Open Thread | Checking in on The Worse Court Since Taney

UH HUH
UH HUH


The Washington Post
@washingtonpost
The Supreme Court allowed Alabama to hold upcoming elections using a congressional map that a lower court found discriminates on the basis of race and dilutes the political power of the state’s Black voters.
https://x.com/washingtonpost/status/2062134465753666015


Norman Ornstein
@NormOrnstein
Our chief justice, John “Jim Crow” Roberts
8:19 AM · Jun 4, 2026

Democracy Docket
@DemocracyDocket
LAST NIGHT: Alabama is allowed to use a congressional map in the 2026 midterms that was found to intentionally discriminate against Black voters, the Supreme Court ruled.

The decision suggests that almost no federal protections remain for non-white voters.
https://x.com/DemocracyDocket/status/2062166085151883390


Ari Berman

‪@ariberman.bsky.social‬
Roberts Court wants to create world where Dems have no legitimate chance to ever take control of Congress, there are no Black members of Congress from the South & no voting rights violations can ever be proven. Their end goal is permanent white GOP minority rule http://www.motherjones.com/politics/202…
https://bsky.app/profile/ariberman.bsky.social/post/3mnfckykm5c2r

From TPM:
SCOTUS Cobbles Together Excuse to Let Alabama Discriminate Against Black Voters in New Order
by Kate Riga
06.02.26 | 11:45 pm

The Supreme Court showed beyond a doubt Tuesday that it will never again put a stop to Republican states snuffing out the Black vote.

The six right-wing justices granted Alabama’s request for a stay, which clears the way for the state to hold its 2026 elections under a 2023 map crafted to deliver Republicans six congressional seats and Democrats only one. It does so by making Black Alabamians’ votes count for less than white ones’.

In Louisiana v. Callais, the Court made vote dilution nearly impossible to prove. It ignored Congress’ alterations to the Voting Rights Act and turned it back into an intents test, where the plaintiffs had to make the extremely difficult showing that the legislators intended to discriminate based on race. And yet, in the Alabama case, the plaintiffs managed to do that. The district court found plentiful evidence that the state intentionally discriminated after the court had previously ordered it to produce a map with two districts composed of a Black majority or near-majority, and Alabama flatly ignored it. The state instead produced another map with only one Black-majority district.

That evidence, rare in its unambiguity, still failed at the Supreme Court.

“As to intentional vote dilution, the District Court did not heed the presumption of legislative good faith because it interpreted the State’s legal disagreement with the court’s earlier remedial order as proof of discriminatory animus,” the majority wrote.

In her dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that the Court’s order proves that “there is no realistic case in which the presumption of legislative good faith can ever be rebutted.” It also, she added, “corrodes the rule of law by rewarding Alabama’s gamesmanship and outright defiance of court orders.”

The majority then delivers the death blow to any attempt to stop red states from suppressing the Black vote.

“Under Callais, the District Court was required to deny relief unless the plaintiffs’ alternative map performed ‘just as well’ with respect to all of the State’s constitutionally permissible districting criteria,” it wrote.

In other words, courts can only force red states to draw additional majority-minority districts if those districts will vote for Republican candidates. Since this will never happen in the South, where race and partisanship are intertwined, it ensures that red states’ efforts to gerrymander Republican candidates into easy wins will always trump Black voters’ ability to elect members of Congress who represent their interests.

SCOTUS Justice Blasts Colleagues in Scathing Dissent
LAW AND DISORDER
The Supreme Court’s conservative majority voted to greenlight Republicans’ power grab in a new state.
Janna Brancolini
Updated Jun. 3 2026 7:35AM EDT
Published Jun. 3 2026 7:30AM EDT

Liberal Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor blasted her conservative colleagues for “disregarding both democratic values and the rule of law” in a blistering dissent to a decision allowing Alabama to eliminate a majority-Black district at the 11th hour.

