• Meet Aesha Rasheed, Foot Soldier (Part 2)

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    Courtesy of Aesha Rasheed

    New Orleans education activist Aesha Rasheed.

    You'll find below the second half of my interview with education activist Aesha Rasheed, whose parents' guide has become an invaluable tool for New Orleans families caught in the maelstrom of the ever-growing crop of charter schools. I asked our Foot Soldier about the guide midway through our conversation last week.

    LR: All right, so -- the Parents' Guide. Did you come up with this?

    AR: After Katrina a lot of people that I knew in my social network knew that I knew a lot about schools, and so as people were trying to figure this out, the question of like what schools are open, and how do we tell people about it, people would ask me. I got to be a de facto expert on those subjects. Because they’re like – no one knows, what do you know? I was like ‘I don’t know, I heard this school is open, let me call this person..’ and then I was like, I’m just going to sit down and try to make a list. I tried to search for one. I was like ‘surely there is a list of every school that’s open, with their phone number’ but there wasn’t. There wasn’t like a single source of information. There were pieces over here and pieces over there but it was never in one place, and it was never comprehensive. And so, I [asked], "what if I tried to make a chart?" And so I made the chart.

    At the time was working with other people who were trying to support organizing for this project called New Orleans Network. Our strategy was to pull together leaders and advocates around an issue, talk about an issue, and try to figure out what are the gaps that need to be filled. And so we had that convening around education.

    One of the things that seemed like it was possible for me and us to do was to provide information. So that everyone agreed what we couldn’t figure out was how to get a handle on what schools were open and where. And [aren’t really needed that, so beyond advocates needed that, but also people were like no one can return as long as the information is only limited, you have to have certain information and access to get information about schools. So what would it look like if the access [were] more equalized?

    So, that started me thinking about a parents' guide. We talked about what it could look like, that group of leaders, but we couldn’t -– we being New Orleans network – didn’t have the money to make it. So we could make a resource guide, and then tell people how to print it and do it very [do-it-yourself].

    Meanwhile, New School for New Orleans, which had been a huge engine for promoting lots of charter schools, creating and establishing and supporting charter schools was thinking more from a school choice place, that people needed information. So this led to interesting collaboration. New Schools for New Orleans figured out how to get the money for it, and I made it. Pulled together the districts and the schools, and went through the process of actually creating guide, and tried to find allies that could hold the accountability to the parents.

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  • How Malala Yousafzai is changing the game

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    New York Times

    People who are known as "game changers" rarely seek out the notoriety or fame that we bestow upon them. Instead, they're individuals who through extraordinary actions and self-sacrifice help to make the world a better place.

    Some you may recognize include:

    • Mahatma Gandhi who fought for India's independence through passive resistance and non-violence;
    • Nelson Mandela who peacefully fought against apartheid in South Africa, spent 27 years in prison and was eventually elected as that country's first black president;
    • and Aung San Suu Kyi, who spent a total of 15 years under house arrest and continues to fight for a more democratic Myanmar (Burma), as a member of its parliament.

    Now, there's Malala Yousafzai. If you don't know her name, you should. She's the 14-year-old student-activist who the Taliban hunted down and shot.

    Malala is still critical but her condition has stabilized. The bullet that entered her head and lodged in her back near her neck has been removed. The Taliban has declared that if Malala survives they will try again to kill her. Her father has also been threatened.

    In their minds Malala poses a serious threat. But why? How could a 14-year-old girl pose a threat to a faceless, and cowardly group that felt the need to shoot at innocent children in order to extinguish her voice? According to a Taliban spokesman after they shot Malala it's because,

    “She has become a symbol of Western culture in the area; she was openly propagating it.”

    The “western culture” that Malala has been fighting for is for girls to have the right to receive an education in Pakistan.

    The New York Times documented her struggles in a 2009 documentary as the Taliban sought to end female education in the Swat region of Pakistan and close schools like the one ran by her father. Yet Malala remained determined to get an education:

    "They cannot stop me. I will get my education if it is in home, school or any place. This is our request to all the world that save our schools, save our world, save our Pakistan. Save our Swat."

    Malala also chronicled the experience of her school closing in a blog for the BBC Urdu, and made television appearances in support of girls receiving an education without the threat of violence. Her work did not go unnoticed. Last year, she was awarded Pakistan's National Peace Award.

    As we now know, Malala's profile may have grown too much for the Taliban. Her cause was seen as radical for a woman, let alone a child. And as Maine democratic Senate candidate Cynthia Dill notes in her article, “it gives credence to the mounting international concerns about the Taliban's resurgence in the wake of a planned U.S. military exit in 2014.”

    Our presidential election will determine the course of action the next administration takes  regarding the Taliban's resurgence based on who's elected to office. But the more immediate concern is the loss of advances that have been made in the region in women's rights, especially in the area of education.

    In neighboring Afghanistan, when the Taliban was in power girls were not allowed to go to school. Now, the estimates are that more than three million girls are receiving some form of education. That said, the struggles for women and girls are far from over in a country that is heavily male-dominated.

