ALL AGAINST ALL: The fuzzy language came into our lives!

THURSDAY, MAY 14, 2026

It still hasn't gone away: It's as we noted in yesterday's report:

1982 was the year the fuzzy language came into our lives. Meanwhile, those were the days!

The legislation containing the fuzzy language was overwhelmingly passed by the Senate and the House! Why in the world did that happen?

As we showed you yesterday, the fuzzy language was hiding in plain sight, right there in subsection (b)in that addition to the original Section 2 of the original Voting Rights Act. After the new language was signed into law by President Reagan, Section 2 of the VRA said this:

SEC. 2. ΓΈ52 U.S.C. 10301¿ (a) No voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard, practice, or procedure shall be imposed or applied by any State or political subdivision in a manner which results in a denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color, or in contravention of the guarantees set forth in section 4(f)(2), as provided in subsection (b). 

(b) A violation of subsection (a) is established if, based on the totality of circumstances, it is shown that the political processes leading to nomination or election in the State or political subdivision are not equally open to participation by members of a class of citizens protected by subsection (a) in that its members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice. The extent to which members of a protected class have been elected to office in the State or political subdivision is one circumstance which may be considered: Provided, That nothing in this section establishes a right to have members of a protected class elected in numbers equal to their proportion in the population. 

Where the heck was the fuzzy language? We'd say it showed up here:

"less opportunity...to elect representatives of their choice."   

That may not sound like fuzzy languagebut we're sorry, it actually is. We'll spell it out as follows:

Let's consider the requirements of this new subsection (b). Basically, subsection (b) contained two legislative declarations. 

The first declaration was quite straightforward. At the time, pretty much everyone would have known what was meant by this:

The political processes [in State A] are not equally open to participation by [Black Americans] if [Black Americans] have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process.   

At that time, everyone could picture what some such formulation pretty much probably meant! Given the gruesome history at issue, it meant that State A could no longer insult the human project in the way some southern states had traditionally done, by making it virtually impossibleCan you guess the number of jellybeans?for a certain group of people to register to vote. 

Such procedures were no longer legal! Within the context of American racial history, anyone might have assumed that that's what that language meant.  

That language was reasonably straightforward, or at least seemed to be. On the other hand, how about a declaration like this:

The political processes [in State A] are not equally open to participation by [Black Americans] if [Black Americans] have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to elect representatives of their choice.   

Are you sure you know what that formulation means? Are you sure you know what it supposedly meant?

To this day, we don't have the slightest idea how to paraphrase that jumbled helping of salad. We don't feel sure, not in the slightest, that we can say, with any certainty, what that new declaration was actually supposed to mean.   

By now, everyone knows what it came to meanmore specifically, what it came to be taken to mean. Down through the years, it came to be taken to mean that "members of a class of citizens protected by subsection (a)"in the immediate sense, Black Americanscould expect to be afforded something approaching proportional representation in the House of Representatives.

That's what it came to be taken to mean! We say that because of the original court order which led to the recent Supreme Court decision, Louisiana v. Callais. Here's the way that original court order went down:

The state of Louisiana (roughly 33% black) had prepared a congressional map with only one majority Black House districtonly one out of six! The state was then ordered, by a lower court, to create a second such district.

When Louisiana did that very thing, the Supreme Court ruled, in Louisiana v. Callais, that the creation of that second district violated Constitutional edicts. And with that, the rush to "crack" districts which were majority Blackthe rush to break those congressional districts aparttook off in various southern states, though not in every such state.  

Almost surely, this will reduce the number of Blacks in the House. The numbers go roughly like this:

At the start of the current Congress, there were 62 "Black lawmakers" in the House57 Democrats and five Republicans. In a recent column in the New York Times, Jamelle Bouie recorded the way those numbers had grown over time, going all the way back to 1965:   

John Roberts Believes in an America That Doesn’t Exist

[...]  

[I]t took a major amendment to the Voting Rights Act and a Supreme Court decision to give Black Americans the opportunity to win more than token representation in Congress. In 1982, Congress reauthorized and amended the V.R.A. to combat disparate impact in voting and electoral outcomes. Four years later, in 1986, a unanimous Supreme Court declared that the Voting Rights Act forbade voting schemes that impaired the ability of “cohesive” groups of language or minority groups to “participate equally in the political process and to elect candidates of their choice.” Following this decision, states across the country—especially in the South—used the 1990 census and redistricting to create majority-minority state legislative and congressional districts where Black voters could elevate Black lawmakers and officials to federal office.