The justices voted 6-3 to grant an emergency request filed by Republican officials to use a congressional map in this year’s midterms that was approved in 2023 but had never been used because a lower court found the map intentionally discriminated against Black voters.

After the Supreme Court instructed the lower court to revisit its decision in light of an April ruling that weakened the Voting Rights Act (VRA), a three-judge panel of Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump appointees again found on May 26 that the map was unconstitutional.
…………..

The state’s primaries were originally supposed to take place on May 19, but Alabama’s Republican leaders suspended the election while they raced to take advantage of Callais to eliminate one of the state’s two majority-Black districts and boost Republicans’ chances in six of the state’s seven districts.

In her dissent, Obama-appointee Sotomayor wrote that the conservative justices had rejected an “orderly election, held under a tried-and-tested congressional map” and instead chose “a chaotic election, held under a never-before-used congressional map that intentionally discriminates against Black Alabamians.”
……………………
Alabama also adopted the map “in unashamed defiance of a prior court order directly affirmed by this Court,” Sotomayor wrote.

In 2023, the Supreme Court upheld a ruling rejecting another Alabama map drawn in 2021 that eliminated a majority-Black district.

“Just as Alabama doubled down on racial discrimination, the Court today doubles down on chaos,” Sotomayor wrote.

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Posted in 2026 Elections, Black Voter Suppression, Breaking News, Chief Justice John Roberts, Elections, Gerrymandering, Open Thread, Politics, Supreme Court, Updated Jim Crow, Voting Rights, Voting Rights Act | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Call Alert! Call Your Congressman and tell them HELL NO ON Section 224

THEE ENTIRE PHUCK!!!

GenXGirl
@GenXGirl1994
House Armed Services Committee Hearing on FY27 NDAA is on Thursday, June 4, 2026 at 10:00AM

CALL TO ACTION: Tell your House Rep to Remove ❌ Section 224: US-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation

CALL YOUR HOUSE REP: 202-224-3121

GenXGirl
@GenXGirl1994
CONFIRMED: SECTION 224 WAS ISRAEL’S PLAN

Israel’s Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu confirms Section 224 of the NDAA was HIS PLAN in a letter to Congress, thanking them for doing his bidding.

TELL YOUR HOUSE REP TO REMOVE SECTION 224!
https://x.com/GenXGirl1994/status/2062214961863037259

Brian Allen
@allenanalysis
JUST IN: Benjamin Netanyahu just thanked Congress for Section 224 of the NDAA.

That should probably get your attention.

Foreign leaders don’t usually thank Congress for provisions they don’t consider important.

Section 224 creates a “United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative” focused on joint weapons development, data sharing, and deeper military coordination. (Al Jazeera)

Go read Section 224.
https://x.com/allenanalysis/status/2062238619868266767?s=20

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Posted in Breaking News, Israel, Military Weaponry, Open Thread, Politics, US military | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Open Thread | Data Centers- We Can’t Continue Down This Path

Read this and the video shown at the link is devastating.

Wall Street Apes
@WallStreetApes
This is the Rio Grande in New Mexico

It’s currently completely dry

Meta’s data center in Los Lunas in central New Mexico is using 75 million gallons of water per year from the Rio Grande water

But they’re not the only Data Center using Rio Grande water, there’s many more.

The Rio Grande River is dry through here for a few reasons

– Extremely low snowpack this winter
– Record-low reservoir levels like Elephant Butte, which is New Mexico’s largest on the Rio Grande are at critically low levels
– Agriculture uses 85% of water use from the Rio Grande in New Mexico, it’s unsustainable long-term
– Data Centers

The exact number actively drawing from it right now is not fully public due to limited transparency on water rights

Total data centers in New Mexico: Around 21 operating or planned facilities. These centers collectively consume up to 1.8 billion gallons per year

Large proposed projects like Project Jupiter near El Paso are in the Lower Rio Grande region and would require significant ongoing water use

This isn’t sustainable. This can’t continue

https://x.com/WallStreetApes/status/2058905926984405155?s=20

Khashoggi’s Ghost
‪@urocklive1.bsky.social‬

Follow
This pretty much sums it up:

1/2



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Posted in Climate Change, Data Centers, Open Thread, Politics | Tagged , , , | 26 Comments

Weekend Open Thread

Good Morning.
I hope that you are enjoying this weekend with family and friends.

