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LetMyPeopleVote
LetMyPeopleVote's Journal
LetMyPeopleVote's Journal
June 9, 2020
06/10 Mike Luckovich- Makin' it hard
https://twitter.com/mluckovichajc/status/1270465955706146823
June 8, 2020
0609 Mike Luckovich: Sad baby
https://twitter.com/mluckovichajc/status/1270109862798786561
June 7, 2020
https://twitter.com/texasdemocrats/status/1269469642852118529
The Texas virtual convention raised $1 million for voter registration
https://twitter.com/texasdemocrats/status/1269466321043034114https://twitter.com/texasdemocrats/status/1269469642852118529
June 7, 2020
Black Lives Matter Comes to Vidor--Yes, Vidor
Vidor is a small town between Beaumont and the Louisiana border that we will not stop in. It has an active KKK chapter. This amazes me
https://twitter.com/kprin7/status/1269607068388003840
Vidor, Texas, boomed the Reverend Michael Cooper, thin and tall in his cowboy hat, will now be known for love! The crowd, assembled at a dilapidated pavilion on the grounds of Vidors Raymond Gould Community Center, cheered. Vidor has been known for many thingsamong them the activities of the local Ku Klux Klan; its status as a sundown town, in which blacks were not allowed in city limits after dark; and an ugly fight in the early nineties over a federal effort to desegregate public housing in the city, which caused Texas Monthly, in a cover story that year, to describe Vidor as Texass most hate-filled town. The census estimates it to be 91 percent white.
So when word started to circulate that a Black Lives Matter rally was being planned in Vidor, many people on social media thought it was a trapand expressed skepticism the events supposed planner, 23-year-old Maddy Malone, even existed. (She does.) To black folks with knowledge of the region, who had been told never to stop in Vidor, the idea seemed insane. A civil rights rally in Vidor is the punchline to a joke, not a thing that could happen in this world. Cmon.
Yet on Saturday, there they were, some 150 to 200 people standing in the sun, in the draining humidity and heat of Southeast Texas, to come together in love and unity and to bind together under God, as Malone told the crowd. My generation is reaching to break the cycle. They heard from a number of speakers, including Cooper, who is the head of the Beaumont chapter of the NAACP, but also young Vidorians like Malone.
Perhaps the most impressive thing about the Vidor rally was the demographic mix of attendees. There were a good number of African American marchers, but the crowd was predominantly white. Many were young people in their teens and twenties, like Maddy. But there were also middle-aged white women with homemade T-shirts and hats bearing slogans like I cant breathe handing out chilled water and snack packs. A white mother bore a sign that said she had been radicalized by Floyds calls for his mama as he was losing consciousness. After the event, a well-built white man with an American flag and an airborne infantry pin on his baseball cap came up to thank Malone for putting the event together. There was a guy in a Pittsburgh Steelers jersey. (Theres always a guy in a Steelers jersey.)
So when word started to circulate that a Black Lives Matter rally was being planned in Vidor, many people on social media thought it was a trapand expressed skepticism the events supposed planner, 23-year-old Maddy Malone, even existed. (She does.) To black folks with knowledge of the region, who had been told never to stop in Vidor, the idea seemed insane. A civil rights rally in Vidor is the punchline to a joke, not a thing that could happen in this world. Cmon.
Yet on Saturday, there they were, some 150 to 200 people standing in the sun, in the draining humidity and heat of Southeast Texas, to come together in love and unity and to bind together under God, as Malone told the crowd. My generation is reaching to break the cycle. They heard from a number of speakers, including Cooper, who is the head of the Beaumont chapter of the NAACP, but also young Vidorians like Malone.
Perhaps the most impressive thing about the Vidor rally was the demographic mix of attendees. There were a good number of African American marchers, but the crowd was predominantly white. Many were young people in their teens and twenties, like Maddy. But there were also middle-aged white women with homemade T-shirts and hats bearing slogans like I cant breathe handing out chilled water and snack packs. A white mother bore a sign that said she had been radicalized by Floyds calls for his mama as he was losing consciousness. After the event, a well-built white man with an American flag and an airborne infantry pin on his baseball cap came up to thank Malone for putting the event together. There was a guy in a Pittsburgh Steelers jersey. (Theres always a guy in a Steelers jersey.)
