He anointed himself the standard-bearer for provincials and portrayed Kerry and his backers as arrogant cosmopolitans.
And so here we are, improbably enmeshed in a latter-day version of the election of 1928, when the Catholicism of Democratic presidential nominee Al Smith bitterly divided the nation along Protestant-Catholic and nativist-immigrant lines. To his credit, Smith's opponent (and eventual victor), Herbert Hoover, did not exploit this rift himself. Bush, by contrast, has not merely exploited the modernist-traditionalist tensions in America but helped create new ones and summoned old ones we could be forgiven for thinking were permanently interred. (Kerry will ban the Bible?)
Indeed, it's hard to think of another president more deliberately divisive than the current one. I can come up with only one other president who sought so assiduously to undermine the basic arrangements of American policy (as Bush has undermined the New Deal at home and the systems of post-World War II alliances abroad) with so little concern for the effect this would have on the comity and viability of the nation. And Jefferson Davis wasn't really a president of the United States.
After four years in the White House, George W. Bush's most significant contribution to American life is this pervasive bitterness, this division of the house into raging, feuding halves. We are two nations now, each with a culture that attacks the other. And politics, as the Republicans are openly playing it, need no longer concern itself with the most fundamental democratic norm: the universal right to vote.
As the campaign ends, Bush is playing to the right and Kerry to the center.
That foretells the course of the administrations that each would head. The essential difference between them is simply that, as a matter of strategy and temperament, Bush seeks to exploit our rifts and Kerry to narrow them. That, finally, is the choice before us next Tuesday: between one candidate who wants to pry this nation apart to his own advantage, and another who seeks to make it whole.  
meyersonh at washpost.com
From: Joan Opyr
Sent: Wednesday, October 27, 2004 10:23 AM
To: meyersonh at washpost.com
Cc: auntiestablishment at hotmail.com
Subject: The word "ringers"

Dear Mr. Meyerson,

I grew up in the South, so when it comes to racism, perhaps my ears are a little sensitive, but when I read that Cuyahoga County Republican Chairman James P. Trakas calls the voters who have been registered by the organized left "ringers," I hear an echo of the word "niggers," and I don't think this is coincidental.  At best, it's a kind of aural Freudian slip.  The GOP's disgraceful effort to suppress new voters is concentrated almost solely in districts with large minority populations; clearly, this is a throw-back to the bad old days of Jim Crow laws and poll tests.  It's a sin and a shame that the party of Lincoln should now rely on bigotry and racism to appeal to white voters and disenfranchisement to suppress black turnout.  This is the bitter fruit of Richard Nixon's so-called Southern Strategy: divide and conquer.

Thank you for your opinion piece exposing this blatant abuse.  Let us hope that the GOP effort backfires and that we have a free and fair vote on November 2nd in which record numbers of minority votes are not only cast but counted.

Sincerely,

Joan Opyr
Moscow, Idaho
www.auntie-establishment.comGet more from the Web.  FREE MSN Explorer download : http://explorer.msn.com
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