if you're in ohio vote NO on issue 1 today Update: Nov 2023: New Issue 1 -Vote Yes!

blackpepper

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

D24OHA

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

blackpepper

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Dirty rotten cheating ass bitches
Exactly. They control the whole state government and changed the rules back in 2010 just to set up this situation. Now they'll hold out for some major concessions or ransom before they get it done this time. They're still butt hurt over losing on marijuana and abortion legalization last cycle, so do everything they can to embarrass the opposition.
 

OutlawR.O.C.

R.I.P. shanebp1978
BGOL Investor


Because the DNC won't officially nominate Biden in Chicago until Aug. 19-22, after the Ohio deadline to set the ballot Aug. 7. The state government has in the past readily adopted legislation to accommodate convention schedules, but this year the lower house is being extra MAGA.
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President Biden could be excluded from the Ohio ballot — here’s why



How is this not a bigger news story?
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
SMH.


We are retired professors at three prominent Ohio universities – the Ohio State University, Case Western Reserve University and Ohio University. Somewhat reluctantly, we have concluded that our universities need some outside adult supervision.

Attempts by massive diversity, equity and inclusion bureaucracies to push state schools to adopt a radical left ideology and stifle intellectual diversity have been appalling; for example, over 100 DEI bureaucrats work at Ohio State alone.

Man vs. Bear vs Drag Queen:I'd rather be stuck in the woods with a drag queen than most Ohio lawmakers

Jerry Cirino:Senate Bill 83 'firestorm' clouds fact that it will rein in college tuition costs

Traditional parts of general education curricula, such as teaching about our history and the development of civic institutions arising from our federal and state constitutions, have been downplayed or even eliminated on many campuses.

Speaker blocking progress​

Accordingly, we, all members of the Ohio chapter of the National Association of Scholars, testified before the Ohio legislature in favor of Senate Bill 83, introduced by Sen. Jerry Cirino, which dealt with the issues mentioned above such as by prohibiting forcing members of state university communities to sign diversity statements pledging support of a left political agenda.

The legislation proposes several other positive things such as prohibiting irresponsible faculty strikes during the middle of an academic term, which damages the education of tuition-paying students. It shortened the excessive (nine-year) terms for the state university boards of trustees, and regulated the potential misuse of faculty tenure.

S.B. 83 handily passed in the Ohio Senate, and cleared the higher education committee in the Ohio House of Representatives.

However, Speaker Jason Stephens has blocked consideration of the bill by the entire House, ostensibly because he doesn’t think the votes are there to pass it.

Cirino disagrees.

As The Columbus Dispatch recently reported, Gov. Mike DeWine acknowledges the need for some legislative action.

Ohio should follow lead of North Carolina, Florida and Texas​

We implore Stephens to let the democratic process unfold and allow the House to vote on this needed reform.

Many other states have enacted restrictions on DEI activities. Several prominent universities, for example, the Universities of North Carolina, Florida and Texas have moved to completely shut down or severely restrict DEI efforts that enforce an authoritarian leftish ideology on members of the campus community, usually in response to gubernatorial or legislative pressure.

Stephens, we beg you: Allow the political process to assess, and likely approve, efforts to curtail the heretofore largely successful efforts of a woke supremacy to curtail the freedom of expression and intellectual diversity that's so essential to operating a vibrant system of state universities.



Richard Vedder, George Dent and Hal Arkes are retired professors of economics, law and psychology, respectively, at Ohio University, Case Western Reserve University and the Ohio State University. They serve on the board of the Ohio chapter of the National Association of Scholars.
:mad:
 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
SMH.


We are retired professors at three prominent Ohio universities – the Ohio State University, Case Western Reserve University and Ohio University. Somewhat reluctantly, we have concluded that our universities need some outside adult supervision.

Attempts by massive diversity, equity and inclusion bureaucracies to push state schools to adopt a radical left ideology and stifle intellectual diversity have been appalling; for example, over 100 DEI bureaucrats work at Ohio State alone.

