Protecting Marriage the Old-Fashioned Way
One Texas legislator, however, had some thoughts on this:
“This amendment is blowing smoke to fuel the hell-fire flames of bigotry,” said Rep. Senfronia Thompson, D-Houston.During the Jim Crow era, Texas trailed only Georgia and Mississippi in lynchings, before reformers like Jessie Daniel Ames helped stop the practice. Of course, people weren’t usually lynched for interracial marriage; it was a little difficult to get that far in those days, when whistling at a white woman could be enough to get an African-American man (or a 14-year-old boy) killed by a mob.
Thompson, 66, an African-American who grew up with segregation, said the legislation reminded her of the time when interracial marriages were illegal.
“When people of my color used to marry someone of Mr. Chisum’s color (white), you’d often find people of my color hanging from a tree. That’s what white people back then did to protect marriage,” Thompson said.


2 Comments:
25 years from now the people of these "red" states will hang their heads in shame at the blatant hatred and bigotry that they promulgated due to ignorance, fear, and prejudice- it is nothing short of despicable and pathetic that this is what America is about in the 21st century.
J.S.
http://voicesofreason.info
Or, they will just pretend it didn't happen, it wasn't them, and it is an entirely different situation as they press on with some other form of as-yet-undetermined discrimination.
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