The concert that never was😂😂

Posted in Weekend Open Thread | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Open Thread | They Have Outlived Their Usefulness

Plain and simple.

Willie Ross Jr. Knee Deep
@RossKneeDeep
Very interesting:

All four Black House Republicans are retiring — the timing tells an important story.
All four Black Republican members of the House of Representatives have announced they will not seek reelection after this term. The departures are happening simultaneously, during a second Trump presidency that has taken a documented and systematic approach to eliminating diversity programs, removing Black officials from positions across the federal government, and installing a senior leadership team that is overwhelmingly white in composition.

The GOP spent several years — particularly in the period following 2020 — making visible and stated efforts to recruit and elect Black candidates to Congress. The argument was both moral and strategic: a party that aspires to govern a diverse country should reflect some of that diversity in its elected representation. Those efforts produced, among others, the members now leaving.

The context in which they’re leaving is specific. The current administration has not only rolled back diversity, equity, and inclusion programs across federal agencies — it has done so with explicit rhetoric that frames such programs as discriminatory against white people. Trump has personally circulated content that carries white nationalist framing. Black officials who were appointed or retained in earlier periods have been removed in significant numbers.

For Black Republicans who spent careers making the argument that their party had room for them and for the communities they represented, this environment creates a specific and difficult position. The argument they were making — that Black voters and Black candidates could find meaningful space in Republican politics — faces the most direct possible institutional challenge from the top of their own party.

The four retirements are individual decisions made for individual reasons. But four simultaneous exits by the entire Black Republican caucus in the House, in this specific moment, is a pattern that carries meaning beyond any single member’s calculus.
What it means for the party’s stated commitment to diversity, for Black voters who supported Republican candidates, and for the candidates who might have considered following this path is a question the departures make more urgent rather than less.

Where does Black MAGA go from here?
https://x.com/RossKneeDeep/status/2050032845049987378?s=20

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Posted in GOP, Open Thread, Politics | Tagged , , , , | 21 Comments

Open Thread | Pope Leo XIV Apologizes For Holy See’s Role In Legitimizing Slavery and Failing To Condemn It

I never thought that I would read these words.

The Associated Press
@AP
BREAKING: Pope Leo XIV makes historic apology for Holy See’s own role in legitimizing slavery and for failing to condemn i.t for centuries

Pope Leo XIV makes historic apology for Vatican’s role in legitimizing slavery
By NICOLE WINFIELD and PAOLO SANTALUCIA
Updated 11:59 AM CDT, May 25, 2026

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Leo XIV made a historic apology on Monday for the Holy See’s role in legitimizing slavery and for having failed to condemn it for centuries, calling the Vatican’s record a “wound in Christian memory.”

Past popes have apologized for Christians’ involvement in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. But no pope had ever publicly acknowledged, much less apologized for, the role that past popes played in giving European sovereigns explicit authority to subjugate and enslave “infidels.”

History’s first U.S.-born pope, whose family history includes both enslaved people and slave owners, delivered the apology in his first encyclical, “Magnifica Humanitas,” (Magnificent Humanity), which was released Monday.

The sweeping manifesto is about safeguarding humanity in an era of increasing reliance on artificial intelligence. Leo raised the slave trade in relation to what he called the new forms of slavery and colonialism that the digital revolution is fueling.

Black American Catholics, activists and scholars have long called for the Holy See to atone for its role in the colonial-era trade in human beings, beyond generic apologies for the involvement of individual Christians.

