US The Long Shadow of the Confederacy: Voting Rights and America’s Unfinished Civil War - The old Confederacy survives less as a government than as an enduring political and cultural force.

  • 🇵🇦 Nuestro primer dominio localizado está en español en kiwifarms.pa. Our first localized domain is on Spanish on kiwifarms.pa.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
1.png

There are moments in American history when the past refuses to stay buried. Statues may come down, textbooks may change, and politicians may insist that the nation has moved on, but history has a way of returning through laws, institutions, and political movements that echo earlier eras. Across much of the South today, battles over voting rights, representation, education, and political power have revived painful questions many Americans believed were settled long ago.

For African Americans in particular, recent efforts to restrict voting access in several southern states feel less like isolated political disputes and more like a continuation of a struggle that began before the Civil War and intensified during Reconstruction. To many observers, the conflict is no longer fought with cannons and armies, but through legislation, court rulings, district maps, polling place closures, and the slow erosion of protections that once guaranteed equal participation in democracy.

The Confederacy formally ended in 1865, but the ideas that sustained it did not disappear with Appomattox. The Civil War was not fought only over territory or economics; at its heart was the question of who counted as fully human, fully American, and fully entitled to citizenship. After emancipation, Reconstruction briefly opened the possibility of a multiracial democracy. African American men voted, held office, built institutions, and participated in civic life in unprecedented numbers.

That progress was met almost immediately with backlash.

Southern states developed poll taxes, literacy tests, grandfather clauses, intimidation campaigns, and outright violence to suppress Black political power. White supremacist organizations used terror to maintain racial hierarchy. The promise of Reconstruction collapsed under the weight of political compromise and federal retreat. For nearly a century, Jim Crow laws institutionalized segregation and systematically excluded African Americans from meaningful political participation.

The Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s forced the nation to confront these injustices. Images of peaceful marchers beaten on the Edmund Pettus Bridge shocked the conscience of the country. In response, Congress passed the Voting Rights Act of 1965, one of the most consequential pieces of legislation in American history. The law recognized a painful truth: states with long histories of racial discrimination could not simply be trusted to regulate voting without federal oversight.

For decades, the Voting Rights Act transformed southern politics. Black voter registration increased dramatically. Minority representation expanded. Federal review blocked discriminatory laws before they could take effect. Although racism did not disappear, the machinery of disenfranchisement was weakened.

But in recent years, many of those protections have been steadily dismantled.

The Supreme Court’s 2013 decision in Shelby County v. Holder effectively removed the federal preclearance system that required certain states to obtain approval before changing voting laws. Almost immediately, states previously covered by the law enacted voter identification requirements, reduced early voting periods, limited ballot drop boxes, purged voter rolls, and closed polling locations in heavily minority communities.

Supporters of these measures argue they are necessary to protect election integrity and public confidence in elections. Critics counter that widespread voter fraud has rarely been demonstrated at levels significant enough to justify such restrictions and that the burdens fall disproportionately on African American, poor, elderly, and working-class voters.

The struggle extends beyond access to the ballot box itself. Battles over congressional district maps have become central to the fight for political representation. In several southern states, courts have found that district boundaries diluted Black voting strength even in regions with large African American populations. The legal battles are complex, but the underlying issue is simple: whether minority communities can effectively translate population numbers into political representation.

At the same time, debates over how race and history are taught in schools have intensified. Some state leaders have moved to limit discussions of systemic racism, slavery’s continuing legacy, or structural inequality. Critics argue that these efforts sanitize history and prevent honest reckoning with the nation’s past. Supporters claim such restrictions prevent political indoctrination in classrooms. Yet beneath the rhetoric lies a larger struggle over national memory itself.

What makes this moment especially troubling for many Americans is the sense that democratic backsliding is occurring while public faith in institutions is already fragile. When access to voting becomes more difficult and election legitimacy is constantly questioned, citizens begin to lose trust not only in individual leaders but in democracy itself.

To describe this era as “the Civil War all over again” is not to suggest that tanks will roll through American cities or that formal secession is imminent. Rather, it reflects the recognition that the central moral conflict of the Civil War — who possesses full political power and equal citizenship — remains unresolved.

The old Confederacy survives less as a government than as an enduring political and cultural force. It appears whenever racial hierarchy is defended through policy. It resurfaces whenever historical memory is selectively rewritten. It gains strength whenever access to democratic participation becomes unequal.

Yet history also teaches another lesson: progress has never occurred automatically. Every expansion of American democracy has required struggle, protest, organizing, coalition building, journalism, litigation, and ordinary citizens willing to defend the rights of others.

The future of voting rights will not be determined solely by courts or legislatures. It will also depend on whether Americans recognize the stakes of this moment. Democracies rarely collapse all at once. More often, they erode gradually through public exhaustion, cynicism, and the normalization of unequal treatment.

The question facing the nation today is not whether history is repeating itself exactly. History never repeats in perfect form. The question is whether Americans are willing to recognize familiar patterns before they become permanent realities.

The Civil War ended 161 years ago. The struggle over who fully belongs in American democracy did not.

BLACK VOTES MATTER!

Article Link

Archive
 
Última edición:
Across much of the South today, battles over voting rights, representation, education, and political power have revived painful questions many Americans believed were settled long ago.
How can this be true when the US is a site of unrelenting evil racism and nothing at all has improved since slavery? Nothing has changed, everything is terrible, and that’s why black people have to be provided endless money for programs. To suggest anything has ever improved much less that the current state of affairs has regressed due to deliberate Democrat psyops is anti-Black.

