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    Miscegenation and Other Civil Rights


    Thursday, November 13, 2008
    By Barney Brantingham (Contact)
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    TRIPPY TIMES: What will things be like now that Barack Obama has been elected president? Here are a few off-the-wall predictions, although who’s to say what’s too trippy in times like these:

    • Outgoing President Bush accepts Sarah Palin’s petition to allow Alaska to secede from the U.S. and become independent. Alaska then affiliates with the OPEC oil cartel.

    • Former Bush Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice becomes a lecturer at UCSB, moves to Isla Vista, and starts giving kegger parties. Is romantically linked with a 23-year-old assistant professor of music.

    On the Beat

    • Rep. Lois Capps is named secretary of state, goes to Cuba, and lifts the Cuban embargo under a President Obama executive order. Santa Barbara Mayor Marty Blum takes her place in Congress. Ty Warner buys 10 hotels in Havana.

    • President Obama appoints ex-opponent John McCain ambassador to Vietnam, where his wife Cindy gets the national beer concession.

    • Four U.S. Supreme Court justices retire, replaced by President Obama with the only four honest judges in Chicago.

    • Obama approves bailouts for 12 major financial institutions that reaped unconscionable profits — if they donate those same profits for college scholarships.

    • Former vice president Dick Cheney is named ambassador to Alaska — if he pledges not to go hunting with Alaska’s President Palin.

    • When a fifth Supreme Court justice dies, President Obama appoints Hillary Clinton as a replacement, thus assuring that she will not challenge him for the presidency in 2012. Former president Bill Clinton becomes her law clerk.

    • Obama appoints former president George W. Bush ambassador to Iran. His mission: End the nuclear threat or don’t come home.

    • President Obama decides to pull out all U.S. troops from Iraq by Christmas, if the airlines agree to waive baggage checking fees.

    • When gas hits $10 a gallon, Governor Schwarzenegger digs a hole and uses his Hummer as a planter for his Yule tree.

    • President Palin of Alaska asks the U.S. to allow the state to return to the nation. Says she intends to run for president in 2012. Congress refuses on a unanimous vote.

    • Palin petitions Canada for annexation, says she wants to run for prime minister. Canada refuses. Cheney wounds Palin’s husband in a hunting accident.

    • President Obama installs 4,000 wind generators outside Congress, the blasts of hot air supplying the entire District of Columbia with energy.

    • China and Japan agree to forgive the multibillion-dollar U.S. debt if the nation agrees not to declare bankruptcy.

    • Hawai‘i declares independence, balancing its budget by luring Chinese and Japanese tourists with cheap golf fees. The two nations offer to buy Hawai‘i. Ty Warner also offers to buy Hawai‘i. He wins.

    • Obama cuts middle-class taxes, and banks, seeking to avoid prosecution, slash mortgages for millions of homeowners. This sparks a major economic boom. Construction workers swarm to Hawai‘i to find work building golf courses.

    • The Dow skyrockets, reviving everyone’s 401(k)s and IRAs. Savings boom. Mortgage rates drop to 2.5 percent, leading to a boom in home ownership.

    • The U.S. Supreme Court okays same-sex marriage. Fifteen members of Congress immediately tie the knot.

    WRONG LOVING: (This is for real.) In 1958, a married couple, ironically named the Lovings, were slumbering peacefully in their bed in Virginia when police broke in and arrested them. Their “crime”: living together. Police also hoped to catch them in the act of sex, another crime.

    Why? Were they gay, breaking a Virginia law? No, Richard Loving was a heterosexual white man, who had just married Mildred Jeter, of African and Rappahannock Native-American descent. They had wed in the District of Columbia to evade Virginia’s anti-miscegenation law (“Racial Integrity Act”) banning marriage between whites and non-whites. But they were charged with breaking Virginia’s law against whites cohabiting with non-whites and faced one to five years in prison.

    Only a decade earlier, California became the first state in the union, since Ohio just after the Civil War, to declare its anti-miscegenation law unconstitutional (Perez v. Sharp) under the 14th Amendment. It had been illegal for whites to marry blacks, Asians, or Filipinos starting in 1850, when California was admitted to the union.

    A Virginia judge suspended the Lovings’ sentence on condition that they leave the state and not return for 25 years. The couple moved to D.C. but in 1963 decided to appeal. The same judge not only refused to reconsider, but wrote a strongly worded defense of racial segregation. The Virginia Supreme Court invalidated the sentence but upheld the Racial Integrity Act.

    Then, in 1964, the U.S. Supreme Court, led by Chief Justice Earl Warren, struck down a Florida ban on racial cohabitation, but not its law against interracial marriage.

    In 1967, 17 southern states were still enforcing laws against interracial marriage. But that year, the Lovings’ case reached the U.S. Supreme Court. It ruled unanimously against all miscegenation laws, finding that marriage is one of the “basic civil rights of man.” (And woman?)