“It is impossible not to feel deep sorrow when contemplating the immense suffering and humiliation endured by so many in stark contrast to their immeasurable dignity as persons infinitely loved by the Lord,” Leo wrote. “For this, in the name of the church, I sincerely ask for pardon.”

Shannen Dee Williams, historian at the University of Dayton and author of the 2022 history of American Black Catholic nuns, “Subversive Habits,” welcomed the apology as a “monumental step toward the kind of essential truth-telling and reparation that many Catholics have prayed and worked to witness.”

“The Catholic Church has never been an innocent bystander in the history of white supremacy,” said Williams. “Black Catholics have waited a long time to hear the Vatican speak honestly about the church’s leading roles in the trans-Atlantic slave trade and chattel slavery–and thus by extension the enduring systems of anti-Black racism in the world today.”

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Posted in Catholic Church, Christianity, Open Thread, Politics, Slave Trade | Tagged , , , , , , | 55 Comments

Clarence B. Jones, Dr. King’s Trusted Attorney and Advisor, Dead at 95

RIP, Mr. Jones

Reverend Al Sharpton
@TheRevAl
I’m saddened by the news of the passing of Attorney Clarence Jones, Dr. King’s attorney and a mentor and friend to me. He was a brilliant strategist, lawyer, author, and philanthropist. So many of us owe a great debt to Clarence Jones.

“Clarence B. Jones, a confidant, lawyer and speechwriter for the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. during the civil rights struggles of the 1960s, who helped plan the March on Washington and drafted part of Dr. King’s celebrated “I Have a Dream” speech, died on Friday in Cupertino, Calif. He was 95.

His death, at an assisted-living facility, was confirmed by his son, Clarence Jr.
A brilliant organizer and a member of Dr. King’s inner circle, Mr. Jones planned protest campaigns; raised funds for Dr. King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference; and coordinated legal strategies to challenge discriminatory laws, defend arrested demonstrators and fight lawsuits against their leaders.

He was one of the lawyers who represented four Black ministers in a seminal case of libel law, The New York Times v. Sullivan, in which the United States Supreme Court held that a public official could not win damages for criticism of his official performance without proving that published statements were made with deliberate malice. It was a landmark victory for the constitutional guarantee of freedom of the press, and cleared the way for reporting on widespread disorder and civil rights infringements in the South without fear of libel actions.

It was also a clarifying victory for civil rights leaders. “We regarded the suit as an effort to politically discredit the leadership of the direct action civil rights movement of Dr. King,” Mr. Jones told law students at the University of San Francisco in 2012. “The political objective of the lawsuit was to bankrupt and decapitate the civil rights leadership.

The many-sided Mr. Jones was at various times a California entertainment lawyer, the first Black partner…” – full article via https://nytimes.com/2026/05/25/us/clarence-b-jones-dead.html

#RIP
#ClarenceBJones

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Posted in Black History, Civil Rights, Open Thread | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Happy Memorial Day!

African American Contributions to Memorial Day
National Mall and Memorial Parks

“Louisiana furnished 24,000 Black men to help put down the rebellion. You talk about strewing flowers upon the graves of our departed Comrades. Who are the ones that do it down South but the Black people?” – Comrade Boyle of Louisiana, speaking before a national gathering of the Grand Army of the Republic, 1907.[1]

“The Constitution that governs us was sustained by the sword and bayonet. The Black soldier played an important part, and as an evidence of their valor, look at yonder graves.” – M.C Maxfield, speaking at a DC Memorial Day ceremony in 1911.[2]

The Origins of Memorial Day
At the April 1901 dedication of the General John A. Logan Memorial, speakers like President William McKinley and New York Senator Chauncey Depew spoke of the nation’s debt to General Logan for his General Order No.11, which in 1868 formalized the annual floral decoration of the graves on Memorial Day, also referred to as Decoration Day.[3] While there is a historical debate over where and when the very first observation of Memorial Day took place, one of the earliest recorded observations of the holiday indisputably took place in Charleston, South Carolina, in the closing days of the Civil War.

