The most powerful word in the English language is racist. Tag a new law with that epithet and watch the stampede to convict. Forget defending the legislation or relying on facts to spare supporters from a public pillorying. A thunder clap of outrage will drown-out fair analysis in favor of political pandering.
President Joe Biden cratered to a tiny minority of divisive racial activists and hurled a charge of Jim Crowism after Georgia's legislature approved changes in the state's election laws. The offensive term Jim Crow refers to racial segregation policies of decades past, promulgated by Southern Democrats.
"This is Jim Crow in the 21st Century. It must end," Mr. Biden huffed in a statement. He added the Georgia election changes are "an atrocity" and warned the Department of Justice is "taking a look" at the measure. His condemnation inflamed racial division and was a thinly veiled threat to Georgia.
Corporations piled on after they were bullied by well organized activist groups. Coca Cola, Delta, American Airlines and Apple are just a few of the business behemoths who upbraided the legislature for daring to alter election laws in their own state. These limousine liberals are cowardly Woke lackeys.
The complicit media, paced by that paragon of journalistic pugilism CBS News, lobbied companies to punish Georgia for caring about election integrity. Faux writers at CBS tweeted an article citing "three ways companies can help fight Georgia's new voting law." Today this passes for unbiased reporting.
The coup-de-gras was applied when Major League Baseball jerked the All-Star Game from Atlanta to punish those mean racists. Commissioner Rob Manfred, a dunderhead of a leader, harrumphed that his millionaire owners oppose "restrictions at the ballot box." That'll show those dumb crackers.
The kerfuffle was stoked by lies, deliberate misinformation and media malfeasance. Few if any of the participants in the finger-wagging, self-righteousness executive suites actually read the bill. How can you tell? Their responses and public-posturing were detached from the reality of the Georgia law.
At the eye of this racial hurricane is the media anointed Uinifier-in-Chief. Perhaps, someone should suggest Mr. Biden read the 98-page Election Protection Act before leveling salacious accusations. That might be asking too much, since he rarely engages publicly except to parrot a prepared script.
The president butchered the facts so badly even the Jeff Bezos-owned Washington Post winced. The paper's fact-checkers awarded Mr. Biden "four pinnochios" for this remarks about the legislation. The Post reserves four long-noses for what it claims "whoppers." Translation: big fat lies.
"One could understand a flub in a news conference," the Post noted. "But then this same claim popped up in an official presidential statements. Not a single expert we consulted who has studied the law understood why Biden made this claim" the newspaper's fact-checkers wrote.
Here's a summary of The Washington Post's assessment of election law changes approved by the Republican-dominated Georgia legislature:
- Nothing in the new law changes early voting hours. The law did make changes to expand the opportunities for early voting, not limit them.
- The bill does not limit in-person voting, but the new law gives election officials the opportunity to extend the hours longer than regular business hours.
- The bill prohibits people from soliciting votes of those in line by offering money or gifts, including but not limited to food and water. It does not prohibit a poll worker from making available, self-service water.
- The law does not eliminate absentee ballot drop boxes for ballots. Last election, drop boxes were set up in unsecured, outdoor locations. Ballot boxes now must be secured inside buildings.
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