vimarsana.com

Page 65 - அட்லாண்டா மேயர் கேஷா லான்ஸ் பாட்டம்ஸ் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

playnice_文学城博客

Other news, 04/09/2021 (2021-04-09 09:23:15) 下一个 Biden admin to create a commission to evaluate the expansion of the Supreme Court; a potential first step in adding more justices to the highest court in the United States. Biden admin is considering sending American tax dollars to Central Americans in a bid to prevent them from making the trek north (Reuters) White House s border coordinator Roberta S. Jacobson resigns as the Biden admin struggles to contain the historic surge in migrants (Daily Mail) Pennsylvania agrees to remove names deceased from voter rolls, in lawsuit agreement  Democrat Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms signed an executive order on Wednesday to “mitigate the impact” of Georgia’s new election security bill known as The Election Integrity Act of 2021.

Jim Crow 2 0 or no big deal: Here s what s in that hotly debated Georgia voting law

Jim Crow 2.0 or no big deal: Here s what s in that hotly debated Georgia voting law cbc.ca 2 hrs ago Alexander Panetta © Dustin Chambers/Reuters Protesters gathered outside the Georgia State Capitol last month as lawmakers debated several voting bills. Defenders of a now-passed law say it s being badly distorted. It seems the one basic fact everyone can agree on with respect to Georgia s controversial new voting law is that an outrageous injustice has been committed. What that outrage is depends on who you talk to. Opponents of the just-passed bill call it a modern-day version of racist old laws that enforced segregation in the U.S. for decades. Jim Crow 2.0, is how Park Cannon, a state lawmaker arrested while protesting the bill, described it to CBC News.

Sports and politics don t mix, yet they keep colliding | Opinion

If the late Martin Luther King Jr. were to hold the Montgomery bus boycott today, would conservative politicians call him a “woke” activist pushing a repressive “cancel culture”? That thought came to mind after Georgia’s Gov. Brian Kemp, former President Donald Trump and other Republican leaders denounced woke Democrats and cancel culture over Major League Baseball’s decision to move their 2021 All-Star Game out of Georgia to protest the Peach State’s new restraints on voting access. Cancel culture, in case you’ve been quarantined on the moon for the past few years, refers to cultural and economic boycotts and general shunning and shaming of people or institutions over their political views or actions. Initiated by the political and social left, the term has been embraced, like “political correctness,” by the right as a cudgel against the left.

GA State Rep Won t Face Charges for Knocking on Governor s Door as He Signed Voter Suppression Bill

HeadlineApr 08, 2021 Image Credit: Tamara Stevens In Georgia, the Fulton County district attorney will not prosecute state Representative Park Cannon, who was arrested last month for knocking on Republican Governor Brian Kemp’s door as he signed a sweeping voter suppression bill. She said the public deserved to witness what was happening. Representative Cannon spoke to CNN last week about her arrest. Rep. Park Cannon: “It makes me wonder why. Why were they arresting me? Why were they doing this? Why did the world have to experience another traumatizing arrest?” In related news, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms issued an executive order Tuesday designed to “mitigate the impact” of Georgia’s new voting restrictions. The actions will center on educating voters, helping them obtain identification and training city staff on how to assist voters.

Georgia lawmaker vows I will keep knocking after charges dropped from protest arrest

Georgia lawmaker vows ‘I will keep knocking’ after charges dropped from protest arrest Rep. Park Cannon says she’s not done protesting the state’s elections changes Updated:  Tags:  The charges against a Georgia state representative arrested last month while protesting the state’s controversial voting law have been dropped, and she vows to continue the fight against the elections changes. Rep. Park Cannon held a news conference Thursday to talk about the incident that initially got her charged with felony obstruction and disrupting the general assembly session. “I walked down to the governor’s office because I wanted to be in the room as these men placed nooses around Black and brown voters’ necks,” she said. “I vow to you that I will keep knocking. And I ask you, Georgia, to keep knocking. America, keep knocking. All the marginalized people, keep knocking.”

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.