    Violence in Pakistan against those who fight for women's rights is nothing new. Normally, sectarian divides and fear of the Taliban have caused Pakistanis to cast an ambivalent eye on attacks against those seeking rights for women and girls, but this time may be different. On Friday, fellow school children and adults around Pakistan prayed for Malala's recovery. And there has been worldwide condemnation of the Taliban's actions. Additionally, arrests have been made.

    In this instance, it appears that the Taliban has failed. Malala is fighting for her life, as the world waits with anticipation for the latest reports on her health. She has shown the world what one little girl can do. How one person was willing to put herself in harm's way; willing to fight for her and every other young woman's right to an education.

    No, the Taliban did not succeed. They have made Malala an icon, and shown the world how one little girl was willing to peacefully fight to change the game.

    Ed. note: Melissa's essay from today's show has been added, along with her interview with Newsweek foreign policy analyst Rula Jebreal below the jump.

    Update, Monday 10/15, 9:45am ET: Malala arrived in England this morning for further treatment. More information from NBC News here.

    Melissa Harris-Perry shares the story of Malala Yousafzai, a 14-year-old Pakistani girl who was hunted down by the Taliban for advocating education for girls.

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  • In our October 14 show, handle the truth

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    (C) 1991 The Island Def Jam Music Group

    Have you ever actually read one of those spammy, scammy, Nigerian-prince-inheritance, I-have-such-a-great-deal-for-you junk emails? Here's what's funny about them: they're now preying upon your mistrust of said spammy, scammy emails in order to get you to trust them. I received one this morning, and I had to laugh at the attempt. It's not so funny when guys running for President of the United States try to pull the same gambit.

    It is hardly a stretch to consider that the greatest danger to Barack Obama's re-election prospects has never been the quality of his opposition. Sure, one could take away from the first presidential debate that if Mitt Romney yells a lot at the moderator, the lies escaping his lips don't matter, given how the polls went a bit nuts over the past week. So what to make of it?

    The President's greatest enemy is mistrust, and Republicans know it. If there is one thing we can believe about our politics, it's that Americans don't trust a damned thing. The politicians themselves, the policies they propose, the banks they rescue, the laws they pass -- it's all either up for debate, or simply dismissed. They know that given the records of George W. Bush and the recently departed Congressional session which they sat on, they don't have much to run on. The plans Romney and his running mate have for the economy are apparently not worthy of our eyes until we send them to the White House.

    So Republicans aren't so much asking America to trust them as they are attempting to have us embrace the mistrust. Romney's best hope is to sow in each voter a lack of faith in what President Obama has done, and even who he is.

    In her opening discussion, Melissa will ask today whether anyone actually cares about the truth anymore. Given what's happening in Florida before the election, it's worth asking; we'll get into that, too. Melissa will also spotlight a young hero targeted by the Taliban for having the audacity to help her classmates get an education --  given that this Mental Illness Awareness Week, we'll take a look at living with mental illness, and take a look at the most recent (and unfortunate) developments with one of the most visible sufferers in our politics, Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr. of Illinois. And be sure to stay tuned for a Footnote that will preview Tuesday's presidential debate in a way no one else will.

    Our guests include:

    • Danielle Belton, editor-at-large at Clutch Magazine, writer for BET's "Don't Sleep!", and creator of the blog The Black Snob. 
    • Diana Furchtgott-Roth, senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, and author of "Regulating to Disaster."
    • Rula Jebreal, foreign policy analyst for Newsweek, and an MSNBC contributor.
    • Jason Johnson, political science professor at Hiram College, chief political correspondent for Politic365.com, and politics editor for The Source magazine.
    • Jonathan Metzl, author of "Protest Psychosis;" director, Program in Medicine, Health, and Society, and professor of psychiatry at Vanderbilt University.
    • Gihan Perera, executive director of Florida New Majority.
    • Joy Reid, managing editor of theGrio.com, and an MSNBC contributor.
    • Bill Schneider, distinguished senior fellow and resident scholar at Third Way.

    As always, folks -- be sure to interact with us during the show here in the comments of this post, on Facebook, and on Twitter, using the hashtag #nerdland. We look forward to having you join us at 10am ET on msnbc!

  • Good Look: What a 'strong president' looks like

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    Fighting through laryngitis, Melissa finished last Sunday's show if not with a strong voice, then a strong message -- about strength. Specifically, what we we perceive our President to be able to do, what we aspire for him to do, and how that often contrasts with his actual powers:

    It takes strength to deal honestly with your opponents, even when they deal dishonestly with you.
    It takes strength to make the tough calls even when you are not sure how they will turn out.
    It takes strength to have the patience to watch policy become progress.
    It takes strength to admit mistakes and change direction when needed...
    So yes, the presidency itself is weak, which is why Americans want presidents themselves to be strong. I just encourage us not to confuse aggressiveness with strength.