What makes this moment especially troubling for many Americans is the sense that democratic backsliding is occurring while public faith in institutions is already fragile.
The reason public faith in institutions is fragile is y’all had your fingers on the scales for decades fucking everything up so yeah, now we’re trying to unfuck it and now YOU are losing faith because you see your paypigs starting to rebel.
 
LEGAL Black voters make up only 6-7% of the entire electorate, the fact that they have such undue influence on elections is due to racial gerrymandering that should have been dealt with decades ago. We should not be bending over backwards for such a small minority of nigger voters (same with kikes).

That is ignoring how much worse places become the minute niggers get an undue majority and start electing shit politicians who immediately start shitting where their constituents eat knowing that their constituents are too stupid to ever vote for anyone else.
 
One isn't entitled to representation as a member of a race. One's entitled to representation as an individual.

Don't like it, move to South Africa.
 
If you want racial representation then talk to Tariq Nasheed, in actual elections you should be an American citizen and nothing else.

You don't get to have your own little racial enclave shaped like a pretzel just so the same forever-term democrats can keep scamming you and your hapless neighbors out of your money.
 
It appears whenever racial hierarchy is defended through policy
You mean like laws giving blacks special voting districts for 60+ years?

After 6-7 decades of Affirmative Action districts, what do they have to show for them besides politicians with rhinestone hats who'd be unelectable anywhere else? How do Birmingham, Jackson, and Memphis look today?
 
I never understood what is the problem with just giving every USA citizen a photo ID and having free public transportation on the day of voting.

But like many issue in modern politics, actually solving it will be detrimental to the one complaining.
 
I never understood what is the problem with just giving every USA citizen a photo ID and having free public transportation on the day of voting.

But like many issue in modern politics, actually solving it will be detrimental to the one complaining.
Could also make Election Day a federal holiday and mandate all employers give their employees a couple of hours of paid leave to vote,.

Interestingly the only paid federal holidays created since the 1960s have been MLK Day and Juneteenth.

Two federal holidays specifically and solely for blacks, where racial issues are the sole topic. Almost like they created these holidays intentionally to increase racial tensions. That always comes in handy to distract from class issues.
 
I never understood what is the problem with just giving every USA citizen a photo ID and having free public transportation on the day of voting.

But like many issue in modern politics, actually solving it will be detrimental to the one complaining.
People who want to voot manage to get themselves to their polling place just fine, why should I have to pay for them to do it? Paying for a photo ID after making presenting one a requirement to voot, fine, election day holiday, fine, levying a tax to fix a problem that doesn't exist, no
 
Just make it a holiday and give out free state IDs. Honestly, they don't actually need to be free for them to be a reasonable expectation . Hobos have cellphones and I've seen dirty fentanoids playing with an Oculus. This is only ever brought up because certain people know that their voter base aren't willing to spend 20 dollars and an hour of their time to get an ID.
Philadelphia was 97% White in the years leading up to the Civil War. Feels like we lost.
 
People who want to voot manage to get themselves to their polling place just fine, why should I have to pay for them to do it? Paying for a photo ID after making presenting one a requirement to voot, fine, election day holiday, fine, levying a tax to fix a problem that doesn't exist, no
It's not necessarily only Niggers. Plenty of old people and whites living in the middle of nowhere that need to pay from their own pocket to get to the polling place. The only people with no issue voting are those living in bughives.

Which does make it pretty ironic that the only real niggers that can't vote are the ones in the bible belt.
 
Battles over congressional district maps have become central to the fight for political representation. In several southern states, courts have found that district boundaries diluted Black voting strength even in regions with large African American populations.
The thing about this is that niggers only vote for niggers.
In places where the majority of the population are niggers, non-niggers will never get their representation.
Some state leaders have moved to limit discussions of systemic racism, slavery’s continuing legacy, or structural inequality.
Because it's anti-white anti-American propaganda and people, especially Millenials and Gen Z, are tired of this endless guilt trip.
 
Communists are obsessed with the Confederates and LARPing as the Union because they project all "reactionaries" and "conservatives" as CSA and their own Commie Progressive bullshit as the Union.
 
AOC came down to Montgomery, AL recently and stood behind bulletproof glass to preach that it’s time for the north to “pull up” to the south. She pulled up with bulletproof glass. I guess civil war is for the plebs, not the greatest minds.
 
The Supreme Court’s 2013 decision in Shelby County v. Holder effectively removed the federal preclearance system that required certain states to obtain approval before changing voting laws.

What the supreme court said in that case was that the government could not forever selectively enforce the voting rights act based on a map and a formula reflecting the situation in the united states in 1965. The preclearance system could return if congress decided to update the formulas in question. But congress has declined to change those formulas since the voting rights act was first passed. Mostly because an updated map would not be quite as southern. Democrats love preclearance and the voting rights act as long as it selectively applies to southern states. But applying it elsewhere.....not so much.

What the court has repeatedly been implying is that you cannot in 2026 pretend that the racial situation is the same as 1965 and selectively target laws at some states but not others.
 
It's not necessarily only Niggers. Plenty of old people and whites living in the middle of nowhere that need to pay from their own pocket to get to the polling place. The only people with no issue voting are those living in bughives.

Which does make it pretty ironic that the only real niggers that can't vote are the ones in the bible belt.
Vooter turnout age 65+ was 71% in 2024. 63% age 45-64. If you look at a national county map of voter turnout in 2024, rural counties widely had a higher % turnout than urban. The only states that bucked this really are places with lots of niggers and/or poors. People who want to voot, voot. People who don't, don't. If 80% of Montana counties could (and did) have turnout higher than 65% in 2024, I'm not buying Mississippi and Tennessee have lower turnout because muh rural vooters can't get to their polling place. It's because the niggers and poors there don't want to. It's not a problem and I'm not paying for it
 
Atrás
Top Abajo