Blog

29 September 2006

Something does smell racist . . . I mean liberal . . . I mean fishy

Desperate for the glory days of the civil rights movement (you know . . . when liberals actually had a cause), the DTH published a heartwarming editorial today blasting the recent House vote which, if approved by the Senate, will require citizens to show a photo ID before voting.

If you have a lot a spare time on your hands and would like to be entertained you can read it here:

http://media.www.dailytarheel.com/media/storage/paper885/
news/2006/09/29/Opinion/Fishier.Than.A.Sushi.Bar-2316398
.shtml?sourcedomain=www.dailytarheel.com&MIIHost=media.
collegepublisher.com

The questionable practicality of their argument is a mute point.

However, on the eve of "race relations week" I found myself disgusted by the editorial board's claim that the legislation will "make voting significantly tougher for target groups. Namely poor people, blacks, Latino, the elderly, victims of natural disasters, and other groups who currently do not have the reason, the transportation, or perhaps the money to purchase a photo ID." (emphasis added)

You heard it hear first. Apparently, according to the DTH, some races and ethnicities have a natural inclination to not have photo IDs. It must be genetic . . .

While I would "never accuse" the far left of manipulating and demeaning minorities with the invention of such stereotypes in order to get elected, one "does have to wonder" if the Bob Johnsons, Oprah Winfreys, and Alex Rodriguezes of the world would agree that attaining a photo ID is one of the many struggles of their races.

Good job DTH . . . can't wait for your coverage of next week.

24 September 2006

Environmentalism at its best...

Government decided to intrude on these people's property rights, and here is their solution.

Rare Woodpecker Sends Town Running for Chain Saws

Good work.

09 September 2006

Compulsion to speech

There's a new state law in North Carolina that says all classrooms have to display the American flag and that time must be set aside each day to recite the pledge of allegiance.

Arguments about the pledge as a pseudo-religious activity aside, the only problem I see with this is that the pledge loses its meaning when it's forced. It's like Islamic states that require women to wear burqas by law: when there is no choice in an action, when there is no decision either to wear or not to wear, to recite or not to recite; then the repetition of any action is rendered meaningless because the participant didn't willingly engage, or otherwise decide anything about, the activity.

To put it another way, it's like Wooley v. Maynard (1976) where the Supreme Court decided it was unconstitutional for New Hampshire to require citizens to display the slogan "Live Free or Die" on all its license plates. The rationale was that forced speech, especially forced "political" speech as it was in this case, cuts right against the First Amendment. But, there is a big difference between Wooley v. Maynard and the state laws about required pledge of allegiance recitation (37 states currently have such laws). The difference is that the new law pertains to schools, which are comprised almost entirely of minors, who have "less" rights as a citizen, perhaps even no rights, when compared to their adult counterparts.

So the law will most likely stay (in fact, I'm sure of it), because it's not "patriotic" to oppose a law that's all about praising the American flag and devoting yourself to American ideals. But for the reasons listed above, there's something unsettling about this law, no matter how innocuous it appears on its surface. After all, our state motto is Esse quam videre, "to be rather than to seem."
About Carolina Review
Carolina Review is a journal of conservative thought and opinion published at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Since its founding in 1993, Carolina Review has been the most visible and consistent voice of conservatism on campus.