    Take a look at Melissa toughing it out through her Footnote from last Sunday -- our Good Look for this week. Be sure to join us today for another edition of "Melissa Harris-Perry," and another Footnote! See you on msnbc at 10am ET.

    Footnote: Melissa Harris-Perry talks about the strengths it takes to be president while the position itself is constitutionally designed to be weak.

     

  • Meet Aesha Rasheed, our Foot Soldier (part 1)

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    Courtesy of Aesha Rasheed

    New Orleans education activist Aesha Rasheed.

    Prior to today's Foot Soldier segment, Melissa shone light on the issue of school choice in her discussion of busing and desegregation in the Boston Public Schools. Closer to home for her, an activist named Aesha Rasheed is determined to ensure that New Orleans parents have the information they need to make the proper choice for their children.

    Rasheed, a former education reporter with the New Orleans Times-Picayune, left the paper in 2005 to pursue advocacy -- and continues pursuing that today through the organization she later founded, the New Orleans Parent Organizing Network, which publishes a parents' guide for the city's increasing crop of charter schools.

    Rasheed had a lot to say about this issue when we spoke. Below is the first half of our conversation, and Melissa's segment from today's show.

    LR: Tell me a little bit about what was going on before Katrina and how you got involved in this.

    AR: Before Katrina I was an education reporter and I covered the Orleans Parish School system and the state board of education, and this is at a time when the state was sort of beginning to implement the accountability system including the high stakes test for kids. Part of the back story is that public schools in New Orleans were definitely in a decline. There were lots of stories – anecdotal stories – [in which] kids were graduating and they don’t know how to read and write, and they aren’t prepared for the workforce. There was pushback from the business community saying that we need to have kids that are better prepared.

    This is a bit of my opinion, but for a long time the city was so reliant –and still is to some degree - on a lower wage employee force so it was acceptable to be supportive of the school system not being that strong. So you could get low wage workers. But it came to this point where [I thought], "well, actually we could use people who are better prepared to attract Fortune 500 companies etc., oil bust, in all of that. So we started to see this new pressure to get kids better prepared, to better prepare our students, and crime is going up, etc… Which created this condition where we then created and implemented this pretty intense accountability system which took the anecdotal stories and put some statistics to it -- so mass failure, kids not passing high stakes tests, lots of evidence that schools were not meeting the needs of kids? And then, a part of the battle was really intense financial disarray, the district had 10 superintendents come through in 10 years. Some of who stayed for a couple of years, some who were interim, and were there for months.

    What I observed as a reporter is that it didn’t get any traction even on a good idea. Because we had somebody new coming in and wanting to redo everything. You know, a new superintendent would come in and say, "I want to change everything." They put in some new educational approach, or changed the structure of a school, or moved all the leaders around, but nothing really had time to stick and evolve. Which built these layers of… maybe it was a good idea but it never went anywhere. Which left kids in the mix of that, and also layers of corruption. So there was corruption, incompetence, corruption, and like big things that happened -- like the district’s accounting system and payroll system didn’t work properly, so there were times where teachers didn’t get paid or got a two-cent check instead of their payroll check. Or dead people were getting paid, or somebody’s cousin who never worked for the system was getting a check, and all these scandals. Meanwhile the FBI was investigating the corruption, and so they had setup investigations inside the school board offices to investigate. They were so probing into what everyone thought was deep corruption. My perspective was that it was probably was a mixture of that layering, where structures didn’t work and systems didn’t work, and people that were all like "look, the system is broken so I better get something." There certainly was corruption but there was also chaos.

    LR: Your interest in this at the time was as a reporter focusing on education.

    AR: Right, so I [was] sitting at school board meetings and observing. I had covered schools in a suburban parish before, and had watched from the outskirts this chaos in New Orleans and thought – well why don’t they do this, or that, why don’t they implement these systems that seem to work in this other parish? I came in New Orleans and was sort of like, visit all the schools and get a good sense of what is going on there. What I saw is this huge disconnect. School board meetings were spent talking who was getting what dollars. A lot of schools were just heartbreaking, like no one was at the front office. There was one school that looked just like a prison. It was very depressing to see the conditions that teachers and kids were actually working within, and that was not the conversation happening at the school board level. No one was actually talking about those conditions and that cause me a lot of angst, and is part of why I fed. I found myself only writing about this is how bad things are, and as a journalist you think writing about how bad things are would move people to do something, but what is saw is a lot of apathy. Apathy is not the right word, because apathy implies people don’t care, but "hardened-ness." People who were like, “it’s been f***** up for a long time; it’s going to stay f***** up, so why bother.”

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  • In defense of democracy

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    If you’ve been watching the show over the last few weeks, and in particular, if you've been following our This Week In Voter Suppression segments, you might be feeling a little shook. I know I am.

    You might be having nightmares about state Republican legislators passing laws that could disenfranchise hundreds of thousands of students, people of color, poor people, and seniors.

    You may be feeling a little anxiety about attempts to purge thousands of people from voter rolls in states like Florida and Ohio.