    Words to remember when, and if, California’s just-passed Proposition 8, adding a ban on same-sex marriage to the state’s Constitution, reaches the High Court.

    Related Links

    • More On the Beat columns

    Barney Brantingham can be reached at barney@independent.com or 805-965-5205. He writes online columns throughout the week and a print column on Thursdays.

    Comments

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    For those who do not know how backward Florida still is regarding interpersonal relationships:

    It is a misdemeanor to cohabitate with someone who is not your spouse. Heterosexual, same race couples who are not married are all criminals here!

    It is a FELONY for a 16 year old to hug or touch his/her 15-year-old boy/girlfriend (outside of the clothing).

    What is up with this? Floridian legislators seem to think that they will be able to legislate celibacy for the first generation in humankind’s history.

    Readers say: Thumbs Up: 0 of 0 • Thumbs Down: 0 of 0

    ActiveNWFL (anonymous profile)
    November 13, 2008 at 5:42 p.m. (Suggest removal)

    Great column, Barney.

    Thanks for reminding us of the noble and sometimes tortured path we've travelled as a nation towards civil rights.

    BTW, I've always thought you had a lovely pot.

    Readers say: Thumbs Up: 0 of 0 • Thumbs Down: 0 of 0

    TerryLeftgoff (anonymous profile)
    November 14, 2008 at 1:48 a.m. (Suggest removal)

    If the election of Obama is such an occasion of joy, why (rhetorical question since past experience has shown that you don't respond to my questions) do you choose to bring up such ugly things of the past that (perhaps to your surprise) we all know?

    Barney: We are all aware of this stuff, just as we know about witch hunts, anti-semitism, what happened to the Indians, people torturing animals, elder abuse and so forth. Articulation specific instances of injustice doesn't bring anything new to the table. What next?...pictures of lynchings?

    What this does is pick at old scabs and re-infects them. It is one thing to teach history as it really happened--including pointing out that many (though not all) of the Founding Fathers were hypocritical bastards who preached out one side of their mouths about "freedom" but only applied it to their own clique, but as AShaw points out, I suspect you may be purging some personal demons.

    OK, so now Obama has been elected--and by a resounding clear voice of the American people. Does this mean now that racism has ended? Is he going to stop the War On Drugs which puts countless people in jail--a disproportionate number of them being Black people--for non-violent offenses?

    Obama is NOT the messiah self-loathing Whites and other idealists think he is, he's just a person like all the rest of us who is being held to a standard no one can match. If racism so bothers you, maybe you should focus energy on ending the Drug War, and doing the incredibly politically incorrect thing of questioning the "multicultural" movement with its attendant "diversity" mantra.

    I think many people will be disappointed after Obama takes office when they realize how similar he is to Bush per American imperialistic policy. Let me also repeat that he also supports the Patriot Act on the domestic front. Let's also bear in mind that as long as there is a three-quarters out-of-wedlock birthrate among Blacks, all the feel-good talk among people will not cure problems specific to their race.

    As long as we identify ourselves by what race we are, the problems of division will continue. Instead, recognize racism exists among all races, make sure civil rights laws are enforced, and look to how you can make a better future, instead of picking the scars of the past, and don't assume that we are all so oblivious that we are not aware of the sins of the past, as well as those of the present and future.

    Readers say: Thumbs Up: 2 of 2 • Thumbs Down: 0 of 2

    billclausen (anonymous profile)
    November 14, 2008 at 5:14 a.m. (Suggest removal)

    Barney, are you SERIOUS?!?! There is no WAY you can find four honest judges in Chicago!!

    AShaw,

    You seemed to have missed the point regarding the miscegenation laws. The point is that state licenses were initially employed as a means of outlawing inter-racial marriage. Before that, marriage was handled by religious institutions, because that is what marriage is, a religious institution. Now that we have all sorts of tax laws and rights given to married couples, homosexuals just want to be treated equally under the law. If marriage was no longer a state function, then homosexuals wouldn't even want to get married. If they did, then they would find a preacher or pastor willing to perform the ceremony, and do it on private property. It would never affect your life in any way, shape, or form. One easy way to fix this problem is to say that everybody in the state who gets married in fact receives a civil union license, and leave the marriage part to the churches.

    Prop 8 is similar to thought legislation. It's also anti free speech. In fact, the idea of "Protecting Marriage" through government decree is just plain retarded. I understand that religious institutions feel they are under attack, but it would be much more beneficial for them to stand up for their rights to practice their religion how they choose rather than taking rights from others.

    Readers say: Thumbs Up: 1 of 1 • Thumbs Down: 0 of 1

    loonpt (anonymous profile)
    November 14, 2008 at 12:20 p.m. (Suggest removal)

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