Kenzie going. Not sure why the girls don't address her behavior since they hate kc and Corbin so much. They're also speechless when it comes to sincere
@Realdevinhaney@Realdevinhaney don't go down. Stop giving these dudes advantages. You see how they don't care that ryan cheated you. He's not in your division stop chasing him. He don't want to fight you. If he do we will challenge for your belt.
Today, the Supreme Court significantly weakened Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. The implications are enormous and they are personal for Birmingham.
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 is the law that makes sure politicians can't draw districts in a way that silences certain communities. For sixty years, it's been one of the most important guardrails we have against rigged maps and it is the legal foundation that produced fair maps in Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, and in cities and counties across the country.
Three years ago, the Supreme Court used this law to require Alabama to draw fairer congressional districts after the Court found the previous maps weren't giving voters a real choice.
That's how it's supposed to work. Communities get fair representation, and politicians can't just draw lines to lock in their own power.
Today, that same Court walked it back.
Estimates suggest this could swing as many as 12 House seats. But the bigger damage will be at the local level, where two-thirds of Section 2 cases are actually litigated. City councils. School boards. County commissions. The places where everyday democracy happens.
Civil rights laws don't survive because they're written on paper. They survive because people fight for them, generation after generation. The Voting Rights Act exists because people marched from Selma to Montgomery and refused to back down.
Birmingham is the city where civil rights were fought for and won. That history is not behind us. It's a responsibility we carry forward.
The people who tried to keep our grandparents from voting are not finished. Neither are we.