    You can even be forgiven if the plans of organizations like True the Vote to send one million volunteers out to intimidate voters at the polls on election day make you feel a bit of hyperventilation coming on.

    It’s okay. The idea of an organized effort to block the vote, steal and election, and most importantly, undermine our democracy, is scary stuff. But here’s the thing, when you turn on the light, they boogeyman goes away. And in this case, the light for the American electorate is knowledge and information.

    As of today, we can all rest a little easier because resistance against restrictive voting laws has blocked or weakened those laws in more than a dozen states. But that still leaves several states with new voter laws that will be in effect on election day.

    If you live in one of those states, don't get scared. Get ready. Do your homework. Find out what the law is, so you can make sure you've got everything you need to exercise your right to vote on November 6.

    You can start with the Map of Shame you see above, courtesy of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. It breaks down what you need to know about voter-ID laws -- whether you need an ID in your state, what kind is valid, and whether or not you're required to show an ID if one is requested of you.

    If you're a new voter, or have to change your registration for any reason, you might be affected too. Most registration deadlines have already passed, but to find out if there's still time for you to get registered, check out the list of deadlines here

    Today, Melissa chatted with Barbara Arnwine, president and executive director of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. Ms. Arnwine is going to be dropping all kinds of knowledge about how you can volunteer to be a part of efforts to stop voter suppression.

    She'll tell you what to do if you get challenged by a monitor on election day. And she's even got a hotline for you to call if you witness some voter intimidation shadiness going down at your local polling place -- 1-866-OUR-VOTE.

    So shake off that shook feeling. Remember: voting is your right. You have the power.

    Ed. note: You can find the first segment of Saturday's edition of This Week in Voter Suppression!™ below the jump.

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  • In our October 13 show, help for the undecided

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    Let's give a break to what many think is a mythical being: the undecided voter. There are 24 days before Election Day, and the Undecided Voter is catching hell -- from Saturday Night Live, most recently. This isn't new; The Daily Show gave them the business in 2008. Really, you haven't made your mind up by now?, they imply. No, some haven't. Some folks have actual questions they still want answered.

    If that isn't clear by the polls being swung by a 90-minute debate in which the one guy who lied loudly came out the "winner" over the President, I don't know what to tell you. Clearly, "Undecided Voter" doesn't just apply to people who haven't made any kind of decision whatsoever.

    Surely such an important decision -- who will be the Leader of the Free World -- is an important one to ponder. And it should be encouraging that there are citizens among us weighing all the important policy positions, personal attributes, and records of the men running for President of the United States. Right?

    Instead, these utterly responsible citizens are being pillories as if they were aliens walking amongst us, and encounters with them are on the level of what Carl Sagan described in "Contact." Meeting one is like encountering an Oklahoma City Thunder fan; seriously, have you met one? But there's the problem with anecdotal evidence right there: there are tons of people (though likely not in Seattle) who root for that team, as there are actual, real, living undecided voters.

    So rather than asking those people in a fury, "WHY HAVEN'T YOU MADE UP YOUR MIND, DUDE/LADY?!?!", today we'll explore some of the things that could help sway their vote in these final days. Naturally, there are people who are their direct opposites -- folks who have voted early, in states like Ohio. Well, in today's edition of This Week in Voter Suppression!™, we'll bring you some fresh news on what extremes Republican lawmakers and state officials are going to in order to block people from voting early.

    We'll also assess the cultural and social impact of an Obama second term on African Americans, and take a look at school desegregation through busing. And we'll have a Foot Soldier which you will not want to miss!

    Our guests include:

    • Barbara Arnwine, president and executive director of the Lawyer's Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.
    • Anthea Butler, professor of religious studies and graduate chair of religion at the University of Pennsylvania.
    • Prudence Carter, associate professor of education and sociology, Stanford University, and author of "Stubborn Roots: Race, Culture, and Inequality in U.S. and South African Schools."
    • Jelani Cobb, associate professor of Africana Studies at the University of Connecticut.
    • Kim Janey, senior project director at the Massachusetts Advocates for Children, and a part of the Boston School Reform Project.
    • Glen Johnson, politics editor of Boston.com.
    • Nina Turner, Ohio State Senator.
    • Matt Welch, editor-in-chief of Reason Magazine, and author of "McCain: Myth of a Maverick."

    As always, folks -- be sure to interact with us during the show here in the comments of this post, on Facebook, and on Twitter, using the hashtag #nerdland. We look forward to having you join us at 10am ET on msnbc!

     

  • Pakistan holds day of prayer for young activist

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    Shakil Adil / AP

    Pakistani children pray for the recovery of 14-year-old schoolgirl Malala Yousufzai during a candlelight vigil in Karachi, Pakistan, Friday.

    While 14-year-old Malala Yousafzai remained in the hospital recovering from a gun shot to the head, fellow school children in Pakistan gathered Friday to offer prayers for her recovery.