On May 1, 1865, the freed people of Charleston gathered at the old racetrack to decorate the graves of 257 Union prisoners of war who had been hastily buried by the retreating Confederate army. The largely African American crowd watched the men of the 35th and 104th United States Colored Troops (USCT), along with the men of the famed 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, perform drills before listening to speeches addressing the meaning of the long and bloody war. When the ceremonies were finished, the crowd dispersed to lay flowers on the graves of the men who had died fighting for Union and for liberty.[4]
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Posted in Black History, Memorial Day, Open Thread, Politics | Tagged , , , | 21 Comments

Weekend Open Thread

Good Morning.
I hope that you are enjoying this weekend with family and friends.

Posted in Weekend Open Thread | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Open Thread | Trump DOJ: Yale’s Medical School Has Way Too Many Black Students

Trump DOJ: Yale’s Medical School Has Way Too Many Black Students
The administration’s view is that the mere presence of students of color at elite schools is incontrovertible proof of discrimination against white people.
By Madiba K. Dennie
May 18, 2026

In April 2025, the Department of Justice launched an investigation into Yale University, accusing its medical school of making admissions decisions based on race and, in so doing, violating the Civil Rights Act of 1964. On Thursday, May 14, the agency published its predictable findings: “Yale discriminated against other applicants to benefit preferred race classes of Black and Hispanic.” About a week earlier, Trump’s DOJ reached the identical conclusion about UCLA School of Medicine.

In both cases, there was no real doubt it would do so. The conservative legal movement has spent decades arguing that laws designed to remedy the effects of white supremacy—in education, elections, and elsewhere—require the entrenchment of white supremacy instead. And throughout his second term, Trump has aggressively built on this legal foundation for resegregation. The DOJ’s latest findings treat the mere existence of Black students as legal grounds for threatening a school’s federal funding—a standard that could make other medical schools more reluctant to admit Black students, which would have a devastating impact on the health of Black communities.

The DOJ first purports to show Yale’s “intent to discriminate” through a review of the medical school’s internal policies and practices. Specifically, the government alleges that Yale conducts interviews “that enable the committee to know applicants’ race and ethnicity,” and considers applicants’ socioeconomic status, which functions as a “racial proxy.”

The Trump administration’s smoking-gun evidence for this conclusion is an orientation packet that Yale provided to admissions personnel, which included a “holistic metrics model” produced by the Association of American Medical Colleges, an organization that helps accredit medical schools. The DOJ findings letter complains that AAMC’s model “shows a myriad of factors that appear unrelated to medicine.” And it features an image of AAMC’s graphic, with the most offensive characteristics—“race” and “national origin”—circled in red.

From there, the DOJ provides the results of its own “preliminary statistical aggregation” of Yale’s medical school admissions data for the incoming classes of 2023, 2024, and 2025, and found “no change in racial disparity between admitted students” before and after Students For Fair Admissions v. Harvard, the Supreme Court’s 2023 decision restricting race-conscious admission programs. In an amicus brief in that case, Yale argued that “no workable race-neutral alternatives” to affirmative action would produce a sufficiently diverse student body. “Given this statement,” the DOJ wrote, “the lack of any change in Yale’s admissions outcomes” demonstrates the school’s “willful failure to comply with that decision.” Put simply, there are more Black students at Yale than the Trump administration expected, and so, it suspects Yale is breaking the law.

The Yale findings show that the Trump administration is literally treating the presence of Black students as evidence of illegal racial discrimination. Because the Civil Rights Act prohibits recipients of federal financial assistance from engaging in such discrimination, this means that schools’ federal funds are at risk unless they reduce their Black student population to something Trump is more comfortable with. The report did not specify what this level might be, which means that for schools, the safest way to avoid suspicion is to not admit Black students at all.

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Posted in Breaking News, DEI, discrimination, Education, Healthcare, Institutional Racism, Open Thread, Politics, Racism | Tagged , , , , , | 6 Comments