NAACP CRIMINAL JUSTICE CHAIRMAN NICHOLAS LITTLE ON THE AXING OF THE VOTER’S RIGHTS ACT
- VEDA Magazine™
- 5 hours ago
- 2 min read
Written by Michael Thervil
“Our President unfortunately has no regard for people being able to have a vice. I mean, we watch how he pretends to reach out and how he attacks the media and how he attacks anyone that works in administration who tells the truth versus the narrative that he wants to spin.” - Criminal Justice Chairman for the Houston NAACP Nicholas Little
[NAACP Nicholas Little Voter's Rights Act] Does the termination of the Voter’s Rights Act adversely affect Black Americans? While many Black Americans feel as if it does, there are some that take the position that the revocation of the Voter’s Rights Acts which was created to “level the political playing field" amongst Black and White Voters in America, doesn’t have any minimum effect on Black American Voters as a whole. While U.S. supreme court justice Samuel Alito made the controversial statement that Black Americans vote more than White Americans and that the premise of the Voter’s Rights Act has been achieved and therefore is now irrelevant as sole reason to axe the Voter’s Rights Act. While the majority of Black Americans frown upon the controversial point made by Justice Samuel Alito, there appears to be a growing segment of young Black Americans that seem to be indifferent to the revocation of the Voter’s Rights Act.

Many people are calling Justice Samuel Alito’s claim not only false but offensive and amongst those that hold this position, there is Law Enforcement Officer and Criminal Justice Chairman for the Houston NAACP Nicholas Little. In this segment, Officer Nicholas Little talked about why it's of the utmost importance that Black Americans have someone to speak up for them in the world of politics and how the gutting Voter’s Rights Act will adversely affect them in the long run. Another topic that Officer Nicholas Little talked about was the issue of immigration and how immigration is currently being enforced and how it will impact neighborhoods and families of immigrant across American.


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