Your daily dose of civil rights and related news
The Virginia GOP chair compared Obama to Osama, and then refused to back down after a critique from the McCain campaign (“While Barack Obama is associated with domestic terrorist William Ayers, the McCain campaign disagrees with the comparison that Jeff Frederick made.”). It’s a civil rights issue because I’m coming around on my earlier views as to whether the Obama-as-terrorist charges are racially-tinged or not.
See also this NYT story.
On the other hand, McCain’s resistance to bringing up Rev. Jeremiah Wright is heartening, if frustrating to many of his supporters (including, unsurprisingly, Gov. Palin).
Frederick County, Maryland, is weighing the consequences of its recent immigration crackdown. According to the article, since an agreement was reached with ICE, “9 percent of all people arrested and taken to the county detention center have proven to be illegal immigrants,” a number the local sheriff considers a success.
The Austin American-Statesman takes a look at how Latinos are responding to immigration and other issues.
A Fresno Catholic priest came out as gay and gave a sermon urging his parishioners to reject Proposition 8. He was immediately stripped of his post by the local bishop.
In the face of surging US prison populations, policymakers are looking at alternatives to incarceration for non-violent offenders.
The Michigan Department of Civil Rights is trying to assuage a wave of voter fears that they will be targeted by suppression and disenfranchise efforts. One of the “myths” they’re trying to dispel is that you can’t vote if your home was foreclosed upon. Well, glad to hear it, but if so it won’t be for a lack of trying.
Finally, the dean of the University of Nebraska law school is defending affirmative action, and questioned the results of a Center for Equal Opportunity (gag) study which purported to show the school “discriminated” against White applicants. The law school has six African-Americans in its entering class of 146 this year. CEO chief Roger Clegg (remember him?), who has been leading the charge against race-conscious admissions across the country, flatly said he’d rather the school turn “lily white” than preserve affirmative action.
















