The Supreme Court is hearing arguments on Wednesday that may overturn the Voting Rights Act of 1965, a law that requires states to discriminate against non-black voters in order to meet racial quotas for congressional districting.
In defending the Voting Rights Act, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson explained that black people need special access to Congress like ... disabled people need access to wheelchair ramps?
They don't have equal access to the voting system, right? They're disabled.

There's a term for this. It's called the "soft bigotry of low expectations." It's no different than people who say we can't require ID to vote because black Americans are too poor and stupid to figure out how to visit the DMV.
The legal genius of Biden's Supreme Court nominee, ladies and gents.
This is why the case Louisiana v. Callais is in front of the Court today. Look at how Louisiana's districts are gerrymandered to make sure black voters have special treatment:
Imagine if someone told you that white people needed a certain number of white-majority districts so white people can be better represented in Congress, or that the law requires a certain number of male-majority districts, or a certain number of Christian-majority districts.
How would that sound?
And yet, Brown Jackson is determined to sell the idea that blacks need special privileges and special representation in Congress (as if all blacks think and vote the same!).
Louisiana Solicitor General: Your honor, I think step zero in all of these cases ... is the plaintiffs came in and said, 'we want another majority black district' ...
KBJ: I thought they came in and said, 'we're not receiving equal electoral opportunity because our votes are being diluted.'
LSG: Which is the same way of saying, 'we deserve a second majority bla -'
KBJ: NO IT'S NOT! Because that, again - just trust me on this - the second electoral, or the second district, is a remedy that one could offer for a problem that we've identified.
"Just trust me on this" is determining the law of the land now?

Brown Jackson is not the only one having a wild day in Court, however. The NAACP lawyers are trying their hardest to argue for the racist law as well.
It got worse:
You can use race to reverse discriminate, but not to actually discriminate ...
Am I getting that right?

If the Voting Rights Act is overturned, Democrats stand to lose up to 19 seats in Congress.
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