First Time Voters – In 1966, African Americans In Alabama Patiently Waiting To Vote, For The First Time In Their Lives … the voting rights act was passed a year earlier. [568×350]
Meanwhile, Dallas County AL Sheriff Jim Clark, who had lead the charge on horseback of the peaceful protesters crossing the Edmund Pettis Bridge in Selma, on this day goes around collecting the ballot boxes in black polling places, and refuses to turn them in to be counted.
Today’s modern Trumpublican party is still doing everything possible, whether legal or not, to suppress the black vote.
greed-man
Meanwhile, Dallas County AL Sheriff Jim Clark, who had lead the charge on horseback of the peaceful protesters crossing the Edmund Pettis Bridge in Selma, on this day goes around collecting the ballot boxes in black polling places, and refuses to turn them in to be counted.
Today’s modern Trumpublican party is still doing everything possible, whether legal or not, to suppress the black vote.