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Same Ole Schickardy: A Voter Literacy Test Cheered By Tea Baggers

Literacy Test, in the context of United States political history, refers to the government practice of testing the literacy of potential citizens at the federal level, and potential voters at the state level. The federal government first employed literacy tests as part of the immigration process in 1917. Southern state legislatures employed literacy tests as part of the voter registration process as early as the late nineteenth century.

As used by the states, the literacy test gained infamy as a means for denying suffrage to African Americans. Adopted by a number of southern states, the literacy test was applied in a patently unfair manner, as it was used to disfranchise many literate southern blacks while allowing many illiterate southern whites to vote. The literacy test, combined with other discriminatory requirements, effectively disfranchised the vast majority of African Americans in the South from the 1890s until the 1960s. Southern states abandoned the literacy test only when forced to by federal legislation in the 1960s. In 1964, the Civil Rights Act provided that literacy tests used as a qualification for voting in federal elections be administered wholly in writing and only to persons who had not completed six years of formal education. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 suspended the use of literacy tests in all states or political subdivisions in which less than 50 percent of the voting age residents were registered as of 1 November 1964, or had voted in the 1964 presidential election. In a series of cases, the Supreme Court upheld the legislation and restricted the use of literacy tests for non-English-speaking citizens.

The Tea Party gathering last weekend in Nashville gave an overwhelming applause to former republican Congressman Tom Tancredo suggestion to reinstate the discriminatory practice.

Although his suggestion appears to be aimed at Latinos who strongly supported Barack Obama, the reinstatement of such a literacy test is unacceptable under our concept of equal protection under law, and African Americans should be screaming to high heaven about the suggestion.

For it was the literacy test that disenfranchised African Americans who held elected offices on both the national and local level during Reconstruction. Discrimination towards one group means discrimination against all groups, African Americans should adhere to that thought unless African Americans are ready to relive the nightmare of our ancestors.

I wonder if Tom and his fellow tea baggers can spell Equal Protection, 14th Amendment, and U.S. Constitution. I alo wonder if they themselves could pass a civic literacy test.

It’s the same ole schickardy, just a different descendant butt hole of Jim Crow.

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    Posted in Black History and Civl Rights and Febone1960.net and Same Ole Schickady 3 years, 3 months ago at 9:52 am.

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