Man vs. Bear vs Drag Queen:I'd rather be stuck in the woods with a drag queen than most Ohio lawmakers

Jerry Cirino:Senate Bill 83 'firestorm' clouds fact that it will rein in college tuition costs

Traditional parts of general education curricula, such as teaching about our history and the development of civic institutions arising from our federal and state constitutions, have been downplayed or even eliminated on many campuses.

Speaker blocking progress​

Accordingly, we, all members of the Ohio chapter of the National Association of Scholars, testified before the Ohio legislature in favor of Senate Bill 83, introduced by Sen. Jerry Cirino, which dealt with the issues mentioned above such as by prohibiting forcing members of state university communities to sign diversity statements pledging support of a left political agenda.

The legislation proposes several other positive things such as prohibiting irresponsible faculty strikes during the middle of an academic term, which damages the education of tuition-paying students. It shortened the excessive (nine-year) terms for the state university boards of trustees, and regulated the potential misuse of faculty tenure.

S.B. 83 handily passed in the Ohio Senate, and cleared the higher education committee in the Ohio House of Representatives.

However, Speaker Jason Stephens has blocked consideration of the bill by the entire House, ostensibly because he doesn’t think the votes are there to pass it.

Cirino disagrees.

As The Columbus Dispatch recently reported, Gov. Mike DeWine acknowledges the need for some legislative action.

Ohio should follow lead of North Carolina, Florida and Texas​

We implore Stephens to let the democratic process unfold and allow the House to vote on this needed reform.

Many other states have enacted restrictions on DEI activities. Several prominent universities, for example, the Universities of North Carolina, Florida and Texas have moved to completely shut down or severely restrict DEI efforts that enforce an authoritarian leftish ideology on members of the campus community, usually in response to gubernatorial or legislative pressure.

Stephens, we beg you: Allow the political process to assess, and likely approve, efforts to curtail the heretofore largely successful efforts of a woke supremacy to curtail the freedom of expression and intellectual diversity that's so essential to operating a vibrant system of state universities.



Richard Vedder, George Dent and Hal Arkes are retired professors of economics, law and psychology, respectively, at Ohio University, Case Western Reserve University and the Ohio State University. They serve on the board of the Ohio chapter of the National Association of Scholars.
:mad:

"woke supremacy "?????
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member


State Representative Dontavius Jarrells, D-Columbus, is a member of the Ohio State House of Representatives, representing District 1, and serves as the assistant minority leader.

As the fundamental freedoms that would shape America were being drafted, our Founding Fathers declared that the People were “endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

That declaration was not just a vision for their time, but a mandate for all generations to come.

The democracy our founders envisioned was never meant to be completed; it was to be an ongoing endeavor.

Today, as responsible citizens and leaders, it is our duty to continue this work. This requires acknowledging our failures, learning from them, and forging ahead together. Among our greatest failures, America’s original sin has been and remains—the enduring legacy of slavery.

Helen Gilmore was a descendant of York Rial and the founder and director of the Rossville Museum and Cultural Center, which she ran out of York Rial’s historic home. Here, she continued the tradition of family reunions her ancestors began at the turn of the 20th century. In this photo, she stands next to fellow descendant James P. Humphrey, whose ancestors were Carter and Phoebe Lee. Humphrey was a graduate of Central State College, WWII veteran, and a member of the NAACP. He became Sidney’s first Black mayor in1981 after serving as city councilman.


Every so often, we are given an opportunity to confront this legacy and correct history’s greatest wrong. One such opportunity has presented itself through the story of the Randolph Freedpeople, a chapter of Ohio history that remains largely untold but is crucial to our collective understanding and growth.

Randoph Freedpeople denied promised land​

In 1833, John Randolph of Roanoke, Virginia, freed his roughly 400 slaves, expressing deep regret for having owned them.

Randolph provided these freed individuals, known as the Randolph Freedpeople, with approximately 3,200 acres of land and the means to relocate. After a prolonged legal battle over his will, the Randolph Freedpeople began their exodus from Virginia to Mercer County, Ohio, in June 1846.

This text was printed in the October 8, 1846 edition of the Defiance Democrat under the headline Let Ohio Look to Her INTEREST IN TIME! and the sub headlines Bebb and the Nigger Laws. and The Unconditional Repeal of the Black Laws.


Their journey was met with resistance.

