Kenneth Bernoska

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During the 1946 primary in Mississippi, Senator Theodore Bilbo riled up his “red-blooded Anglo-Saxon” followers with orders that “the best way to keep [black people] from voting . . . ​[was to] do it the night before the election.” In the run-up to the election, if any black person sought to organize to vote, “use the tar and feathers,” he advised, “and don’t forget the matches.”
One Person, No Vote (YA edition): How Not All Voters Are Treated Equally
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