Look at how Dem shills are attacking Brother Cornel West

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Bills and lawsuits like what? Show me where they're advocating for us.

Also, I hate to break it to you...brace yourself...Thurgood Marshall died 30 years ago:francis:
hell, you can go back to thurgood’s era, before and after he made it onto the supreme court, and come up short with legislation and supreme court decisions that helped black people.

brown vs. brown?

all it did was say black boys and girls can now sit next to white boys and girls and read the same schoolbooks under the same roof (and, this only occasionally, to this day).

it didn’t say that that black boys and girls would be free to use the knowledge they’ve gained to enter society and apply it for the purpose of building an economic base that was not impeded by institutional racism.

look at the voting rights act. black men and women now had the right to vote for politicians who were, under no circumstance, inclined to use the powers of their office to mitigate the institutional harm black people are subject to in our society.

even the civil rights acts was another toothless gesture of non-economic paternalism that gave black people the “right” to sit down next to white people and eat at the same restaurants they ate at. but, again, there was to be no right for them to own a restaurant except in the rarest occassion.

all of these decisions and pieces of legislation essentially gave black people the right to be around white people insofar as they never challenge them economically.

:mjgrin:
 

skylove4

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Cornell really might as well commit that. It’s over for him and any kinda legacy he has created, which was great and would have keep him in high in history as an intellectual but he threw it away to become a clown. I used to think he was so smart and wise but it was all an act, he’s nothing more than a clown or a cartoon character, he even wears the same costume like one. I was so excited to hear him speak as a young man at Alabama state but I’m ashamed I even went now. The motherfukker looks like he stinks too, fukking c00n agent.
 

Ghost Utmost

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this is appallingly ignorant of history.

first, no country has ever attempted to “take the USA down,” so you can’t argue that it isn’t possible. the us lost to a militarily inferior insurgency in indochina. second, history is filled with multiple examples of a militarily outmatched insurgency from within overturning an oppressive state.

a lot of you sound like bytchmade slaves on a plantation. you’re giddy at the idea of jumping out a window for liberal zaddy.

:francis:

Calling Vietnam "Indochina" is a little 'old school white racist'.

No one has TRIED the USA - since Pearl Harbor - before we were considered the Alpha country - cause since then, it would be like prime Bushwick Bill vs prime Michael Jai White. Street fight. No holds barred, to the death.

You're saying that the Black people in America have enough military power to

overthrow

the USA

?

This is so exhausting. Arguing for simple common sense
 
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Cornell really might as well commit that. It’s over for him and any kinda legacy he has created, which was great and would have keep him in high in history as an intellectual but he threw it away to become a clown. I used to think he was so smart and wise but it was all an act, he’s nothing more than a clown or a cartoon character, he even wears the same costume like one. I was so excited to hear him speak as a young man at Alabama state but I’m ashamed I even went now. The motherfukker looks like he stinks too, fukking c00n agent.
:mjpls:
 
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Don't mind him. He's from the UK and prefers monarchies for some weird reason. He barely even thinks white supremacy exists.
I'm still on your mind, huh? All because I talked about your white liberal and neoconlib masters. Run back to the latrine from where you came from. You and your ilk are falling apart.
 

Kyle C. Barker

Migos VERZUZ Mahalia Jackson
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I'm still on your mind, huh? All because I talked about your white liberal and neoconlib masters. Run back to the latrine from where you came from.

You remind me of the internet brained dorks I use to shove into lockers lol


You and your ilk are falling apart.


Says the self proclaimed monarchist. That's how I know the internet was bad for you

Hello,
Just thought I'd introduce myself. I'm a Brit of Jamaican descent. I'm interested in African histories, cultures, genetics, myths, legends etc.
As a Brit, you know I like 'football' (soccer to you yanks, even though I don't mind handegg). I love Hip Hop, Drum & Bass and Metal music. I can't stand Grime, Dubstep and most Dance/Electronica music

My world views are somewhat... controversial.
Here's some of them:
1. I don't believe in 'White Supremacy'... or should I say that I don't believe in the grand nigh onmipresence, omniscient and omnipotence of it. As T. West from Afrisynergy News has said, "White Supremacy donotes Black (Non-white) inferiority." The idea that white supremacy is always many steps ahead is rediculous. It also begs the question - If 'White Supremacy' is always many steps ahead how can the likes of Tariq Nasheed, Jason Black etc know what's going on? How do we know that they aren't being manipulated by said 'White Supremacy' to make videos about it? Also why are the biggest preachers of 'White Supremacy' always these 'pro-black con men'. China, India and even Africa rising certainly puts a major hole in the 'White Supremacy' entity.
Let's call it the correct term - Western European Descended Hegemony

2. I can't stand 'pro-black con men' like Tariq Nasheed, Jason Black, Umar Johnson, Sa-Neter etc. They love talking about how other cultures like the Olmecs, Indians, Greeks, Jews etc were 'black' (when they weren't. No genetic, linguistic, archaelogical etc evidence for it) yet they seldom talk about other great African polities like the Mali Empire, Kanem Bornu, Songhai, Kongo Kingdom, Swahili city states etc.

