Is 48 years long enough to erase centuries of systemic disenfranchisement of voters who belong to minority ethnic or racial groups?
If you are an 18-year-old African-American from the South, you need only ask your grandfather what it was like to be educated in a segregated school. And if you are a Latino from Arizona, you should ask your abuelos if they recall the term “Operation Eagle Eye,” a voter intimidation scheme designed by Republicans in the 1960s to suppress the vote of minorities.
I find it hard to believe that conservatives who revel in tradition and our connection to history have somehow managed to be convinced that those centuries-old traditions of suppressing minority rights have magically dissipated from society so easily.
These are the same conservatives who use scriptures written thousands of years ago to justify sustaining archaic myths about marriage as central to the foundation of civilization. It took Mississippi 148 years to ratify the 13th Amendment of the Constitution, which bans slavery. Yes, meaning the 13th Amendment was officially ratified just this year in Mississippi.
Yet the culture of white privilege that bred the systemic racism which has been infused into our institutions over hundreds of years is supposed to have withered away in five decades.
It makes one wonder if conservatives even believe what they are saying when they cite these ancient authorities, or respond so contemptuously to Latino migration by claiming cultural incompatibility with our supposed Anglo heritage.
On Wednesday, the Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of Section 5 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act in Shelby County v. Holder. This key provision of the act requires jurisdictions with a historical pattern of voter discrimination against minorities to submit any changes in their voting procedures to the Department of Justice for review to ensure that those laws do not harm the influence of minority voters.
The Voting Rights Act has been reauthorized four times since 1965, the last time in 2006. The Senate voted 99-0 and the House of Representatives voted 390-33 to reauthorize the act, with all thirty-three dissenting votes coming from the Republican Party.









