Mar. 25, 2012 at 12:55am
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Obama is not even black. He’s got a mixture of race.
Sep. 20, 2011 at 11:20am with 39 notes
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GOP Kingmaker Sheriff Tasks ‘Cold Case Posse’ With Investigating Obama’s Birth Certificate

Cold Case Posse, coming next fall on CBS!                

cognitivedissonance:

Well, Sheriff Joe Arpaio went and did it. He’s using taxpayer’s dollars to investigate a settled question, and it’s difficult to argue racism is not playing a part. From ThinkProgress:

The lawman is… willing to use official resources to pursue the bogus conspiracy theory. As birther website WorldNetDaily gleefully reported:

Arizona’s Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio told WND he has assigned a five-member “Cold Case Posse” to investigate the authenticity of Barack Obama’s birth certificate.

The decision, he says, is simply a matter of doing his duty.

Arpaio’s investigation comes in response to a complaint filed by the Surprise, Arizona Tea Party, which alleges that Obama may be using a forged birth certificate…

The Cold Case Posse is an officially-sponsored all-volunteer group of people with skills and backgrounds that make them qualified to investigate cases. The group has been inactive in recent months due to “budgetary limitations within the Maricopa County Sheriff’s office,” but apparently a wild goose chase looking into the veracity of the president’s birth certificate is an appropriate use of funds.

Arpaio is, of course, claiming that politics did not come into play regarding his decision. He’s just doing his duty. So why does he consider it his duty to cater to the Tea Party versus not misappropriating taxpayer dollars? Turns out there’s a lot Arpaio considers his duty that’s outside the bounds of common sense. Here’s a short list:

Aug. 26, 2011 at 5:11pm with 17 notes
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Farnsworth headline of the day: Arizona Files Suit Challenging the Constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act

manicchill:

Politico reports:

The state of Arizona filed a lawsuit Thursday challenging the federal government’s authority to enforce part of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, becoming the first state to challenge the constitutionality of sections of the federal law that bars states from denying or limiting a person’s right to vote based on their race or color.

Aug. 12, 2011 at 12:00pm with 215 notes
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…In 1963, when much of (The Help) movie takes place, Charlayne Hunter, the future journalist, was integrating the University of Georgia. Gwendolyn Brooks had won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry way back in 1950; Lorraine Hansberry had received wide acclaim for her 1959 play (and 1961 movie) “A Raisin in the Sun;” and Zora Neale Hurston had published seven books — mostly about black Southern life. Surely, an aspiring writer like Aibileen would have known of these examples (she could have read about any of these achievements in The Atlanta Daily World, The Chicago Defender or Jet magazine) and understood that being a black woman writer was not impossible. But the filmmakers keep Aibileen ignorant of these facts — and they bank on their audience’s ignorance as well…