Upon learning of their arrival, white landowners in Mercer County resolved to prevent the Freedpeople from settling, even threatening violence. When the Randolph Freedpeople arrived, they were met by armed mobs and forced to turn back, despite having a legal right to the land.

Denied their promised land, the Randolph Freedpeople were left to wander, eventually settling in parts of Shelby and Miami County, with many making Piqua their new home.

Our View:We must remember, work against 'America’s original sin' this long weekend

For generations, they and their descendants have contributed significantly to their communities, to Ohio, and to America. Yet, the promise of freedom and opportunity that Ohio was supposed to represent was denied to them.

Correcting a grave error​

This historical episode, unfolding in the years leading up to the Civil War, starkly illustrates that the freedom promised to slaves in the North was far from guaranteed. Ohio turned its back on the Randolph Freedpeople, and now is the time for us to acknowledge this failure, learn from it, and move forward.

With the help of the descendants of the Randolph Freedpeople and other local leaders, we have an opportunity to right this wrong.

We are looking at options to address the injustices faced by the descendants of the Randolph Freedpeople. Ohio lacked the courage to do the right thing then, but I believe we have the courage today.

This is our opportunity to continue the work started by our Founding Fathers. We can recognize this dark chapter in Ohio’s past and write a new one that brings hope, closure, and the promise of a better future. The America we live in today does not have to reflect the injustices of the past. By seizing opportunities like this, we can build a more perfect union, for all of us.

State Representative Dontavius Jarrells, D-Columbus, is a member of the Ohio State House of Representatives, representing District 1, and serves as the assistant minority leader.

Excerpt from Dontavius Jarrells letter to Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine on behalf of descendants of the Randolph Freedpeople delivered June 13:​

"Upon his death in 1833, John Randolph of Roanoke, Virginia, freed his roughly 400 slaves, stating in his will that he 'give and bequeath to all my slaves their freedom, heartily regretting that I have ever been the owner of one.'

Randolph also provided the freedpeople, known as The Randolph Freedpeople, with land and the means to relocate. After a prolonged legal battle over his will, the Randolph Freedpeople finally began their exodus from Roanoke, Virginia, in June 1846 to what was to be their new home in Mercer County, Ohio.


After several weeks of travel, the Randolph Freedpeople arrived in Cincinnati, where they took boats north on the Miami Erie Canal toward their final destination. However, word had spread to the white landowners in Mercer County that the former slaves were traveling to their new home legally inherited by them. The residents of Mercer County resolved, 'we will not live among negroes, and as we have settled here first, we have fully determined that we will resist the settlement of blacks and mulattos in this country, to the full extent of our means, the bayonet not excepted.'

This was hardly in line with the dream of unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for all.

When the Randolph Freedpeople finally made it to the shores of Mercer County, they were met by mobs of white residents and their bayonets. Left with the choice of staying and risking their lives, the Randolph Freedpeople turned their boats around and headed south along the canal.

Like Moses leading the Israelites out of slavery in Egypt, the Randolph Freedpeople were denied entrance to their promised land and forced to wander.


Randolph descendants Sammy Robert Johnson and Eddie Bennet were veterans of World War I and sent a postcard home to Springfield while overseas in France.


They eventually settled in parts of Shelby and Miami County, with many making Piqua, Ohio, their new home. For generations now, they have contributed to their community, to Ohio, and to America.

Considering this all happened in the years leading up to the Civil War, with a nation divided, the freedom promised to slaves in the North was anything but guaranteed. How Ohio handled this situation is a prime example.

Despite being given their freedom, Ohio turned its back on the Randolph Freedpeople. Now is the time for Ohio to acknowledge its failure, learn from it, and move forward.


In 1988, Randolph descendant Mary Gillem Rosa was honored by the city of Piqua on her 101st birthday. At that time, she was the oldest living descendant of the Randolph Freedpeople.


With the help of descendants of the Randolph Freedpeople and other local leaders, I am exploring legal and just means to right this wrong and finally give what they legally inherited almost 200 years ago. And I seek your support.

I am not advocating for reparations or eminent domain. I propose identifying state-owned land in Mercer County and returning it to the descendants of the Randolph Freedpeople.
"

 
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