Grimke sisters, then and now

As one of the midwives who helped birth the South Carolina feminist organization the Grimke Sisters in 2002, it was a kick to stumble on this funky little video celebrating these exceptional women – Sarah and Angelina Grimke – homegirls from Charleston who made history by thinking big and living large.

The women who so inspired us that we named our group for them deserve a monument on our State House lawn, littered as it is with statuary dedicated to our state’s historical figures (sadly, without regard to their humanitarian records). That’s not bloody likely, but we can remember the Grimke sisters here.

And if you want to join the Grimke Sisters group online, you can subscribe to the listserv by sending e-mail to GrimkeSisters-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.

Becci Robbins

Obama wins SC New Democrats e-poll

“New Democrats” Pessimistic About Future, Concerned About Economy

With 30% of the vote, Sen. Barack Obama won the South Carolina New Democrats’ e-poll with Hillary Clinton and John Edwards tied at 26% each and with 17% undecided. Results of the statewide e-poll were released today and offer a glimpse of what might be in store for 2008 South Carolina Democratic Presidential Primary. The e-poll was conducted completely online via e-mail and the SC New Democrats’ website, thus showcasing how technology can be used to open up the political process and give every citizen a chance to have their opinions and ideas heard.

“Technology is changing every part of our lives and we need to find new ways to use the technology to give more people a voice in the political process. With over a thousand people taking part, clearly this is a good way for people to have their voices heard,” said Phil Noble, President of the SC New Democrats.

As part of the e-poll, people were asked to suggest questions that they would like to see asked of each of the candidates during the Democratic Presidential Debate to be help in Myrtle Beach. Over 2,200 questions were submitted and will be given to the organizers of the debate.

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Can we hear the call for change?

By the Rev. Dr. Bennie Colclough
Co-Chair of the SC Progressive Network

The African-American community should pay close attention to what Sen. Barack Obama has said about equality for gay and lesbian Americans and the correlation of religion-based bigotry and discrimination against African-Americans.

The struggle for justice, equality, and dignity for gay and lesbian Americans continues and Sen. Obama and other leaders have engaged the African-American faith community on this issue.

Are we listening?

As an African-American minister, I many years ago heard the call for change on this issue and it is still my resolve today to be a missionary for justice and equality, to be courageous, true to my faith, and challenge the African-American faith community, to love God with our whole heart and our neighbors as ourselves.

The African-American faith community must defend the human dignity of all people as distinguished leaders in our community are calling us to this task.

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Playing the race card

By Kevin Alexander Gray
Columbia

I hesitantly step into the Hillary Clinton – Barack Obama family scuffle over South Carolina’s black vote. Both candidates are products of the Democratic Leadership Council (DLC), the conservative wing of the Democratic Party. Clinton is a DLC star, chair of its American Dream Initiative touting free markets, balanced budgets and middle-class know-how, while Obama’s political action committee, the Hope Fund, has raised money for half of the DLC’s representatives in the Senate. This is how America measures progress: the DLC, founded as a vehicle for pro-business Southern white men, is now the arena advancing a black man and a white woman who talk as if the more populist Southern white man in the race were invisible.

The “controversy” over Clinton’s Martin Luther King comment (“it took a president to make the dream a reality”) was, if anything, a set up to push Obama to talk race, something he has taken pains to avoid beyond the occasional King quote he tosses into the mix. Talking race in a white media echo chamber works to Clinton’s advantage. First, it is a subtle nod to subconscious and not so subconscious racism. Secondly, it gives her the chance to expound upon the Clintons’ fictional race history with blacks.

What Bill knows, Hill knows. And Southern politician Bill Clinton has always played race politics to perfection. Many have perhaps forgotten about Bill, speaking in the last pulpit King stood in, telling blacks in 1993 how disappointed “Dr. King would be [in them] if he were alive today”, because of black on black crime. “Crime” has long been a white politician’s code to signal, “I can stick it to blacks.” In his first presidential race Governor Clinton supported the death penalty at a time when the country was split almost down the middle on the issue. For good measure, he made sure to oversee the execution of convicted killer Ricky Ray Rector, a brain-damaged black man, in the heat of the primaries.

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