You Don't Need Sight to Have a Vision

Summary


In November of 2000, I wrote a letter to the Voter Rights division of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Washington, DC, in which I requested that they provide information from their research archives of the specific number of Black American men who were previously imprisoned in the Florida Department of Corrections that have registered to vote as authorized by Sections 944.292 and 944.293, Florida Statutes, which provision merely suspends a citizens' civil rights upon conviction of [a] felony. The reason for my inquiry was due to my discovery from legal research of a pattern of all white jury panels in the appellate court cases from Broward County, Fla., which panels continually made detestable decisions of guilty verdicts upon disparaging allegations against Black people. To me, this was extremely exact and too coincidental, coming from the prospective of a democratic system of government built upon the virtues outlined by a sanctity of a checks and balances system equivalent to one man one vote, as provided by the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution.

The illustration of the above circumstances defines the purpose for the message to urge legislation for felons' Civil Rights restoration, which I have continuously conveyed in dialogue with Chief Jimmie Brown, host of Hot-105's talk show Hot Talk, as away to eradicate judicial fraud and make the playing field equal. This United States Judicial System is a system established upon a thesis of democracy. A democracy that is continually reprised to its original status of being a misnomer and a travesty upon Black American equality. I submit this dissertation as a metronome to compliment the spark of cultural unity; and to avenge the absence of Black on Black crime desiccation. I have examined this judicial system (in Florida) both internally as a prisoner and externally as a-paralegal, and have discovered that Black society may be blinded to how the internal demise facilitates a skewed perspective of justice- unequal injustice- where two defendants were each charged with similar circumstances and crimes.

See the full content of this document

Extract


You Don't Need Sight to Have a Vision

Part One of a Two Part Series

After reading the opinion page of the Westside Gazette Newspaper, my recluse spirit was overwhelmed in captivity. I could no longer contain myself to not shout my Mission Statement again, as my interpretations from reading those articles and other articles collectively confirm these perilous times that Black people are facing as cited within...

See the full content of this document

Sponsored links




ver las páginas en versión mobile | web

ver las páginas en versión mobile | web

© Copyright 2012, vLex. All Rights Reserved.

Contents in vLex United States

Explore vLex

For Professionals

For Partners

Company