The Late Strom Thurmond was a racist during all his years in the Senate representing South Carolina. He has no legitimacy in 2016. The Senate majority leader bringing up this rule during the time when America celebrates it's first African American president is especially egregious.
Strom Thurmond was a horrible man who denied his African American daughter to his death. A man like this should not be revered by Republicans in a rule that insults our democracy and makes the Supreme Court ineffective.
February 6, 2013
By Mary C. Curtis
Essie Mae Washington-Williams (click here) lived for 87 years. But, in her own words, she was never “completely free” until she could stand before the world and say out loud that Strom Thurmond, the one-time segregationist South Carolina senator, was her father. That was in 2003, after she had spent more than 70 years being denied what we all deserve – her true name and birthright. “In a way, my life began at 78, at least my life as who I really was,” Washington-Williams wrote in her life story. She has died.
Strom Thurmond was a horrible man who denied his African American daughter to his death. A man like this should not be revered by Republicans in a rule that insults our democracy and makes the Supreme Court ineffective.
February 6, 2013
By Mary C. Curtis
Essie Mae Washington-Williams (click here) lived for 87 years. But, in her own words, she was never “completely free” until she could stand before the world and say out loud that Strom Thurmond, the one-time segregationist South Carolina senator, was her father. That was in 2003, after she had spent more than 70 years being denied what we all deserve – her true name and birthright. “In a way, my life began at 78, at least my life as who I really was,” Washington-Williams wrote in her life story. She has died.
Thurmond’s oldest child — born when he was a 22-year-old man and her mother, Carrie Butler, a 16-year-old black maid in his father’s house – had kept the senator’s secret, an open one rumored about but never revealed when he was alive because, she had said, “He trusted me, and I respected him.” As in the case of Thomas Jefferson, another successful southern politician who was father to black children, stories shared among African Americans were long disbelieved until they turned out to be true....