3. I can't stand black bootlickers like Candace Owens, Tommy Sotomayor, Jesse Lee Peterson etc. I have no problem with black people having different opinions and political views. In fact I encourage it. However, many black bootlicks are deluded, pathological liars and fools.

4. I can't stand Political Correctness. I tend to lean on the side of Free Speech absolutism. I believe in the right to offend. If you don't like it, challenge it or grow thicker skin. I believe everybody has the right to criticise who and whatever they want. It makes for a healthy and honest society. It doesn't make you a 'c00n' for not siding with Tariq Nasheed or Frances Cress Welsing.
I'm seldom offended by racial slurs and other such Un-PC terms. Feel free to mock my heritage and what not as you wish.

5. The Left and Right wings of Politics as a philosophy need to die a quick and painful death. I believe in ideas not sectariarism. I believe in policy not political theory.

6. I'm Pro Brexit.

7. I'm a monarchist. I believe a (Semi) Constitutional Monarchy is the best form of government. The idea that republics ensure peoples rights is fukking rediculous. The 20th century had many republics and most of them were bloody and totalitarian. Do you honestly think that if the Gulf Arab polities were to become republics, they would be beacon of great rule?
Nope. The best they would be is 'pre 2015 Civil War' Yemen.

8. I consider myself Afro-Conscious rather than pro-black. One of the tenants of being pro-black is you must only date black women. I date who the fukk I want.

If you have any questions about me, feel free to ask.
 

bnew

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Her name was on a filing agreeing to be a Cornel West elector. Her question: What’s an elector?​


Image


FILE - Scholar and activist Cornel West, who is running for U.S. president as a third-party candidate in 2024, speaks on Saturday, July 15, 2023, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)

By BRIAN SLODYSKO and JONATHAN J. COOPER

Updated 10:30 PM EDT, August 16, 2024

PHOENIX (AP) — When Denisha Mitchell was asked why she filled out paperwork to serve as an Arizona elector for the independent presidential candidate Cornel West, her first response was “What?!” Her second: What’s an elector?

“I was shocked and surprised by it all. I didn’t even know what an elector was,” Mitchell told The Associated Press on Friday. “The crazy thing is it was all forged. None of it was my handwriting. It was definitely not my signature. My email was wrong, my address was wrong.”

Mitchell’s case is the latest example of dubious tactics used in an effort to qualify West, a left-wing academic, for the ballot in states across the U.S. It’s also among the more egregious. It’s an effort that West himself apparently knows nothing about. His campaign did not immediately respond for comment Friday evening.

“If you produce information that is a false on filing to a government entity in Arizona, you’ve committed a felony. It’s just not that complicated,” said Dennis K. Burke, a former U.S. Attorney in Arizona, who also served as a chief deputy in the state attorney general’s office.

But as the presidential election enters a critical three-month period, there are efforts around the country to subvert the integrity of the ballot, many of them coming from a collection of conservative activists and Republican-aligned operatives pushing West’s candidacy.

Republicans and their allies have worked to get West on the ballot in Arizona, Wisconsin, Virginia, North Carolina, Nebraska, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Maine.

Their hope is West will serve as a spoiler candidate, boosting former President Donald Trump’s chance of winning in November by siphoning liberal support away from the Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, in battleground states that could be decided by just a few thousand votes.

While it is not clear who is behind the effort — and there is no indication that Trump’s campaign is directly involved — one thing is certain: It’s not West, who has not been actively campaigning and whose presidential committee, records show, was almost $17,000 in debt at the end of June.

Since discovering she was signed up to be an elector, Mitchell has signed an affidavit that will be submitted to state authorities next week attesting that she never agreed to serve as an elector and never signed her name to a filing. In Arizona, all independent presidential campaigns are required to submit filings showing that they have a slate of electors who will cast their Electoral College votes for a presidential candidate.

But her story is not the only unusual one among the slate of electors for West.

One of them, Elizabeth Rothgeb, pleaded guilty to manslaughter after accepting a plea deal stemming from the killing of her then-husband with an ax in 1998. She spent 10 years in prison and was released on Christmas Eve 2010, according to online records from the state prison system.