At the 10th anniversary of the [Voting Rights Act] in 1975, there were 17 Black members of Congress, up from six in 1965. All but one of them served in the House of Representatives. At the 20th anniversary in 1985, there were still only 20 Black Americans in the House (and none in the Senate). By 1995, however, there were 43 Black Americans serving as voting members of Congress, including one senator, Carol Moseley Braun of Illinois. This, even after the Democratic Party suffered its largest congressional defeat of the postwar era. Nonetheless, it would take another 20 years before Black Americans’ share of the House approximated their overall share of the population.

With its decision in Louisiana v. Callais last week, the Republican-appointed supermajority on the Supreme Court has delivered the latest in a string of decisions—stretching back to Shelby County v. Holder in 2013—that have weakened the Voting Rights Act’s ability to stop racial discrimination in voting and to secure fair representation in both Congress and state legislatures. Led by Chief Justice John Roberts, the conservative justices have sidelined lawmakers, invented doctrines and ignored their own rules and procedures in a relentless drive to trim the Voting Rights Act beyond all recognition.

After the 1982 amendment to the VRA, the numbers plainly took off. For what it's worth, Bouie's account of that unanimous Supreme Court decision in 1986 strikes us as almost wholly misguided, a point we'll touch on tomorrow.

In 1982, the fuzzy language came into our livesand then, the numbers took off. As of the start of the current Congress, Blacks were actually over-represented in the House, though by an extremely slender margin.

That said, this level of membership had been achieved, in some part, by the invention of crazily gerrymandered majority-Black districts which were anything but "concise." That was one of the words that unanimous Court used in 1986 as it shot down one last pathetic attempt in North Carolina to keep Blacks out of the House.

What the heck did Congress mean in the summer of 82? More specifically, what did the House and the Senate mean when they folded in the fuzzy language we've identified above?

It may be that no one knew for sure! That's one of the ways that large groups of pols can agree to vote for legislation whose specific meaning may be a bit hard to nail down.

It may be that no one knew! But over the years, for better or worse, the understanding of the requirements of the VRA kept bending toward the idea that various demographic groups had a right to expect something resembling "proportional representation," as we saw when Louisiana was told that it had to create a second district that was majority Black. 

Uh-oh! When Louisiana behaved as directed, the Supreme Court shot their new map down.

In recent decades, journalists and jurists alike have employed all sorts of murky formulations to avoid the use of the proscribed term, "proportional representation." (In his column, Bouie referred to something called "fair representation," a much less clearcut term.)

Many voices in Blue America are currently saying this Louisiana v. Callais has ushered in "Jim Crow 2.0." Tomorrow, we'll visit one example, drawn from the conversation which occurred when the Harvard professor and the Princeton professor spoke with the rising cable news star who graduated magna cum laude from Harvard.

(We refer to the conversation which occurred when the (very capable) rising star guest hosted on Velshi last Sunday.)

The Harvard professor and the Princeton professor oppose Louisiana v. Callais. As is perfectly obvious, a large number of well-intentioned, intelligent people do. 

They want the various states to continue to feel obliged to create weirdly gerrymandered districts for the purpose of sending a larger, as opposed to a smaller, number of Blacks to the House. At this site, we're inclined to think something different:

We're inclined to think that this is one of about three million beliefs and practices which will make it quite difficult, in the end, for Blue America to survive the current "war of the all against all" in which our floundering, failing former nation has long been haplessly engaged.

Tomorrow, we'll show you what the professors saidand the professors and the rising star are, all three, very good, highly accomplished people. We'll also ask you to ponder this:

How did their conversation look and sound to other people around the country? Other questions about their conversationand about the way it may have soundedmay also arise:

Does the look and the sound of their conversation help address the puzzlement recently voiced by Sunny Hostin? Speaking on The View, she said she was puzzled by the degree of support retained by President Trump, even at this late stage in the game.

We share her puzzlement, though only up to a point. That said, there's another question which may arise at this very dangerous time:

President Trump has very low approval ratings. But so does the Democratic Party as the midterms approach. 

The Dems may win the House this fall, but then again, it's possible that they won't. Meanwhile, the sitting president will still be there. He'll be there in either case. 

How in the worldhow on earthdid we ever get into this dangerous mess? 

How did it ever get this far? And might that conversation on Velshi, mixed with other discussions, possibly start to explain?

Tomorrow: Tomorrow, we'll have to hurry to get it all in! First: 

Why did the two parties agree, in the way they did for all those years, to create those majority-Black districts? We'll let Carl Hulse explain

(It's our impression that this was all understood and discussed in real time.)