    Yousafzai was targeted and shot by gunmen Tuesday on a school bus in Pakistan under order of the Taliban because of her outspokenness on education for girls and against the Taliban. She had previously blogged for the BBC on these issues under a pseudonym. Three suspects were arrested.

    Radio Free Europe reports:

    The prayers in schools and other places across Pakistan on October 12 are in response to a call by the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial government for people around the nation to express solidarity with Yousafzai.

    Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf is due to visit Yousafzai on October 12 as the gravely wounded schoolgirl recovers in a military hospital in Rawalpindi.

    Prayers were held throughout the country Friday as leaders condemned the attack. A spokesman called Yousafzai's condition "satisfactory," but said the next two days are critical.

    Asif Hassan / AFP - Getty Images

    Pakistani Muslims pray for the early recovery of child activist Malala Yousafzai during Friday prayers in Karachi on October 12. Pakistanis at mosques across the country prayed Friday for the recovery of the schoolgirl shot in the head by the Taliban as doctors said the next two days were critical.

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  • Cleveland targeted by 'voter fraud' billboards

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    Producer Jamil Smith contributed to this post.

    Despite debates, deceptions, and divisions, Mitt Romney is still having a hard time catching up in Ohio. While this morning's new NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist poll shows the Republican presidential nominee keeping it airtight in Florida and surging to a slim lead in Virginia, Ohio remains a stronghold of Obama support. The President leads by six points there, a bit of a slimmer lead than before, but still very strong -- especially since my fellow Buckeyes have been able to vote since October 2.

    Another thing we're seeing in Ohio? The Republican Secretary of State taking a series of L's on his efforts to restrict early voting. He's to the point now where he's appealing to the Supreme Court to reverse a court ruling keeping the polls open all the way through Election Day, whereas he wants to bar people from voting on the last three days beforehand.

    As Trymaine Lee noted in the Huffington Post, that action alone is confusing matters:

    Local election officials said they don't know how to inform their poll workers or voters. Ministers have stalled their Souls to the Polls campaigns. And Husted has raised the ante in the latest round between the state's Democrats and Republicans over expanding or limiting voter access. "The problem is we have no clue what's going on," said Tim Burke, a Democrat and chairman of the Hamilton County Board of Elections in Cincinnati. "I am absolutely convinced that this is part of an overall strategy."

    We don't know if a crop of alarmist billboards warning against committing voter fraud have erected in black and Latino neighborhoods around Cleveland, Ohio are a formal part of that strategy, but local politicians and civil-rights groups believe that's the goal of whoever is paying for them. According to a map created by Eric Fischer (see below the jump), there are currently 10 billboards standing, a majority of which are prominently featured at the corner major intersections. Clear Channel, who was paid to display the ads, has declined to disclose who paid for them.

    The only indication of authorship exists in a corner in fine print: "Paid for by a private family foundation." 

    What is the incentive behind placing billboards in poor, heavily democratic neighborhoods of color? Their strategic placement and aggressive content certainly suggests so. A Cleveland city councilwoman, Phyllis Cleveland, voiced her protest in a video on the Cleveland Plain Dealer site (see above):

    "When you have the words 'felony,' 'voter,' and 'fine' all the the same message, and by placing it where it is, the only message that you are intending to send is that this is a threat to you if you vote... It's just a blatant attempt to keep people in this community, particularly black people and poor people, from voting."

    The Plain Dealer also reports that Washington-based voting advocacy group, The Lawyers' Committee For Civil Rights, sent a letter this week to Clear Channel Outdoor's office in suburban Parma requesting they take down the signs.

    The glut of voter-ID laws which could have disenfranchised as many as 21 million citizens have largely been struck down. But Ohio is a perhaps the swing state of swing states, the one upon which Romney's electoral hopes lie. With the Republican trailing in the state, and the Secretary of State doing everything but pulling a George Wallace in front of the polls, the rights of early voters in the state aren't served well by scary messages about a problem that never really existed.

    See the aforementioned racial map of Cleveland, and the sites where the billboards are located. Below, you'll see a "PoliticsNation with Al Sharpton" report from Tuesday about these billboards -- and not just in Ohio.

    Billboards are popping up in minority neighborhoods in Wisconsin, broadcasting "Voter fraud is a felony". Rev. Al Sharpton talks about voter intimidation and why it's important to fight back.

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  • GOP lawmaker releases pro-marriage equality ad

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    Washington State Representative Maureen Walsh recently filmed a PSA in favor of marriage equality in the Evergreen State. Walsh, a third-term Republican Representative, is advocating for the passage of Referendum 74, which would allow same-sex couples to marry in Washington.

    In the 30-second PSA, Walsh said the issue of marriage equality was a "question of fundamental fairness" and that it was not her, or anyone else's, place to stop a couple from benefiting in the "incredible bond of marriage."

    "As a Republican, I don't believe the government should tell anyone who they can or cannot marry," Walsh added.

    Walsh made headlines back in February after stunning her party with her bipartisan support for marriage equality. In her heartfelt speech in the Legislature, she spoke about her own daughter, who is a lesbian, and her desire to one day throw her a wedding. 

