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Showing posts with label Gov. Bobby Jindal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gov. Bobby Jindal. Show all posts

Jan 20, 2013

Letters From Melissa-Politics by MH-P



For those who don't know her, Melissa Harris-Perry (MH-P) is an American author, television host and political commentator with a focus on African American politics. She is a professor of political science at Tulane University. Prior to this position, Melissa was an associate professor of politics and African American Studies at Princeton University (2006-2010) and taught political science at the University of Chicago from 1999 to 2005.

Currently, MH-P hosts a weekend news and opinion television show on MSNBC. I watch the show faithfully every Saturday and Sunday. It's a source of information and amazing data on current events, issues, and historical trends. The show serves as an avenue for me to discover new faces and spend time with a variety of folks from the media and political arenas.

In a recurring segment of the Melissa Harris-Perry Show, the host delivers an open letter to prominent figures in the news about vital issues of the day. I find the segment compelling, focused, and down to the nitty-gritty. When she begins, saying "it's Melissa", one who doesn't know better is caught off guard, maybe even disarmed. By the time time she signs off as "Melissa", she has made her point and shook out the truth with wit, candor and grace.

One example is Melissa's open letter to Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal about his refusal to set -up a state-run insurance exchange required by the Affordable Care Act (better known as Obamacare).

Take a look at some of the content:


"Bobby, you're the governor of a poor state," Harris-Perry, a Louisiana resident said. "Being a governor of a state with this much poverty and inequality ought to give you a certain sense of urgency—but you don't seem to give a damn. What you do care about is reaching higher office. And why not? You're term limited in Louisiana and the White House will have an opening in four years."

Harris-Perry charged that Jindal has made a number of national political moves recently, and that it "looks like [his] 2016 machine is raring to go."

She later added, "Tell you what governor, if you're bored with dealing with the real problems that face us in Louisiana; if you want to move on to the national stage, don't wait until the end of your term. Pull a Palin, quit now. We'll find somebody else."
 
 


Melissa has written to Justice Clarence Thomas, George Will and New Jersey Govenor Chris Christie. I particularly liked her letters to my state's senator Majority leader Harry Reid telling him "get tough on assault weapons, Harry Reid". Her letter to Indiana's G.O.P. failed senatorial candidate Richard Murdock addressed  his controversial comments on rape. 

"You see, Mr. Mourdock, the violation of rape is more than physical. Rapists strip women of our right to choose, of our right to say no, of our right to control what is happening to our bodies. Most assailants tell us it is our fault. They tell us to be silent. Sometimes they even tell us it’s God’s will," she said. "That is the core violation of rape– it takes away choice. Richard, you believe it is fine to ignore a women’s right to choose because of your interpretation of divinity. Sound familiar?"



I love the show overall and particularly the "Letters from Melissa" segment and highly recommend it to you and yours.

Apr 22, 2012

Forty Year of Solitary Confinement For Angola 3




It’s been 40 years since that day on April 17, 1972, or 14,600 days ago, when  Herman Wallace and Albert Woodfox were placed in solitary confinement in a 6ft x 9ft x12ft cell for 23 hours every day, in America.

Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace

The state says Woodfox and Wallace were guilty of murdering a 23 year old guard at Angola Prison. Wallace, Woodfox, and their network of supporters say they were framed for their political activism as members of the Black Panthers. Woodfox and Wallace founded the Angola chapter of the Black Panther Party in 1971. A third prisoner, Robert King, joined them a year later. The three campaigned for better working conditions and racial solidarity between inmates, as well as an end to rape and sexual slavery.
Robert King
Robert (Wilkerson) King is the only freed member of the Angola 3. He spent 29 years in solitary confinement for a murder he did not commit. He was released in 2001 after his conviction was overturned.
Today, to mark the 40th anniversary of their placement in solitary confinement, Amnesty USA says it will deliver a petition to Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal that bears the signatures of tens of thousands of people from 125 countries. "We want the state of Louisiana and we want the world to know that we are still focusing on this case. This is a total violation of human rights and civil rights," King says. "And it is ongoing."

LA Gov. Bobby Jindal (R)
Amnesty International is calling on the Louisiana authorities to end the cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment of Woodfox and Wallace, and to remove them immediately from solitary confinement. The Angola 3 has a pending civil suit 'Wilkerson, Wallace and Woodfox' vs. the State of Louisiana which the United States Supreme Court ruled has merit to proceed to trial based on the fact that their 30+ years in solitary confinement is "inhumane and unconstitutional". The outcome of this landmark civil case could eliminate long term solitary confinement in U.S. prisons.
In America, in 2012...God have mercy on us.

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