Rothgeb, who could not be reached for comment, is a registered Republican, as are two other electors for West, voting records show. Two additional electors listed in the state filings are not registered to vote at the addresses provided for them, records show.

As for Mitchell, she’s says she is unsure who filled out the paperwork in her name.

She and her husband were both enthusiastic supporters of Bernie Sanders and were drawn to West’s progressive message earlier this year. They later took jobs gathering petition signatures to get an initiative on the ballot that would raise the wages of tipped workers. They soured on West’s candidacy when they read that Republican-aligned operatives were working to get him on the ballot to play spoiler.

“We weren’t for the Republican griminess, so we stopped pushing him,” she said.

Her former employer, a signature gathering contractor called Wells Marketing, a mysterious Missouri limited liability company, is leading the effort to get West on the ballot in Arizona. The company did not respond to a message seeking comment at a phone number listed for it.

“I don’t know who did it. But because I worked for Wells (Marketing), they do have my information,” said Mitchell.

The company is closely affiliated with Mark Jacoby — a brother-in-law of a Wells Marketing official, according to social media posts — who was also listed on state documents as the employer of one signature gatherer working to get West on the ballot in the state.

Jacoby is a Republican-aligned operative from California with a longstanding reputation for using deceptive tactics. He was convicted in 2009 of voter registration fraud, court records show.

In 2020, Jacoby worked to gather signatures to place the rapper Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, on the ballot. Ye’s quixotic presidential campaign was widely viewed by Democrats as an effort to dilute Joe Biden’s popularity with Black voters.

Jacoby’s firm, Let the Voters Decide, was investigated for using questionable signature gathering tactics during a 2020 petition drive in Michigan that sought to roll back some of Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s emergency powers during the coronavirus pandemic. No charges came of the investigation.

He was accused in 2008 of tricking voters into registering with the California Republican Party by telling them they were signing an initiative to strengthen penalties for child molesters, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Jacoby did not answer a call at a number listed to him and his voicemail inbox was full.

Similarly unusual efforts have unfolded in other states, as well.

In April, The Washington Post reported pro-Trump activist Scott Presler was gathering signatures for West outside a Trump rally in North Carolina. In a video posted online, Presler described West, an academic, as a “far-left Marxist” who “if we get him on the ballot he could take a percentage point away” from Biden.

But Republican involvement in getting West and his Justice For All party on the ballot in North Carolina ran far deeper.

At the beginning of June, disclosures show, West had spent just $2,400 this year to gather the signatures needed to qualify for the ballot in states across the U.S.

But then Justice For All submitted well over the roughly 13,800 signatures needed. State government emails obtained by The Associated Press show current and former employees of Blitz Canvassing, a Republican firm that earned millions of dollars doing work for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, helped West pull off the feat. The emails, previously reported by NBC News, show the employees affiliated with Blitz Canvassing were the designated representatives to pick up and drop off petitions for West’s campaign.

Ballot access hijinks are nothing new in Arizona, where elections are often decided by fractions of a percentage point.

This year, a leader of the conservative group Turning Point Action resigned from the organization and dropped his bid for reelection to the Arizona House of Representatives after he was accused of forging signatures on his nominating petitions.
 

Born2BKing

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Her name was on a filing agreeing to be a Cornel West elector. Her question: What’s an elector?​


Image


FILE - Scholar and activist Cornel West, who is running for U.S. president as a third-party candidate in 2024, speaks on Saturday, July 15, 2023, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)

By BRIAN SLODYSKO and JONATHAN J. COOPER

Updated 10:30 PM EDT, August 16, 2024

PHOENIX (AP) — When Denisha Mitchell was asked why she filled out paperwork to serve as an Arizona elector for the independent presidential candidate Cornel West, her first response was “What?!” Her second: What’s an elector?

“I was shocked and surprised by it all. I didn’t even know what an elector was,” Mitchell told The Associated Press on Friday. “The crazy thing is it was all forged. None of it was my handwriting. It was definitely not my signature. My email was wrong, my address was wrong.”

Mitchell’s case is the latest example of dubious tactics used in an effort to qualify West, a left-wing academic, for the ballot in states across the U.S. It’s also among the more egregious. It’s an effort that West himself apparently knows nothing about. His campaign did not immediately respond for comment Friday evening.

“If you produce information that is a false on filing to a government entity in Arizona, you’ve committed a felony. It’s just not that complicated,” said Dennis K. Burke, a former U.S. Attorney in Arizona, who also served as a chief deputy in the state attorney general’s office.

But as the presidential election enters a critical three-month period, there are efforts around the country to subvert the integrity of the ballot, many of them coming from a collection of conservative activists and Republican-aligned operatives pushing West’s candidacy.