June 7, 2020
Black Lives Matter Comes to Vidor--Yes, Vidor
Vidor is a small town between Beaumont and the Louisiana border that we will not stop in. It has an active KKK chapter. This amazes me
https://twitter.com/kprin7/status/1269607068388003840
Vidor, Texas, boomed the Reverend Michael Cooper, thin and tall in his cowboy hat, will now be known for love! The crowd, assembled at a dilapidated pavilion on the grounds of Vidors Raymond Gould Community Center, cheered. Vidor has been known for many thingsamong them the activities of the local Ku Klux Klan; its status as a sundown town, in which blacks were not allowed in city limits after dark; and an ugly fight in the early nineties over a federal effort to desegregate public housing in the city, which caused Texas Monthly, in a cover story that year, to describe Vidor as Texass most hate-filled town. The census estimates it to be 91 percent white.
So when word started to circulate that a Black Lives Matter rally was being planned in Vidor, many people on social media thought it was a trapand expressed skepticism the events supposed planner, 23-year-old Maddy Malone, even existed. (She does.) To black folks with knowledge of the region, who had been told never to stop in Vidor, the idea seemed insane. A civil rights rally in Vidor is the punchline to a joke, not a thing that could happen in this world. Cmon.
Yet on Saturday, there they were, some 150 to 200 people standing in the sun, in the draining humidity and heat of Southeast Texas, to come together in love and unity and to bind together under God, as Malone told the crowd. My generation is reaching to break the cycle. They heard from a number of speakers, including Cooper, who is the head of the Beaumont chapter of the NAACP, but also young Vidorians like Malone.
Perhaps the most impressive thing about the Vidor rally was the demographic mix of attendees. There were a good number of African American marchers, but the crowd was predominantly white. Many were young people in their teens and twenties, like Maddy. But there were also middle-aged white women with homemade T-shirts and hats bearing slogans like I cant breathe handing out chilled water and snack packs. A white mother bore a sign that said she had been radicalized by Floyds calls for his mama as he was losing consciousness. After the event, a well-built white man with an American flag and an airborne infantry pin on his baseball cap came up to thank Malone for putting the event together. There was a guy in a Pittsburgh Steelers jersey. (Theres always a guy in a Steelers jersey.)
So when word started to circulate that a Black Lives Matter rally was being planned in Vidor, many people on social media thought it was a trapand expressed skepticism the events supposed planner, 23-year-old Maddy Malone, even existed. (She does.) To black folks with knowledge of the region, who had been told never to stop in Vidor, the idea seemed insane. A civil rights rally in Vidor is the punchline to a joke, not a thing that could happen in this world. Cmon.
Yet on Saturday, there they were, some 150 to 200 people standing in the sun, in the draining humidity and heat of Southeast Texas, to come together in love and unity and to bind together under God, as Malone told the crowd. My generation is reaching to break the cycle. They heard from a number of speakers, including Cooper, who is the head of the Beaumont chapter of the NAACP, but also young Vidorians like Malone.
Perhaps the most impressive thing about the Vidor rally was the demographic mix of attendees. There were a good number of African American marchers, but the crowd was predominantly white. Many were young people in their teens and twenties, like Maddy. But there were also middle-aged white women with homemade T-shirts and hats bearing slogans like I cant breathe handing out chilled water and snack packs. A white mother bore a sign that said she had been radicalized by Floyds calls for his mama as he was losing consciousness. After the event, a well-built white man with an American flag and an airborne infantry pin on his baseball cap came up to thank Malone for putting the event together. There was a guy in a Pittsburgh Steelers jersey. (Theres always a guy in a Steelers jersey.)
June 6, 2020
https://twitter.com/texasdemocrats/status/1269325066665431041
Joe Biden is about to speak at Texas convention
https://www.facebook.com/TexasDemocraticParty/videos/248065709784422https://twitter.com/texasdemocrats/status/1269325066665431041
June 6, 2020
https://twitter.com/texasdemocrats/status/1269325066665431041
Joe Biden is about to speak at Texa Democratic Party Convention
https://www.facebook.com/TexasDemocraticParty/videos/248065709784422https://twitter.com/texasdemocrats/status/1269325066665431041
June 5, 2020
Mike Luckovich-To protect and to serve
https://twitter.com/mluckovichajc/status/1268919967573061634Profile Information
Member since: Mon Apr 5, 2004, 04:58 PMNumber of posts: 145,129