In 1999,southern confederate state Alabama still had laws against interracial marriage and 36 % opposed or were unsure about repealing it
http://www.cnn.com/US/9903/12/interracial.marriage/
Alabama considers lifting interracial marriage ban
March 12, 1999
Web posted at: 1:32 p.m. EST (1832 GMT)
MONTGOMERY, Alabama (CNN) -- The Alabama House of Representatives is set to vote on a controversial bill that would repeal a ban on interracial marriages.
Last year, a similar measure died in a legislative committee. But on Wednesday, a House panel voted to send the proposed constitutional amendment to the full House for consideration.
Alabama is the last state in the union to have such a law on its books. Although the state stopped enforcing it decades ago, after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled such laws unconstitutional, the fact that it has not been officially repealed remains a sore point for many in Alabama.
"These kinds of things represent oppression and slavery and discrimination against black people," said Rep. Alvin Holmes, who introduced the bill to the legislature.
Major Cox, who is black, and his wife, Margaret, who is white, would also like to see the law repealed, although they have been married for 18 years.
"Taking it off (the books) will be a recognition of the progress that the state is making," she said.
If the bill is approved by the House and Senate, it will clear the way for a statewide vote.
A measure intended to repeal Alabama's ban on interracial marriage died in committee last year
A recent poll in Alabama indicated high support for the bill. About 63 percent of those who responded to the poll favored lifting the ban on interracial marriage while 26 percent were opposed. Ten percent said they were not sure or had no reply.
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2011/04/mississippi-republicans/349433/
Poll: 46 Percent of Mississippi GOP Want to Ban Interracial Marriage
Also, those folks are pretty keen on Sarah Palin
So the liberal-leaning Public Policy Polling outfit posed a revealing question to Mississippi Republicans in their latest survey: "Do you think interracial marriage should be legal or illegal?"
Shockingly, 46 percent of the state's GOP voters replied "illegal." 14 percent bizarrely responded "not sure." That means about 60 percent of these Southern Republicans are hearkening back to a time--1958 to be exact--when the American mainstream overwhelmingly looked down on people with different shades of skin getting married.
One of the reasons why I don't like to debate you, is that you like to nitpick your evidence while ignoring the whole 'enchilada'. I still stand that racism is split evenly among political parties and that the % of racist people in this country is rather small. Live with that.In 1999,southern confederate state Alabama still had laws against interracial marriage and 36 % opposed or were unsure about repealing it
http://www.cnn.com/US/9903/12/interracial.marriage/
Alabama considers lifting interracial marriage ban
March 12, 1999
Web posted at: 1:32 p.m. EST (1832 GMT)
MONTGOMERY, Alabama (CNN) -- The Alabama House of Representatives is set to vote on a controversial bill that would repeal a ban on interracial marriages.
Last year, a similar measure died in a legislative committee. But on Wednesday, a House panel voted to send the proposed constitutional amendment to the full House for consideration.
Alabama is the last state in the union to have such a law on its books. Although the state stopped enforcing it decades ago, after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled such laws unconstitutional, the fact that it has not been officially repealed remains a sore point for many in Alabama.
"These kinds of things represent oppression and slavery and discrimination against black people," said Rep. Alvin Holmes, who introduced the bill to the legislature.
Major Cox, who is black, and his wife, Margaret, who is white, would also like to see the law repealed, although they have been married for 18 years.
"Taking it off (the books) will be a recognition of the progress that the state is making," she said.
If the bill is approved by the House and Senate, it will clear the way for a statewide vote.
A measure intended to repeal Alabama's ban on interracial marriage died in committee last year
A recent poll in Alabama indicated high support for the bill. About 63 percent of those who responded to the poll favored lifting the ban on interracial marriage while 26 percent were opposed. Ten percent said they were not sure or had no reply.
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2011/04/mississippi-republicans/349433/
Poll: 46 Percent of Mississippi GOP Want to Ban Interracial Marriage
Also, those folks are pretty keen on Sarah Palin
So the liberal-leaning Public Policy Polling outfit posed a revealing question to Mississippi Republicans in their latest survey: "Do you think interracial marriage should be legal or illegal?"
Shockingly, 46 percent of the state's GOP voters replied "illegal." 14 percent bizarrely responded "not sure." That means about 60 percent of these Southern Republicans are hearkening back to a time--1958 to be exact--when the American mainstream overwhelmingly looked down on people with different shades of skin getting married.
Very instructive that these debates were so recent : roughly 2000.
More it goes and more I am realizing I have really no understanding of the long terms effects of the transatlantic slave trade to people's behaviours.
From finding out about it, 2019 would be basically 400 years of this kind of stuff and its system lasted in the country that brought it to its paroxism ( USA),
and to have this "Charlottesville" going on, really shows how deep the issue is into the
subconscious of Americans.
May be Americans really need to discuss it really openly and get to the bottom/truth of it.
May be one day, it will be too late.
Racism in the south keeps getting passed down from generation to generation.It is getting better but its not ending anytime soon imo.I cant say I would support the south winning the civil war in 1865 because slavery would have gone on longer but today I would support and vote for the original confederate states and a few other red states like Oklahoma,West Virginia,Kansas,Missouri and Kentucky and start their own conservative white supremacist nation.
You don't want a one party system (however much you dislike the other party).. The lesson of the DPRK should suffice. What we need is civil discourse. We can disagree, but that is it. We disagree. A civil discourse.
You don't want a one party system (however much you dislike the other party).. The lesson of the DPRK should suffice. What we need is civil discourse. We can disagree, but that is it. We disagree. A civil discourse.
Racism in the south keeps getting passed down from generation to generation.It is getting better but its not ending anytime soon imo.I cant say I would support the south winning the civil war in 1865 because slavery would have gone on longer but today I would support and vote for the original confederate states and a few other red states like Oklahoma,West Virginia,Kansas,Missouri and Kentucky and start their own conservative white supremacist nation.
The progressive left WANTS a one-party system... some form of socialistic dictatorship. And they thought they had it nailed down with the presumed Hellary win. I like Bannon's comment, "you don't think they're going to let you take your country back without a fight, do you?"
That's what all of this turmoil is about.
Racism in the south keeps getting passed down from generation to generation.