Republicans and their allies have worked to get West on the ballot in Arizona, Wisconsin, Virginia, North Carolina, Nebraska, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Maine.

Their hope is West will serve as a spoiler candidate, boosting former President Donald Trump’s chance of winning in November by siphoning liberal support away from the Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, in battleground states that could be decided by just a few thousand votes.

While it is not clear who is behind the effort — and there is no indication that Trump’s campaign is directly involved — one thing is certain: It’s not West, who has not been actively campaigning and whose presidential committee, records show, was almost $17,000 in debt at the end of June.

Since discovering she was signed up to be an elector, Mitchell has signed an affidavit that will be submitted to state authorities next week attesting that she never agreed to serve as an elector and never signed her name to a filing. In Arizona, all independent presidential campaigns are required to submit filings showing that they have a slate of electors who will cast their Electoral College votes for a presidential candidate.

But her story is not the only unusual one among the slate of electors for West.

One of them, Elizabeth Rothgeb, pleaded guilty to manslaughter after accepting a plea deal stemming from the killing of her then-husband with an ax in 1998. She spent 10 years in prison and was released on Christmas Eve 2010, according to online records from the state prison system.

Rothgeb, who could not be reached for comment, is a registered Republican, as are two other electors for West, voting records show. Two additional electors listed in the state filings are not registered to vote at the addresses provided for them, records show.

As for Mitchell, she’s says she is unsure who filled out the paperwork in her name.

She and her husband were both enthusiastic supporters of Bernie Sanders and were drawn to West’s progressive message earlier this year. They later took jobs gathering petition signatures to get an initiative on the ballot that would raise the wages of tipped workers. They soured on West’s candidacy when they read that Republican-aligned operatives were working to get him on the ballot to play spoiler.

“We weren’t for the Republican griminess, so we stopped pushing him,” she said.

Her former employer, a signature gathering contractor called Wells Marketing, a mysterious Missouri limited liability company, is leading the effort to get West on the ballot in Arizona. The company did not respond to a message seeking comment at a phone number listed for it.

“I don’t know who did it. But because I worked for Wells (Marketing), they do have my information,” said Mitchell.

The company is closely affiliated with Mark Jacoby — a brother-in-law of a Wells Marketing official, according to social media posts — who was also listed on state documents as the employer of one signature gatherer working to get West on the ballot in the state.

Jacoby is a Republican-aligned operative from California with a longstanding reputation for using deceptive tactics. He was convicted in 2009 of voter registration fraud, court records show.

In 2020, Jacoby worked to gather signatures to place the rapper Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, on the ballot. Ye’s quixotic presidential campaign was widely viewed by Democrats as an effort to dilute Joe Biden’s popularity with Black voters.

Jacoby’s firm, Let the Voters Decide, was investigated for using questionable signature gathering tactics during a 2020 petition drive in Michigan that sought to roll back some of Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s emergency powers during the coronavirus pandemic. No charges came of the investigation.

He was accused in 2008 of tricking voters into registering with the California Republican Party by telling them they were signing an initiative to strengthen penalties for child molesters, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Jacoby did not answer a call at a number listed to him and his voicemail inbox was full.

Similarly unusual efforts have unfolded in other states, as well.

In April, The Washington Post reported pro-Trump activist Scott Presler was gathering signatures for West outside a Trump rally in North Carolina. In a video posted online, Presler described West, an academic, as a “far-left Marxist” who “if we get him on the ballot he could take a percentage point away” from Biden.

But Republican involvement in getting West and his Justice For All party on the ballot in North Carolina ran far deeper.

At the beginning of June, disclosures show, West had spent just $2,400 this year to gather the signatures needed to qualify for the ballot in states across the U.S.

But then Justice For All submitted well over the roughly 13,800 signatures needed. State government emails obtained by The Associated Press show current and former employees of Blitz Canvassing, a Republican firm that earned millions of dollars doing work for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, helped West pull off the feat. The emails, previously reported by NBC News, show the employees affiliated with Blitz Canvassing were the designated representatives to pick up and drop off petitions for West’s campaign.

Ballot access hijinks are nothing new in Arizona, where elections are often decided by fractions of a percentage point.

This year, a leader of the conservative group Turning Point Action resigned from the organization and dropped his bid for reelection to the Arizona House of 'Representatives after he was accused of forging signatures on his nominating petitions.
"Republicans and their allies have worked to get West on the ballot in Arizona, Wisconsin, Virginia, North Carolina, Nebraska, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Maine.

Their hope is West will serve as a spoiler candidate, boosting former President Donald Trump’s chance of winning in November by siphoning liberal support away from the Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, in battleground states that could be decided by just a few thousand votes

"

Bu bu but why you mad Cornell West is running
 
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