Thursday, December 01, 2011

Did Black Brooks County, Georgia Election Officials Seek to Steal an Election via Absentee Ballots?

By Nicholas Stix
Revised and expanded 3:51 a.m., Thursday, December 1, 2011



[See my VDARE exposés:

Diversity is Strength! It’s Also… “Jim Snow” Disenfranchisement of Whites; and

New York Times Finds Civil Rights Commission's Condemnation of Hate Bill (and AG Holder's Jim Snow Policies) Unfit to Print.]


The Web site City Data provides the following demographic breakdown of Brooks County, Georgia:

• White Non-Hispanic Alone (57.7%)
• Black Non-Hispanic Alone (35.7%)
• Hispanic or Latino (4.4%)
• Asian alone (1.4%)
• Two or more races (0.7%)


That 12 black former Brooks County officials would be charged with felony voter fraud would be striking, even if a white Republican were in the White House. Such charges typically are made against districts that are already predominantly black, but in the Age of Obama, racist blacks (i.e., the overwhelming majority of blacks) are turning up the volume on every sort of racist wickedness and evil.

In the past, we have seen such charges made of racist black strongholds such as Noxubee County, Mississippi and 28 other Mississippi counties; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; St. Louis (city), Missouri; Perry County, Alabama; etc. Note, too, that blacks are rarely charged with felonies in such situations, if at all.

Individual blacks caught engaging in voter fraud are also rarely prosecuted. Let us recall the 2000 election in Florida.

Immediately following the 2000 election, as part of the Democratic Party’s attempt to steal the election for Vice-President Al Gore after the fact (see: “Gore to U.S.: Drop Dead”), all manner of racist black Democratic operatives, including Jesse Jackson Sr. (here, here, here and here) and then-chairwoman of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Mary Frances Berry here and here), undertook a massive race hoax, asserting that black Floridians had been disenfranchised, including by policeman using “dogs and guns” (black Gore campaign manager Donna Brazille).

As I wrote in my February, 2001 Middle American News exposé, “The Great Florida Disenfranchisement Hoax,” regarding the charge that “Black college students were disenfranchised”:

Black students at white-free campuses Florida A & M University, and Bethune-Cookman and Edward Waters colleges, insisted that they had registered to vote, yet had been denied the franchise. In fact, the students had not properly completed their registration by the October 10 deadline. Or they lied. As Timothy Carney reported in the December 22 online edition of Human Events, not one single student complained to the local election boards of being disenfranchised. (Postscript: It turned out that far from students at the aforementioned segregated campuses being disenfranchised, many students engaged in vote fraud, through voting twice – once using their home address, and once using their college address. The students in question sent in absentee ballots and voted at polling places on Election Day. Unfortunately, cowardly Florida election authorities, surely fearing another “blacklash,” refrained from prosecuting any of the malefactors.)

I now strongly suspect that massive electoral fraud was committed by blacks in Florida in the 2000 election. My grounds are:

1. Although blacks in 2000 comprised only 14.6 percent of Florida’s population, they reportedly comprised 16 percent of voters;
2. A sizable portion of those Florida blacks were non-citizens who had immigrated from the Caribbean (the West Indies, Haiti, etc.), whether legally or illegally;
3. A sizable portion of those Florida blacks who were citizens were ineligible to vote, based on prior felony convictions;
4. Prior to 2000, blacks had always had a proportionally low turnout;
5. The Democratic candidate was just another white man, and one decidedly lacking in charisma and sex appeal, thus not giving blacks a motivation to come out in extraordinarily high numbers;
6. According to FAIR, “In Florida, election observers say a ‘sizable number’ of Florida votes in the 2000 election may have been cast by ineligible felons, illegal immigrants, and non-citizens.”

Thus, I believe that the Florida Disenfranchisement Hoax was a smoke-screen meant both to divert attention from massive black vote fraud, and to aid the ultimately unsuccessful cause of stealing the 2000 election.

Returning to the instant case, note that 11 of the 12 black Brooks County indictees are females, and that several were employed either with the voter registrar's office or were school board members. Convicted felons are typically barred from holding such positions, which excludes a substantial portion of the black male community. Under racial socialism, with its anti-business attitudes, continuous expansion of the public sector, and demand for virtually unlimited school spending, in order to “close the gap,” controlling school budgets is one of the greatest sources of graft.

In a related vein, in a letter just published by VDARE tonight, an Irish reader observes,

The claim that “the poor” in America cannot afford photo ID does not make sense to me. If three quarters of poor households own at least one car, then why can’t people use their driving licenses? And if the very poorest of the poor can’t get photo ID, then how do they receive government assistance, or buy alcohol?

The arguments against photo ID make no sense. It looks like people are desperately trying to keep on committing voter fraud.


12 former officials indicted for voter fraud
Posted: November 22, 2011 4:51 p.m. EST; Updated: November 28, 2011 10:56 a.m. EST
By Stephen Abel
WALB

QUITMAN, GA (WALB) - 12 former Brooks County officials were indicted for voter fraud. The suspects are accused of illegally helping people vote by absentee ballot.

State officials launched an investigation after an unusually high number of absentee ballots were cast in the July 2010 primary election….

The defendants include some workers in the voter registrar's office and some school board members. They are Angela Bryant, April Proctor, Brenda Monds, Debra Denard, Lula Smart, Kechia Harrison, Robert Denard, Sandra Cody, Elizabeth Thomas, Linda Troutman, Latashia Head, and Nancy Denard.

2 comments:

Site Administrator said...

Another cool & informative blog.

Anonymous said...

I am white conservative Brooks county resident who believes in adherence to laws, However this incident needs to be put into proper perspective, School board has been exclusively controlled by same members elected for 25-30 years with past chairman, Asst. DA Shealy illegally serving for 30 years (Ga attorney general on his website published opinion and cites Ga code stating "one serving as asst. DA can not hold any elected office due to possibility of conflict of interest}". He further states that i mere recusal (as Shealy and Miller have done in present case is insufficient). It should be obvious these greedy board members have invited this revolt by the blacks and have brought this on themselves. Also Claude Butler,ex commissioner enjoyed many years of illegally doling out many favors only for benefit of his special friends and was the mastermind of the infamous million dollar boondoggle "Dixie overpass bridge to nowhere")
The defeated incumbents mounted extensive write in campaign, running a second time; therefore alleged voter fraud did not influence outcome of election. History shows voter fraud convictions are few to non-existent so time to get over it and work a little harder in next election.Seems to be an ill advised effort by Brad Shealey for revenge with no regard to exorbitant cost to local taxpayers and racial unrest in county,