Southern Pov Law Center screws up big time

Kestrel

Well-known member
Here we go again....

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lefty

Well-known member
I did not read the article, the OP is on my ignore list--

but the SPLC walks on water in my book. They do amazing work and are advocates for the 'little' man.
 

Mike95060

Work In Progress
They have far to go. They lost credibility after they went after Ayaan.

well, I don't agree with you about "they have far to go." Yeah they made a big, recent, mistake and they are apologizing and paying for it. In my view that does not take away from their past work.

If you want to read their own version of their history feel free.

https://www.splcenter.org/about-us/our-history

Some highlights from the 70's.

1970 – A federal court rules that the Montgomery, Ala., YMCA must end its policy of racial discrimination. SPLC co-founder Morris Dees filed the case, Smith v. YMCA, after two black children were turned away from a YMCA summer camp.

1971 – Morris Dees and Joe Levin formally incorporate the SPLC. Julian Bond is named as its first president.

1972 – In Selmont Improvement District et. al. v. Dallas County Commission et. al., the SPLC rectified a 20-year injustice when a federal court ordered the paving of 10 miles of streets in an unincorporated black neighborhood near Selma in Dallas County, Ala. The new streets had to be equal in quality to those installed free in adjacent white neighborhoods in 1954.

1972 – A federal court accepts the SPLC’s reapportionment plan for the Alabama Legislature. It is later affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court. The plan followed the SPLC’s Nixon v. Brewer lawsuit that claimed blacks were underrepresented. Seventeen black lawmakers are elected to the Alabama Legislature in 1974, the first election after the reapportionment plan is adopted.

1973 – The U.S. Supreme Court rules in the SPLC's favor in the first successful sex discrimination case against the federal government, Frontiero v. Richardson. It rules the Department of Defense cannot grant certain benefits to dependents of servicemen but not to those of servicewomen.

1973 – The Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirms a ruling banning the use of public recreational facilities by segregated private schools in Gilmore v. City of Montgomery.

1974 – Three SPLC clients – Jesse Walston, Vernon Brown and Bobby Hines – are freed in August 1974 following two years in a North Carolina prison after being wrongfully charged with raping a white woman. The three black men, known as the Tarboro Three, faced death sentences.

1975 – SPLC client Joanne Little, a black inmate accused of murdering a white jail guard in North Carolina, is acquitted of murder. The guard was found dead in her cell without his pants. Little said he had tried to rape her.

1976 – A federal court rules Alabama prisons are “wholly unfit for human habitation” in Pugh v. Locke. SPLC attorneys work for more than a decade to force the state to bring the prisons up to constitutional standards.

1976 – The SPLC starts “Team Defense” to develop trial strategies for capital cases and share them with attorneys across the U.S. at seminars and in SPLC-published manuals.

1977 – The U.S. Supreme Court opens the door for women to be hired for law enforcement jobs traditionally held by men after ruling in favor of the SPLC in Dothard v. Rawlinson.

1977 – An SPLC lawsuit challenging sterilization abuse funded by the federal government is remanded to U.S. District Court for dismissal after federal officials withdraw the regulations challenged in the case, Relf v. Weinberger.
 

Mike95060

Work In Progress
Did ya take a look at the 80's highlights as well?

1980 – The U.S. Supreme Court vacates the convictions of 11 death row inmates in Alabama after affirming the SPLC’s claim in Beck v. Alabama that the state’s death penalty statute is unconstitutional.

1981 – The SPLC creates Klanwatch to monitor Ku Klux Klan activity across the country. It is renamed the Intelligence Project in 1998 after it expands its mission and begins monitoring other hate groups.

1981 – A Klan terror campaign against Vietnamese fishermen in Texas ends and Klan paramilitary training bases are shut down as part of an SPLC lawsuit, Vietnamese Fishermen’s Association v. Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.

