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Article on Literacy Tests.

Presented as a means for assessing whether voters were educated enough to vote, literacy tests and other methods were designed for a single purpose: to stop Black Americans from voting.

During the Reconstruction period that followed the war, enfranchised Black men gave Ulysses S. Grant his narrow victory in the popular vote. Before that period ended, 2,000 Black Americans would be elected to office in the South.

But by the dawn of the 20th century, all the progress that was made to expand the rights of formerly enslaved Black Americans was severely crippled by the institution of state-specific voting laws that were designed to exclude Black voters from the ballot box. Southern states created elaborate voter registration procedures or “voting literacy tests” that determined whether the voter in question was literate enough to cast their ballot.

Of course, these voting literacy tests were administered largely to voters of color and were scored by biased judges. The tests were intentionally confusing and difficult and one wrong answer meant a failing grade. Even Black voters with college degrees were given failing scores.

In the mid-1960s, a professor of law at Duke University, William W. Van Alstyne, conducted an experiment in which he submitted four questions found on the Alabama voter’s literacy test to “all professors currently teaching constitutional law in American law schools.”

Alstyne’s professors were told to answer all submitted questions without the aid of any external reference, just as any voter would be required to do when presented with the test. Ninety-six respondents sent Alstyne their answers; 70 percent of the answers given to him were incorrect.

As Alstyne had demonstrated, passing a voting literacy test was virtually impossible. The questions were intentionally written to confuse the reader, and one wrong answer would result in automatic failure.

  • came_apart_at_Kmart [he/him, comrade/them]
    ·
    10 days ago

    weird that Dems don't want to fund universal, no cost post secondary education then, if it would so obviously guarantee their eternal victory.

    or maybe they just want to reassert the fash talking point that only the professional-managerial class from credentialed institutions with racial, economic and social barriers should have the franchise.

    • Red_Sunshine_Over_Florida [he/him]
      ·
      10 days ago

      More specially, they're cutting their own throats if attendance in post secondary education declines (which it is for men rn). That reduces their base of voters in the long term, since they've decided to become a party that exclusively caters to university-educated professionals.

      • came_apart_at_Kmart [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        10 days ago

        I still owe about $5k after ~12 years of public service including 120 qualifying payments (to 3 scummy, inept servicers with exclusive federal contracts) for the public sector loan forgiveness program. after Biden promise to forgive $50k, became $10k became a watered down reform plan that became so bungled, the older program I already qualified for was also frozen right after they had pushed the button to wipe the first chunk of my loans ($20k) and now I sit in limbo with tens of thousands of others, potentially forever.

        the Dems are fucking pathetic on education, unless you're born extremely rich.