Oh, Georgia! Voter suppression by the candidate who had the responsibility of oversight over his own race. And you ignored the conflicts of interest as Brian Kemp purged the voter rolls of black voters and closed numerous polling places in majority-black counties–all to keep them folks from turning out and voting for his opponent.
I suppose I should be thanking you, Georgia, because you make Florida look good, but I am not.
This is what the school-to-prison pipeline looks like. A 12-year-old boy is given cash by his parents to pay for his school lunch. (Let’s not imagine what might have happened if his parents had not given him money for lunch. There are too many lunch-shaming stories floating around as it is.)
The cashier runs the counterfeit pen across the bill and the streak turns blackish or brown. Counterfeit! (The iodine solution in the pen reacts to wood-pulp-based paper, but does not react to the fiber-based cotton and linen the U.S. Treasury uses to make currency.)
What happens next? The straight A, honor roll student is punished with a 10-day suspension. Although the investigation reveals he had no idea and his parents did not know either, that did not matter.
Ignorance of the law is no excuse, boy! Neither is your tender age and innocence that kept you from questioning the cash your parents gave you for your lunch. Possession is nine-tenths of the law (as the saying goes), you possessed, you will be punished.
Oh, Georgia! Oh, America! How can you be okay with this?
In wonder if his punishment would have been different had he gone to a school that was predominately white versus African American, because the school he goes to is 80% black with an over 90% minority population and a predominately black administration, but the white Superintendent reversed the disciplinary decision. Is that what it’s like to be black in America? Where your own race treats ykumworse than the evil white people? How about you tell the whole story rather than race bait.
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