A Klan terror campaign against Vietnamese fishermen in Texas ends and Klan paramilitary training bases are shut down as part of an SPLC lawsuit, Vietnamese Fishermen’s Association v. Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.
A Klan terror campaign against Vietnamese fishermen in Texas ends and Klan paramilitary training bases are shut down as part of an SPLC lawsuit.
1982 – The SPLC wins the release of Johnny Ross, who became the nation’s youngest death row inmate at age 16 after being wrongly convicted of the rape of a white woman in Louisiana in 1975.

1983 – The SPLC wins a financial settlement on behalf of cotton mill workers who contracted brown lung disease, or byssinosis, by inhaling tiny dust particles on a daily basis. Following the case, Wilkins v. Lanier, federal regulations were passed to control the dust exposure and require textile companies to provide regular medical screenings.

1983 – Melted clock from SPLC office 1983 –Klansmen burn the SPLC offices on July 28, 1983. More than a year after the fire, three men are arrested: Tommy Downs and Charles Bailey, members of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, and Joe Garner, a national officer of the group. They are charged with arson and possession of explosives. All three plead guilty and are sentenced to prison.

1984 – A paramilitary unit of the Klan is enjoined from operating as a result of an SPLC lawsuit brought on behalf of Alabama citizens against Klan leader Bill Wilkinson and the Invisible Empire Klan.

1984 – Kentucky’s tax system, which had virtually exempted un-mined coal from taxation, is reformed after the SPLC files Nowak v. Foster, providing a boost for public schools.

1985 – A paramilitary Klan group in North Carolina is ordered to stop training and operating. The SPLC brought the case, Person v. Carolina Knights of the KKK, after the group began terrorizing residents.

1987 – The SPLC wins an historic $7 million verdict against the United Klans of America for the 1981 lynching of Michael Donald in Mobile, Ala. It marks the end of the notorious United Klans, which was responsible for the deadly bombing of Birmingham’s Sixteenth Street Baptist Church and the murder of civil rights activist Viola Liuzzo in the 1960s.

1987 – Alabama state troopers must integrate after the U.S. Supreme Court rules in favor of the SPLC in its lawsuit, Paradise v. Allen.

1988 – SPLC appeal wins release of Roy Patterson from prison in Georgia, 13 years after he was wrongfully convicted of murdering a police officer. Patterson acted in self-defense when a state trooper and a policeman attacked him and his wife and child.

1988 – A federal jury assesses nearly $1 million in damages against two Klan groups and 11 followers responsible for an attack on peaceful marchers in Forsyth County, Ga. The SPLC sued on behalf of the marchers in McKinney v. Southern White Knights. The Invisible Empire was eventually forced to pay damages and disband.

1989 – The Civil Rights Memorial, created by Maya Lin, designer of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, is dedicated by the SPLC at its office in Montgomery. In 2005, the Civil Rights Memorial Center, an interactive visitor’s center, opens in the SPLC’s former office.

1989 – The SPLC wins a settlement against members of the Invisible Empire Klan who attacked peaceful civil rights marchers with bats, ax handles and guns in Decatur, Ala., in 1979. The Klansmen must attend a race relations course taught by the leaders of the group they attacked.
 

wazzuFreddo

WuTang is 4 the children
They did good work getting rid of the Aryan Nation up in Idaho around 2001-2002

Also doing good work right now to stop the separation and internment of immigrant children on our sotuthern border.
 

carries an axe

meat bone meat meat meat
Nope. Just read what they're up to on their website.

Fighting dangerous people like Dave Rubin, Sam Harris, Jordan Peterson and intentionally misquoting them.
 
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enki

Well-known member
They've done good things in the past...But if you take a look at their hate map, particularly in California, they tend to find one wing nut with a computer in a basement and label the "group" a lethal danger, as they recently did in Kingsburg, where they was one dude (Holy Order of Odin), who hadn't been there for some time.

Here's an example of their sloppy work from that far-right website known as Politico:

https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2018/02/21/splc-hate-map-gurnee-illinois-217036

A glowing example of Michels' Iron Law of Oligarchy.

