So I'm going to listen to a presentation by the head of the North Carolina NAACP on the state's politics and protests tonight. It should be interesting, so I'll give you all a rundown later tonight.
That should be interesting. Can't wait to hear your recap!
From whence I have gone, I, MetalSlimeHunt, do return.
So, it was interesting to say the least. I don't regret going, if nothing else.
It started with an introduction by one of ASU's history professors, in which his basic point was that the actions of the NC General Assembly violate basic logic even if you accept their goals as stated. After him, one of the people who had been arrested at Moral Mondays spoke and sung the freedom song that she had been arrested over (she also told how, hilariously, some of the cops at the detention center got the song stuck in their heads and were humming it).
After that, it went on to the main attraction, Dr. Reverend William Barber, head of the NC NAACP and effective founder of the Moral Mondays protest. He spoke extensively about how this was less a partisan political issue and more a struggle between good and evil, hence the "moral" in Moral Mondays. I find it hard not to agree with him on that, given that the General Assembly has cut Medicaid for thousands of North Carolinians and effectively enacted voter suppression. He went on to talk about the First Reconstruction and Second Reconstruction, with the overarching points that: A. He believes we are on the cusp of a Third Reconstruction, and that this time it can truly succeed. B. Fusion Politics are vitally important for breaking down extreme ideologies, both in the past and here today. C. Framing the issues as moral ones is important, and moral dissent is vital even if it fails (the primary example being the lone dissenter in Plessy v. Furguson.) From there on it was fairly standard "we will never surrender" stuff.
Lots of deafening applause throughout.
What I didn't like: The religious aspect of it all. I know the NAACP was founded on a fairly religious basis and that mobilizing the Christian Left is important until the religion collapses wholesale (and that the guy is a reverend to boot), but it was just too much. For somebody who talked a lot about fusion politics he was dangerously close to alienating secular people, which is far too common. To his credit, he did at least mention nonbelievers once or twice, but it just does not balance out the clear lack of understanding when he would relate everything back to Jesus or say things like "and on that we can agree, no matter what God you worship". The only part that really pissed me off was when he was going through various traditionally opposed people that should work together, and said "or people of faith, or people struggling with their faith, or people who don't share my faith but share my values".
He was a decent speaker, though he tripped over his words a few times when ad libbing and had a (to me) annoying tendency to not pluralize. Still not bad for an hour long speech.
My favorite lines of the whole thing were "When you make
Ronald Reagan look like a liberal..." (referencing how Reagan said the Earned Income Tax Credit was one of the most powerful tools to reduce poverty, while the current Republicans hate it and cut it significantly in North Carolina.) And, in reference to NC Senator Apodaca calling the Voting Rights Act a headache and being glad it was struck down: "If you think that was a headache, you haven't seen anything yet, because if you think you can take away people's voting rights without causing yourself a headache, you are out of your cotton-picking mind!"
So, in summery: 8/10, even progressives often disrespect the nonreligious, decent overall though. RIP Republicans (I'm joking of course, they won't be missed) if this continues.
The Moral Monday protestors are currently calling on Governer McCorry to call a special legislative session to resend the Medicaid cuts and voter suppression laws. He's already refused, obviously, but they're continuing to protest, and have an especially large protest planned for December 23rd.