    "I hope she will not feel like a second-class citizen involved in something called a 'domestic partnership,'" Walsh said in her speech.

    Meanwhile, former Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum made a stop in Spokane, Wash. on Tuesday to campaign against the referendum

    But support for marriage equality is strong heading into November, as indicated by a recent poll out of Washington that shows a 15-point lead between those in favor of passing the referendum and those who oppose it. 

    Washington is one of four states in the country that will vote on marriage equality this November.

  • Victims of sexual assault slam Akin in latest McCaskill ads

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    In a powerful three-point punch to her opponent Todd Akin's damning remarks on "legitimate rape," Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill released a blitz of TV spots featuring testimonials from rape survivors.

    One ad features Diana—a self-described Republican, pro-life mother, and rape survivor. Another stars Rachel who shares how she was "brutally raped in a home invasion." A third highlights Joanie, another pro-life mother and survivor of an "extremely violent sexual assault."

    All three women are uniting with McCaskill to take down Akin in the Missouri Senate race. 

    "What Todd Akin said was offensive, but what he believes is worse," Diana says in the ad. "I have never voted for Claire McCaskill. But because of Todd Akin, I will now."

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  • Why diversity in higher education isn't optional

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    MSNBC

    Debo Adegbile of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, on our show last Sunday.

    This is a guest column by one of our Sunday guests, Debo Adegbile, who is the Acting President and Director-Counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, Inc. (LDF). LDF argued the Fisher v. Texas case in the federal appellate court, and filed a friend of the court brief in the Supreme Court. You can follow him on Twitter at @DeboLDF.

    For many students, college is the first time that they have meaningful interactions with people of other races. Because many of our nation’s neighborhoods and schools remain segregated, not by law but in fact, the opportunities to learn from, work with, and live alongside people who are different are often limited in American life. For decades, the United States Supreme Court has helped to break down these barriers through landmark rulings that paved he way for the nation’s universities to pursue the twin goals of academic excellence and broad diversity. But a major case now before the Court could determine whether universities will be able to consciously continue their role of bringing people from different racial backgrounds together.

    As the acting President of the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (“LDF”), I have a particular legal vantage point on the issue of diversity in higher education. LDF filed a brief on behalf of African-American students and alumni in the Supreme Court attesting to the critical role that college plays in expanding opportunity for all students.

    But I also have a personal perspective. 

    I played soccer when I was in college. My teammates and I came from across the nation and world, played hard, and learned lasting lessons about our strengths, limits and character. After practices, we often recounted the day’s highs and lows as we walked up the hill to dinner -- ribbing each other along the way. But one evening, things were different. As I reached out to hug a teammate who was walking apart from the group he turned and snapped at me “get off me, you fuzzy foreigner.”

    This incident was well over twenty years ago, but I remember it clearly. We were both people of modest means who loved the game, but in the blink of an eye, our similarities seemed to be meaningless. While my life in The Bronx, New York may have been “foreign” to the experience of my teammate who was from a different part of the country, it was undoubtedly my race, and perhaps my name that caused him, reflexively, to refer to me as something other than a teammate. But if our early measure of each other was affected by our prior experiences and preconceptions, at college it was not be singularly defined by them.

    Had ours been a chance encounter that might have been the end of the story -- but because we attended the same college and were able to live together and learn from each other, we both had the opportunity to move past it. Through our experiences on campus, on the soccer field, in the dorm and through the classes and interests that we shared we came to appreciate both the similarities and differences associated with our distinctive racial backgrounds and built a friendship. We would later travel to his hometown during a school vacation. Years later, at his request, I vouched for his character when he sought admission to his state’s bar.

    My experience and countless others like it across the nation illustrate the possibilities that living and learning with students of different races, cultures and backgrounds affords. This story is a window into a larger American challenge and the difficulties we encounter when we fail to develop tools for productive cross-racial interactions. In the absence of opportunities to understand people based upon experiences, we run the risk of reducing them to stereotypical assumptions about their most obvious feature, which is often their race.

    Today the Court will hear oral arguments in Fisher v. University of Texas, a case that revisits the constitutionality of college and university admissions policies that seek to ensure that their student body is broadly diverse as well as academically qualified. LDF is not alone in endorsing the benefits of diversity in this case. An avalanche of over 70 briefs were filed from major corporations like Merck, DuPont, Halliburton and American Express, retired military leaders like General Colin Powell, over 100 college and universities, small businesses, religious denominations, and leading civil rights organizations. There also have been numerous opinion pieces, such as a piece in the Washington Post by Harvard Law School Dean Martha Minow and Yale Law School Dean Robert Post, and another by Steve Farmer, Vice Provost for enrollment and undergraduate admissions at the University of North Carolina, which forcefully make the case for diversity.

