California enacts ban on Confederate flag

thoughtone

Rising Star
Registered
source: Al Jazeera America


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New law prohibits government agencies from selling or displaying the controversial flag unless for educational purposes

California Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislation on Thursday prohibiting state agencies from selling or displaying items bearing the Confederate flag.

State Assemblyman Isadore Hall, D-Compton, introduced the bill, AB 2444, after his mother saw replica Confederate money sold at the Capitol gift shop in Sacramento. The money featured a picture of the flag.

Hall, who is black, said the state should not promote a symbol of racism that is meant to intimidate. Many African-Americans see the flag as a symbol of racism, as it was raised by Confederate states that supported slavery during the American Civil War.

The bill passed the California State Assembly on Aug. 21 by a vote of 66-1. Hall said the bipartisan victory symbolized that lawmakers were "standing together united to fend off the ugly hatred of racism that's been portrayed and demonstrated through the emblem of the Confederacy."

Tim Donnelly, a Republican from Twin Peaks, was the only Assembly member to vote against the bill, arguing that it infringed on the Constitutional right to free speech.

"I'm a strict Constitutionalist," The Los Angeles times quoted Donnelly as saying after the vote. "It's painful and lonely.”

However, other lawmakers argued that the legislation does not violate free-speech rights because it only applies to formal actions of government officials and agencies. Moreover, the law allows for the flag to be used for historical or educational purposes and does not apply to people on state property.

While many anti-racism advocates hailed the new law a success, some said legislators should make better use of their time by addressing more pressing race issues — such as racism in local police forces.

These critics pointed to recent cases of police brutality, including the Aug. 9 shooting of unarmed black teen Michael Brown by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri — which became a flashpoint for racial tensions in the U.S.

Political commentator John McWhorter described California's new law as a futile endeavor that will fail to make "a real difference in black lives."

"A serious approach to racism in this country will be about black men and the police. It is that nexus that teaches black America that there is something called a 'war on black men' which is what most readily comes to black people’s minds as the racism that America is 'all about,'" McWhorter wrote in the Daily Beast.

McWhorter added, "Given how urgent things such as the War on Drugs, and its effect on black men and the cops are, might we not simply walk on by the damned flag?"
 

Shadow

The Dark Lord
BGOL Investor
Hell, the fact that it was being shown or sold in a government institution is bad.

At best it's the flag of an enemy nation defeated in combat.

At worst, well.....
 

RichmondFire

Rising Star
OG Investor
Hell, the fact that it was being shown or sold in a government institution is bad.

At best it's the flag of an enemy nation defeated in combat.

At worst, well.....

At worst it inspires rebellion, something that at this time seems possible...I know they don't want to deal with twenty million pissed off slave descendants running up on they white house lawn...
 
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Diomedes3000

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I applaud the Bill but black folk to get real shit passed not symbolic shit. How about some bills to stimulate the hood or education programs. We need to get serious we at war fighting devils on all sides. :smh:
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
yea they should be able to keep the flag but not

the stars, the stars should be replaced by zeros.

for their win-loss record...


fuckin loser flag....


LOL

and they want to remind themselves

they were on the losing team...


gotta love the loyalty..

but laugh at the stupidity...
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
Registered
source: Huffington Post

Supreme Court To Hear Confederate Flag License Plate Free Speech Case


WASHINGTON, Dec 5 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday agreed to weigh in on whether Texas officials should have approved a specialty license plate that displays the Confederate flag.

The case raises the issue of how states can allow or reject politically divisive messages on license plates without violating free speech rights.

The Texas division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans Inc said its members' free speech rights were violated when the state, which has a program that allows groups to suggest messages to be used on specially designed plates, declined to approve the plate.

The proposed design featured a Confederate battle flag surrounded by the words "Sons of Confederate Veterans 1896." The flag, synonymous with the states that fought to secede from the United States in the U.S. Civil War, is a blue cross inlaid with white stars over a red background.

In rejecting the proposal, the state said it had received public comments that suggested "many members of the general public find the design offensive."

The legal issue is whether messages on state-issued license plates represent speech by the government or an endorsement of a private message. The latter constitutes "viewpoint discrimination" and is a violation of the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution's guarantee of freedom of speech.

The New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Texas officials did not have grounds to reject the Confederate plate.

A ruling is expected by the end of June.

The case is Walker v. Sons of Confederate Veterans, U.S. Supreme Court, No. 14-144. (Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Gunna Dickson)
 
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