General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsNikki Haley and the GOP nurtured the environment that led to Charleston.
It is no secret that one of the baubles of the conservative movement is the Confederate flag, which appeared on Roofs license plate. It is a symbol of white supremacy and slavery, and it is also a symbol that is a part of South Carolina's official government as the flag flies in the capital. When questioned about her states continued support for it, Governor Haley shrugged it off.
South Carolina hasn't exactly left its racist history behind. Haley has consistently sided with more guns, fewer voting rights, and fostering a conservative culture of fear and suspicion. Last year, she signed a new and even more expansive bill for concealed weapons and easier access to guns in her state. She was applauded by the NRA for this bill. In an age where abortion clinics are bombed, elementary school children are gunned down on a cyclical basis, and lone gunmen have unlimited access to machine guns, the idea of expanding gun rights seems inconceivable, especially in a state where a gun-related death happens every 14 hours.
Meanwhile, South Carolina was one of the first to add more restrictions on voting after the Supreme Court cut away at the Voting Rights Act and Republicans continue to pursue new voting rights restrictions aimed at black and Latino citizens. South Carolina is also one of the only states not to have a hate crime law on the books.
Given the history of the South, along the rise of both active shooters and gun access, we can't call what happened Wednesday night a senseless tragedy. In fact, the Charleston church shooting is full of savage sense. Thanks to complicity at best, and outright racist at worst, the inconceivable is still feasible. The fear tactics that were once localized in the dark backwoods of our political landscape now reach every phone and laptop. Today, xenophobia and bigotry are the daily platforms from which many conservatives speak to their shrinking base. The Charleston shooting is not a random act of violence, but part of a long litany of history culminating in a painful present.
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/cafe/conservatives-dont-know-why-charleston-happened
blm
(113,074 posts)Aren't there RW conferences pretty much monthly at this point?