    This journey began over 60 years ago in a case, also out of the University of Texas, Sweatt v. Painter, when the Court first recognized the diversity principle and that law, education, and life do not exist in isolationSome years later, in another case, Bakke v. University of California at Davis, a pivotal opinion by one of the Justices affirmed this core value – that all students and the country as a whole benefit from diversity in higher education. Justice Powell, who cast the deciding vote in Bakke, observed that “nation’s future depends upon leaders trained through wide exposure to the ideas and mores of students as diverse as this Nation of many peoples.” This notion applies with even greater force to the challenges our nation faces today. And in 2003, in the Michigan case, the Court roundly embraced diversity in higher education, emphasizing the many educational advantages of having people of different racial backgrounds on campus and in the classroom.

    America is better and stronger when the pathways to educational opportunity are visibly open to everyone. We cannot and should not waiver from this important path to educational opportunity -- as the Supreme Court has previously explained, nothing less than the future of the nation depends upon it.

    Find the entirety of our Sunday conversation on affirmative action below the jump. We'll have more on today's events later today on the blog.

    Continue reading this entryContinue reading this entry ...

  • Mitt Romney would like to reintroduce himself

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    AP Photo/ Evan Vucci

    Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney delivers an address centered upon foreign policy yesterday at the Virginia Military Institute.

    Next Tuesday will mark six years since the normally mild-mannered Dennis Green famously lost his temper at a press conference following a crushing loss his Arizona Cardinals suffered at the hands of the Chicago Bears. Green, then Arizona's head coach, saw his team blow what seemed to be an insurmountable lead late in the game, and lose at home on Monday Night Football. I'll spare all the specifics that NFL Films covers well in this video -- one which you should watch in order to see Green spit hot fire:

    The Bears are what we thought they were. They're what we thought they were. We played them in preseason — who the hell takes a third game of the preseason like it's bullsh*t? Bullsh*t! We played them in the third game — everybody played three quarters — the Bears are who we thought they were! That's why we took the damn field. Now if you want to crown them, then crown their *ss! But they are who we thought they were! And we let 'em off the hook!

    Over those nearly six years, I've been reminded of the punchiest line in Green's rant -- "they are who we thought they were!" -- often as I've watched Mitt Romney run for President. Considering the address he gave yesterday at the Virginia Military Institute, it seems that this actually be the moment at which it is most poignant. How so?

    Despite Romney's newly launched, media-driven campaign "reset," it is important to remember that he has always been the same person. I'll explain what I mean.

    There's no doubt that Romney's efforts at re-invention are the stuff of legend, even under their current moniker of "etch-a-sketching." Last week's debate was a sign that we're in a new phase of it, a (perceived) Romney shift back to the political center under the cover of vagaries and lies. Yesterday, he continued in that vein with a frightening foreign policy speech.

    First, the biggest etch-a-sketch:

    “I will recommit America to the goal of a democratic, prosperous Palestinian state living side by side in peace and security with the Jewish state of Israel.”

    This two-state solution, of course, is the exact opposite what he remarked to a private, high-priced fundraiser back in April. Yes, the same one at which Romney spoke derisively about the "47%" and said that he believed Palestinians aren't interested in peace and that as President, he planned to "kick the ball down the field and hope that ultimately, somehow, something will happen and resolve it."

    In a substantive, surgical breakdown, Fred Kaplan of Slate called the speech "the most dishonest" Romney has delivered yet. Conor Friedersdorf of The Atlantic wasn't happy, either, going even further by calling it a "terrible, horrible, no good, very bad"  speech:

    The speech that Mitt Romney gave Monday ought to make every American nervous about what he and his ideological team would do if permitted to direct U.S. foreign policy. What a debacle...

    Romney's foreign policy sure does seem as if it's the terrible consequence of the Republican Party's attempt to treat spending as if it was the only failure of the Bush Administration, rather than acknowledging the various ways in which the Bush foreign policy made the United States worse off.

    Yeah, but was it loud? Given that near-universal praise greeted Romney for his bullying, loud debate performance full of lies last Wednesday and the wacky polls we've seen both ways since, it's clear that that this is a volcanic electorate in many senses -- molten, fiery, volatile. As long as Romney feeds the heat with his rhetoric, all while re-jiggering himself to the left of his extreme party positions for those voters who -- like casual sports fans at playoff time -- are just starting to pay attention, it's a recipe for success. Right?

    In his analysis of Romney's speech yesterday, Adam Serwer of Mother Jones opted not to focus on the substance Kaplan and Friedersdorf analyzed, noting that this speech was less policy address than public service announcement (in the vein of Jay-Z, naturally). Jonathan Cohn of The New Republic ponders the timing of this "reset," wondering if Romney has been espousing the extreme for a little too long:

    Historically, those commitments have told us something about the plans candidates pursue in office. Those commitments have also told us something about the resistance candidates will put up in the face of political pressure. With Romney, the latter may be more important, because if he’s elected he'd almost certainly be working with a Republican Congress. The plans he endorsed are very much like the ones House Republicans have already passed. If Romney is not willing to stand up his party’s base now, why should we expect he'd stand up to them as president? ...