Also, do those of us in Blue America know how we look and sound? How we look and sound to others? 

Admittedly, we're very bright. But do we understand how we occasionally seem?

Language from a writer: From Hemingway, in A Moveable Feast:
During our last year in the mountains new people came into our lives and nothing was ever the same...

 

 

55 comments:

  1. Where Bob puts “Black Americans” in n square brackets, perhaps he should use the singular “a black American.” As I read it the VRA applies to individual voters. An individual voter may not be deprived because he’s black. That is subtly different from saying that blacks as a group may not be deprived.

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    1. The world is on fire and our corrupt leadership is either stealing or screwing over everything they touch. And you are splitting hairs over the word blacks. Fuck you you Nazi enabling bitch.

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    2. Quaker in a BasementMay 14, 2026 at 2:44 PM

      Actually, I'm with David on this one. Well, sort of with David.

      Our Gracious Host notes the "fuzzy language" that obstructs a clear understanding of the issue of equal access to the ballot. David is correct that the fuzziness arises from mixing discussions of individual rights with consideration of collective rights.

      Redistricting isn't the only controversy where this fuzziness causes problems. The whole debate over the Second Amendment, the rights of "the People" to bear arms, and the maintenance of well-regulated militias is mired in confusion over whether the framers were talking about individual or collective rights.

      In any case, the potency of an individual's vote is diluted when legislatures rig the game so that some people always win and other never can.

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    3. Yes indeedy, Quaker, it's just as my neighbor Stonewall Beauregard Jackson was telling me the other day, he is confused by the "fuzziness" of the 14th and 15th language, What is a poor ol'
      rebel to do? GMAFB

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    4. No confusion on 2'nd Amendment. It says people have the right to arms in a militia. That's collective. Jerks just pretend the preceding wording is not what it is.

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    5. Some of those jerks are on the Supreme Court.

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    6. Quaker in a BasementMay 14, 2026 at 6:06 PM

      Very well, Nonny 2:49. Tell us which parts of those amendments discuss collective rights and which refer to individual rights.

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    7. Quaker, be real. It wasn’t ever individual blacks that were being denied the right to vote. And the individual right is meaningless without the collective right to elect a true representative

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  2. Dear Bob,
    You discuss the Gutfeld! show so much. Did you watch the Friday show where he had Gad Saad? Gad’s theory is that leftists are the way they are because they are infected with the Woke Mind Virus, and the society as a whole (not just the US, but Europe too) is going down the tubes because of leftists’ Suicidal Empathy. Food for thought!

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    1. it's sad that empathy has somehow become a bad thing.

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    2. “ Love thy neighbor as thyself” - said by some woke commie, probably

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    3. Woke was manufactured for the dumb rubes by a sick piece of work named Christopher Rufo. Only a rotten to the core person would adopt the teachings of a sick manipulative POS like Rufo over the teachings of Jesus Christ. Food for thought!

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    4. If that's your "food for thought", you're going to starve to death, my friend.

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  3. It’s like the old joke, I have as much right to bribe the president as any other billionaire

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  4. Democrats screwed the pooch with Biden and their two disasters female presidential candidates. They are politically hurting themselves by continuing to support race-conscious policies, even after such policies have become unpopular with the public. They should focus on class instead and try to appeal to working-class voters.

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    1. The fucking Governor of TN “cracked” the city of Memphis into 3 fucking parts to dilute the black vote. Who the fuck is race-conscious, maggot brain?

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    2. Working class bigotry is no more acceptable than the right-wing's white privilege. Feel free to become a Republican if it bothers you to honor the freedoms outlined in our Constitution.

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    3. You have to rise above it all or drown in your own shit.

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    4. Democrats should focus on white working class voters. Primarily white men.

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    5. Nonsense, maggot. right-wing's white privilege is perfectly acceptable, it fucking rules the Supreme Court

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    6. ...freedoms outlined in our Constitution.

      It never ceases to amaze me how the right-wing racists always forget that the 14th and 15th Amendments to the Constitution are actually part of the Constitution and actually were specifically written to address RACISM TOWARDS BLACKS, you ignorant pissant.

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    7. Nope, still a dope.

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    8. It's just that the Democratic party should focus more on the white working class than they do on unpopular race conscious policies if they want to be more successful than they have been. It's more fun to win than it is to lose.

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    9. The “white” working class? No other members of the working class count?

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    10. Of course they count. The whites are the vast majority and therefore where all the power and votes are. Does that make sense?

