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@2dollarbill-blog
Well wishes from the #Obama fam. Too bad Uncle Barry & Aunt Mich can't make it to the #wedding.
new pocket watch from @givememy10s.
Tyreese from #TheWalkingDead tonight. Happy #Halloween.
Kathy Griffin X A$AP Rocky - Back & Forth
#fluxproject #atlanta
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E News instructions on #twerking . Terrence J sold his soul & u can see it on his face. #mileycyrus is ruining things
Project X + Looper?
+1 Official Trailer #1 (2013) - Rhys Wakefield Thriller HD (by MOVIECLIPS Trailers)
Clapping for the Wrong Reasons. Its IG filtered. Vaporizers & Topanga picking lemons. Chance the Rapper & Trinidad James playing connect four.
Sign language interpreter for Kendrick Lamar - "Fuckin Problems" At Lollapalooza (by Alexis Anderson)
Take the Impossible “Literacy” Test Louisiana Gave Black Voters in the 1960s
By Rebecca Onion
This week’s Supreme Court decision in Shelby County v. Holder overturned Section 4(b) of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which mandated federal oversight of changes in voting procedure in jurisdictions that have a history of using a “test or device” to impede enfranchisement. Here is one example of such a test, used in Louisiana in 1964.
After the end of the Civil War, would-be black voters in the South faced an array of disproportionate barriers to enfranchisement. The literacy test—supposedly applicable to both white and black prospective voters who couldn’t prove a certain level of education but in actuality disproportionately administered to black voters—was a classic example of one of these barriers.
The website of the Civil Rights Movement Veterans, which collects materials related to civil rights, hosts a few samples of actual literacy tests used in Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi during the 1950s and 1960s. In many cases, people working within the movement collected these in order to use them in voter education, which is how we ended up with this documentary evidence. [Continue reading.]
10 mins for 30 questions,
One of the questions was
Spell backwards, forwards.