Tavis Smiley: ‘Why
I Fear America Could Enslave Black People Again’
by Breitbart News 19 Oct 2016
In an op-ed for TIME magazine
discussing Donald Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan, PBS host Tavis
Smiley writes that he fears black
people could once again be enslaved in America.
From TIME
magazine:
In my lifetime, I have never seen Congress so blatantly
mock our Constitution. It’s especially striking that it comes
from the political party that’s always lecturing us about the “rule of
law”. What’s worse is that they’re getting away with it. Republicans have
turned this Constitutional issue into a political football and suckered the
White House, Democrats in Congress and the news media into playing the game by
their rules. This is a travesty of justice, but it has all but disappeared as a
news story.
I wonder what other Constitutional mandates Congress
could just decide to ignore. Is it possible that the White House, the
opposition party in Congress and the news media could be cowardly complacent,
too frozen by fear to actually do anything to stop their overreach? They
haven’t in this situation. It’s all “politics,” they say. Sound familiar?
That’s exactly what we said when Trump’s campaign was just a joke. He won once.
And could win again.
So, could the Constitution be thwarted and black folk end
up enslaved again? Legal scholars, of course, will find the question ludicrous
and laughable.
It wasn’t farfetched for the young student who pressed me
at Lehigh that evening. And, honestly? With the hair-raising, bone-chilling,
spine-breaking, nerve-wracking path we’re on right now, I shudder to think
where this democracy could end up one sad day, if we don’t get off this low
road and make our way to higher ground soon.
Read the rest here.
TIME magazine
Strobe Talbott
was an editor for Time magazine, and
is the president of the Brookings
Institution (think tank).
Note: Foundation
to Promote Open Society was a funder for the Brookings Institution (think
tank).
George Soros
was the chairman for the Foundation to Promote Open Society, and is Robert Soros’s father.
Henry Louis
Gates Jr. was an honorary trustee at the Brookings Institution (think
tank), and is the host of African
American Lives.
African
American Lives was a Public
Broadcasting Service (PBS) program.
Tavis Smiley
show was a Public Broadcasting
Service (PBS) program.
Tavis Smiley is
the host of the Tavis Smiley show.
Carnegie
Corporation of New York funded the study that led to creation of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS).
Newton N. Minow
was the chairman of the Public
Broadcasting Service (PBS), is an honorary trustee at the Carnegie Corporation of New York, a
member of the Commercial Club of Chicago,
and a senior counsel at Sidley Austin
LLP.
Carnegie
Corporation of New York was a funder for the Brookings Institution (think
tank), and funded the study that led to creation of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS).
Cyrus F.
Freidheim Jr. is an honorary trustee at the Brookings Institution (think tank), and a member of the Commercial Club of Chicago.
R. Eden Martin is
the president of the Commercial Club of
Chicago, and counsel at Sidley
Austin LLP.
Michelle Obama
was a lawyer at Sidley Austin LLP.
Barack
Obama was an intern at Sidley Austin
LLP.
Robert
Soros is George Soros’s son, and
was married to Melissa Soros.
Melissa Soros was
married to Robert Soros, and is a
friend of Kate Betts.
Kate
Betts is a friend of Melissa Soros,
and a contributing editor for Time
magazine.
Strobe Talbott
was an editor for Time magazine, and
is the president of the Brookings
Institution (think tank).
Time magazine
is a publication for Time Inc.
Norman Pearlstine
is the chief content officer for Time
Inc., was a trustee at the Carnegie
Corporation of New York, and a trustee at the Paley Center for Media.
Carnegie
Corporation of New York was a funder for the Brookings Institution (think
tank), and funded the study that led to creation of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS).
Patricia E.
Mitchell was the president & CEO for the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), the president of Time Inc. Television, and is the president
& CEO for the Paley Center for Media.
Norman Pearlstine
is the chief content officer for Time
Inc., was a trustee at the Paley
Center for Media, a trustee at the Carnegie
Corporation of New York, and is the chief content officer for Time Inc.
Time magazine
is a publication for Time Inc.
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