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    11. I thought you maggots were all concerned with the tyranny of the majority; that is why Hillary Clinton never became president. Now you're all ok with the tyranny of the majority? It's always heads you win, tails we lose with you rebs.

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    12. The “vast majority”, 3:43? How old is your information?

      “The U.S. working class, often defined as workers without a four-year college degree, is diverse, with workers of color making up 45% of this group. While historically considered mostly white, the current working class is roughly 53–55% non-Hispanic white, 13–14% Black, 21–25% Hispanic, and 4% Asian.”

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    13. A majority of them are white. That's why it would be politically smart to cater to them. And why it's politically disadvantageous to not cater to them.

      Point is Democrats have gotten caught up in unpopular race conscious policies. They need to get away from that and cater to white men from the working class as well as the minorities in the working class in order to be successful.

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    14. https://jacobin.com/2026/04/working-class-voters-dealignment-trump-democrats

      "Working-class voters may be having second thoughts about MAGA, but they’re still abandoning the Democratic Party. Democrats’ reliance on college-educated suburbanites is arithmetically insufficient and politically unsustainable."

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    15. It must be all those republican pro-working class policies that attracted the white working class to the Republican Party. I’m sure you can think of one….?

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    16. (Democrats pretend to care about black people but black people know they don't really give a shit about them. So stop trying. Stop faking. Be real. Are you going to sit there and say with a straight face you give a shit about black people?)

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    17. 5:15 they just pretended to listen to them and care about them. That's all. That's the difference. That's all it takes.

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    18. To be fair, king chickenshit really clamped down on the Haitians eating our pets. That’s something.

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  5. Somerby doesn't believe in racism or understand about systemic racism and voter suppression, which continues today and affects black voters disproportionately at the polls. All this nonsense about fuzzy language and splitting of hairs is motivated by a desire to deny the existence of racism. It is sophistry. There is no need to wade into the weeds with Somerby on this topic. Dismiss him as a racist and leave the wrangling to Congress.

    Somerby has nothing to say on this matter.

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    1. He has also declared #metoo over. Meanwhile Republicans themselves have joined Democrats in forming a committee to investigate sexual improprieties by House members.

      Bigots don't get to declare when racism is over. The conservative Supreme Court will be addressed after Democrats take over Congress following the midterm wave.

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  6. After the 1982 amendment to the VRA, the numbers plainly took off. For what it's worth, Bouie's account of that unanimous Supreme Court decision in 1986 strikes us as almost wholly misguided, a point we'll touch on tomorrow.

    LOL, don't bother, TDH.

    As of the start of the current Congress, Blacks were actually over-represented in the House,

    At this point it is obvious TDH is just trolling.

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    1. All four Republican House members are leaving Congress at the ends of their terms. Burgess Owens is leaving due to redistricting. Others are leaving out of a more general frustration with the lack of accomplishment possible during Trump's administration and the retreat of the Republican Party from efforts to make its image more diverse.

      This puts the lie to Republican claims that they care about appealing to black voters:

      https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2026/04/29/black-republicans-are-abandoning-congress/

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    2. Can’t wait to see his “reasoning” here.

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  7. "by making it virtually impossible—Can you guess the number of jellybeans?—for a certain group of people to register to vote."

    This coy reference to black voters, who he calls "black Americans" as if their citizenship were at issue, as "a certain group of people" underlines that racists divide people into groups based on skin color, whereas our Constitution considers all of us to be part of that group known as citizens and voters. It is very odd the way Somerby uses language to refer to people whose voting rights are still being infringed by voter suppression methods and now explicit redistricting (between designated census taking years) to discriminate against them in their exercise of their voting rights.

    We had legislation to monitor and prevent this because, historically, those efforts were blatant. Now Somerby and the right are pretending that this is strictly a partisan matter because racially motivated vote suppression is not happening. Yet we have been the impact of voter suppression by right wing states in several previous elections (such as Stacey Abrams loss in GA). That suggests that the Supreme Court's assumption that the Voting Rights Act is no longer needed to prevent racial discrimination in voting is demonstrably incorrect. The use of specious technicalities to overthrow the means of achieving racial fairness is very obvious to those who are not right wingers. That obviously excludes Somerby.

    Placing voting rights abuses in the Jim Crow past (as Somerby does with his offensive jelly bean remark) ignores current practices, including reducing polling places in black districts, reducing vote by mail opportunities, requiring obscure forms of ID to vote, challenging black voters' registrations but not white voters' and similar tactics. If this were partisan, the means used to reduce Democratic voting would not be so obviously targeted at black people, the way it is.