    Romney had more than a year of campaigning to position himself as a moderate. He chose not to do so. That tells us a lot—more, surely, than anything he says now.

    That brings me back to "they are who we thought they were," and a must-read New York Times piece on Romney from last week. In a lengthy examination of Romney's past as Massachusetts governor, it was clear that through all of his varied policy machinations and switches, the guy really wanted one thing more than anything: to be President. I've wondered aloud why a man of his wealth and business influence would even bother with the revealing, arduous process of becoming President, but one thing that has been clear over the course of time is that Romney is a politician of almost limitless ambition, to the point where lying has become a campaign staple (and alternatively, punchline).

    Yesterday's speech gave some substantive, frightening indication of what he'd do if elected. But Mitt Romney hasn't changed. If we'd been paying enough attention, it would be clear that we've always known. So enough about "etch-a-sketching," and the like. It's clear that Romney not only doesn't expect America to care -- he's counting on it.

  • MHP: Affirmative action 'a policy that works'

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    Editor's note: Melissa toughed out Sunday's two-hour broadcast with laryngitis, but doing so meant the sacrifice of some of her longer segment introductions. Below is the essay which she intended to deliver prior to our discussion of affirmative action, and the very important reason it is back in the news this week.

    All eyes will be on the Supreme Court this Wednesday as the justices hear arguments in Fisher v. University of Texas. That's the case which is putting the often challenged practice of Affirmative Action front and center. It's not the first time the court has presided over a case involving affirmative action. However, this is a conservative leaning court, led by Chief Justice John Roberts. And only eight justices will be deciding the outcome as Justice Elena Kagan recused herself. So, this could be the case that potentially eradicates the practice of affirmative action from the college admissions process.

    And In an age, where we have a black president, some may ask, do we even need affirmative action anymore? To answer that question, we only have to go back a few short decades.

    While the 1954 Supreme Court ruling Brown v. Board of Education changed the educational landscape for students of color, and Presidents Franklin Roosevelt and John Kennedy took small steps to address affirmative action during their terms, it was President Lyndon Johnson ushering forth the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which created the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission -- and then issuing an executive order in 1965 that enforced affirmative action for government contractors for the first time.

    Universities and colleges followed suit and began to include affirmative action in their admissions procedures in order to diversify their student bodies. But with affirmative action's implementation in higher education a number of challenges against the policy have arisen.

    In 1978, Allan Bakke, a white medical-school applicant, said he was denied admittance to the University of California because affirmative action made room for less qualified minority applicants. In that case, the Supreme Court ruled against the use of racial quotas in the admission process because it was a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th amendment. However, the Court did say that race could still be considered as one of many factors.

    And In 2003, there was both Gratz v. Bollinger and Grutter v. Bollinger.

    The first case focused on affirmative action in the undergraduate admissions process, while the second looked at law school admissions, both at the University of Michigan.

    This time the Supreme Court ruled that the use of affirmative action in the undergraduate process was *un*constitutional, but upheld the school's policy for law school admissions.

    Now, there's Abigail Fisher.

    In 2008, she was denied admittance to the University of Texas at Austin. In Texas, the top 10% of high school graduating classes enjoy automatic admission to the state University system. Fisher didn't make that cut, so she was assessed based on a formula for which race is one part of the equation to consider admitting the applicant to the institution.

    Fisher's suit charges that race shouldn't be part of the process at all because it violates the Equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. And that's what the Supreme Court will now rule on, whether race should be a factor in admitting students to school.

    This ruling could change the face of higher education as we know it and possibly reverse the successes of affirmative action has achieved. Since the late 1980s, the total college enrollment of students of color has increased by 57.2%. And the number of degrees earned by Native Americans rose 151.9% between 1981 and 2001.

    That's progress, folks. This is a policy that works.

    Make no mistake. The end of affirmative action in higher education would have dramatic, immediate and negative consequences for the egalitarian progress we have made in the past thirty years. We certainly shouldn't fool ourselves into thinking we're past needing affirmative action when so much inequality still exists.

    Video of the first third of our look at the Fisher case and affirmative action, featuring panelists Kenji Yoshino, Robert Traynham, Chloe Angyal, and Debo Adegbile, is below. The rest of the discussion can be found either in the carousel above or at our MSNBC video hub.

    NYU professor Kenji Yoshino and Debo Adegbile of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund join the Melissa Harris-Perry panel to talk about how the Supreme Court is slated to hear arguments this week for Fisher vs. University of Texas addressing affirmative action.

Weekends, 10am-12pm ET, msnbc
"Melissa Harris-Perry" is hosted by the Tulane political science professor of the same name. Join her each Saturday and Sunday as she explores politics, culture, art and community beyond the beltway. A panel and guest-driven conversation featuring penetrating political analysis and humor, "MHP" continuously challenges the definition of politics and will push the boundaries of what we know, how we know it, and where we get our information. Twitter: @MHPshow.
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