Did ya take a look at the 80's highlights as well?

So something from 1989?
 
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Mike95060

Work In Progress
Nope. Just read what their up to on their website.

Fighting dangerous people like Dave Rubin, Sam Harris, Jordan Peterson and intentionally misquoting them.

I'm not arguing that they have made mistakes recently with those named above. I like Sam Harris and Jordan Peterson. I think their criticisms of the left are fair and coming from a place of good will and good intention.

In our hyper polarized world we risk throwing the baby out with the bath water when we "take down" the opposition without careful thought. The SPLC did that to those named above. Returning the favor to the SPLC does not equate to justice.

And for the record, I am pleased they are issuing public apologies and paying fines. I hope that punishment is enough to set them back on track.
 

Mike95060

Work In Progress
So something from 1989?

Sorry i'm not following you.

The link I posted has their history by decade. I can post em all if you want...

1990 – The SPLC wins a $12.5 million judgment against Tom and John Metzger and their hate group, White Aryan Resistance, for their role in the murder of Ethiopian student Mulugeta Seraw by racist skinheads in Portland, Ore.

1991 – Teaching Tolerance, a program to provide free classroom materials on tolerance and diversity to teachers, is launched. A year later, Teaching Tolerance releases its first teaching kit, America’s Civil Rights Movement. The accompanying documentary film, A Time for Justice, wins a 1995 Academy Award in the short documentary category.

1991 – The SPLC brings dramatic changes to the way child welfare authorities provide for children with special mental health needs with the settlement of R.C. v. Fuller.

1993 – The Confederate battle flag is removed from atop the Alabama Capitol after the SPLC wins Holmes v. Hunt. The flag had flown atop the building since Gov. George Wallace raised it in 1963 as a symbol of defiance to integration efforts.

1994 – The SPLC begins investigating white supremacist activity within the anti-government militia movement. Six months before the April 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people, Morris Dees writes a letter warning U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno of the danger posed by militias.

1994 – The SPLC wins a $1 million default judgment against the Church of the Creator in the 1991 slaying of a black sailor, Harold Mansfield, by one of the group’s reverends.

1995 – Indigent dialysis patients in Alabama receive state-funded transportation to medical care following an SPLC lawsuit brought on behalf of these patients who sometimes went without food to afford transportation. Although the case, Harris v. James, was ultimately overturned on appeal, Alabama Medicaid recipients continue to receive transportation.

1996 – Alabama prisons are forced to abandon the use of brutal prisoner chain gangs following an SPLC lawsuit, Austin v. James.

1998 – A South Carolina jury awards the largest judgment ever against a hate group in Macedonia v. Christian Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. The Christian Knights, its state leader and four other Klansmen are ordered to pay $37.8 million (later reduced to $21.5 million) for conspiring to burn Macedonia Baptist Church, an African-American church.

1998 – A homeless African-American teenager is enrolled in an Alabama high school after being denied admission to a school because of her homeless status and steered away from another because of her race. The SPLC lawsuit, Penny Doe v. Richardson, led to a state policy that complied with federal law and ensured that local schools live up to their responsibility to educate homeless children.

1999 – Klansman Wallace Weicherding and New Order leader Dennis McGiffen are sent to prison for conspiracy in connection with a plot to kill Morris Dees by bombing the SPLC office.
 
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carries an axe

meat bone meat meat meat
I'm not arguing that they have made mistakes recently with those named above. I like Sam Harris and Jordan Peterson. I think their criticisms of the left are fair and coming from a place of good will and good intention.

In our hyper polarized world we risk throwing the baby out with the bath water when we "take down" the opposition without careful thought. The SPLC did that to those named above. Returning the favor to the SPLC does not equate to justice.

And for the record, I am pleased they are issuing public apologies and paying fines. I hope that punishment is enough to set them back on track.

agreed in full:thumbup
 

afm199

Well-known member
Used to be a big fan. Now I consider them one more wealthy influence group that's all about the money.
 
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