    Somerby is refusing to deal with the reality of black voter suppression, which includes gerrymandering majority black districts out of existence, even when justified by geographically coherent demographics. This pretense that we cannot recognize what is happening is offensive on Somerby's part.

    I have no doubt that right wingers and bigots like Somerby considered blacks to be over-represented in the presidency when Obama was elected. After all, we have no all-black states.

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    1. You're stupid. What are you going to do about it?

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    2. Out vote you smarmy, er smart ones.

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    3. 2:34 do you believe yourself to be educable?

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  8. “As of the start of the current Congress, Blacks were actually over-represented in the House”

    This is just flat out wrong.

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    1. 1:35, yes simple math is difficult, apparently. The Republicans will know that their policy has achieved success when those four blacks are out of there. Then they can start working on their 1 black senator.

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  9. "Also, do those of us in Blue America know how we look and sound? How we look and sound to others?"

    People pleasers sacrifice their own needs to make others like them. If we, as Blue Americans, sacrifice what we stand for just to gain the approval of Others, we will no longer have integrity as a political party. We will no longer know what we want to accomplish and we will be indistinguishable from any other political party.

    The right wing is a party based on economic gain for those who are able to take advantage of opportunities to grift and con and otherwise benefit from advantages over Others. They all sell merch. They lie in order to steal, including lying to attain office, lying about their accomplishments, and lying in order to cook the books and make money from their official positions. Their loyalty is only to themselves, they threaten and impose fear on those who are powerless, and they use symbols of wealth to assert their status among the rest of the grifters, to prevent themselves from becoming targets of theft. Meanwhile the peope they are supposed to serve are left to suffer.

    This is what Somerby means when he refers to the battle of the all against the all. It is every man for himself and women need to sit down and shut up. That is why blacks are being plundered for their votes, including by a corrupt Supreme Court.

    This lack of restraint by Republicans clearly appeals to Somerby, who has been lying here on Trump's behalf. He gets something from it. I suspect money, but perhaps it is just the opportunity to lie to others while expressing his own hate that appeals to him. After reading Somerby each morning, everyone else I encounter during the day seems much better by comparison.

    Why would any Democrat want to join the scum who reject our values?

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    1. "We will no longer know what we want to accomplish..."

      This may be why the Republicans have accomplished absolutely nothing despite being in the majority in both houses of Congress. They are busy with their insider trading and don't have time to discuss what to do for the people.

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    2. Somerby used to mock Democrats for believing we are better than red America. The problem is that Trump has created a situation where the lack of morals and evil ways on the right are obvious. Those on the right have proven beyond a doubt that Democrats own the high road and are better people than right-wingers. Trump has removed all doubt, as Republicans grovel before his smelly assed corpse of a body and pretend he makes sense when he talks. We Democrats not only don't want to be anything like Republicans, but we don't want them anywhere near us. It is the Others who are rejecting the Republicans these days, not Democrats trying to figure out how to get Others to like us.

      The country has changed and Somerby doesn't seem to have noticed it.

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    3. In answer to your question, Bob, we know how we look and sound, and it has little resemblance to you.

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    4. This is a very ignorant comment. Whenever you find yourself dehumanizing millions of people, it's time to step back and examine yourself and what would lead you to divide people into two different categories, one morally pure and the other morally corrupt. Because when someone does this, it's almost certainly something psychological within themselves leading them to such reasoning.

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    5. You must be mistaken, 4pm. You were NOT replying to a Republican.

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  10. "How in the world—how on earth—did we ever get into this dangerous mess? "

    By electing and reelecting the most corrupt GOP presidents: Nixon, Reagan, Bush Klan, and Psycho.

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  11. Somerby approaches this topic from the get-go assuming liberals (and black voters?) are wrong, apparently upset by the cries of “racism”, and thus asks liberals to see themselves as “others” see us (he never describes how he thinks “others” see us). Somerby refuses to examine the evidence contrary to his view, hiding behind his own interpretations of the VRA and its supposed “fuzzy” language and the convenient excuse of partisan gerrymandering.

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  12. Cecelia's Old ManMay 14, 2026 at 4:17 PM

    As an aside, New Orleans Parish is predominantly black:

    https://www.datacenterresearch.org/data-resources/who-lives-in-new-orleans-now/

    So's Memphis:

    https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/memphiscitytennessee/PST045225

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  13. Would Somerby ever deign to read and/or give serious consideration to the dissent in the Callais case authored by Kagan, Sotomayor, and Jackson?

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