Community | January 29, 2011 | Comment on this video (21)

Full video of 'New Black Panthers' scene reveals GOP attorneys orchestrating the affair

bundlebear
It was pretty obvious from the start that the whole New Black Panthers Party "voter intimidation" controversy was a Breitbart-like right-wing operation intended to gin up fear among white voters, made for heavy airplay on Fox News -- and later, to become an Obama-bashing tool, especially in the hands of Bush-appointed right-wing operatives still inside the Justice Department.

Now Ryan J. Reilly at TPM Muckraker has a great little scoop demonstrating that this whole scene in fact was being orchestrated by GOP attorneys: It turns out that the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, which has been devoting a great deal of energy to the matter, finally released the full two-and-a-half-minute video showing the New Black Panthers being chatted up by police outside the polling station in Philadelphia -- and then afterwards, the "poll watchers" -- lawyers hired by the GOP -- orchestrating the scene:

In the extended version of the footage, posted by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights this month, a police officer tells Morse to back off. That's when the commotion begins.

The video shows someone off-screen to Morse's left, telling the officer "I got him, I got him." A man who appears to be Chris Hill, a Republican poll watcher who was accused of intimidating voters at the polls by another woman at the location, says "Put it down. You've got enough."

Then Bartle Bull chimes in. "Don't you threaten him with your hands. You're threatening him. Don't you use your hands!"

Soon an individual seems to grab Morse's arm or his camera -- the screen moves erratically. "I'm a fucking professional videographer," Morse tells the person trying to stop him from filming. "I was paid... to come from L.A. today."

The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, which has doggedly pursued the Justice Department's handling of the New Black Panther Party voter intimidation case, released the final version of their report this week, complete with responses from all the commissioners on the panel. Two Democratic commissioners who have dissented from the investigation pointed out the additional footage in their reply and note that while the Justice Department handed over a full copy of the video, the Commission didn't see fit to post it online until this month, far after the report had been finished.

The video shows that the white Republican poll watchers who showed up to the majority African-American precinct knew exactly what kind of media sensation they had on their hands.

"We're on the same team," says another Republican poll watcher off screen.

"You're fucking up the story. Don't fuck up the story," one unidentified poll watcher tells Morse.

"You guys are lawyers, I'm a videographer," Morse says.

The USCCR issued its full report, including evidentiary material, earlier this week, and as you can see it's a pretty divided affair, largely along partisan lines -- though in fact conservative Bush appointee Abigail Thernstrom backs up her earlier concerns about the investigation with a brief but scathing dissent:

This investigation lacked political and intellectual integrity from the outset, and has been consistently undermined by the imbalance between the gravity of the allegations and the strength of the evidence available to support such charges. Some commissioners offered serious, principled critiques of the process, and questioned the evidentiary record. Their views were contemptuously ignored by the commission's majority.

The majority charges that racial double standards govern the enforcement of the Voting Rights Act in the Holder Justice Department. If that can be convincingly demonstrated, it will be a grave indictment of this administration.

But that evidentiary showing awaits further investigation by the Department of Justice and Congress. I applaud that investigation, and hope that it will shed more light on this important question than the tendentious report provided by the commission’s majority.

Indeed. As we explained previously:

So a little perspective is perhaps helpful here: There are indeed black racist hate groups (the United Nuwaubian Nation of Moors is another). However, they are dwarfed both in size and in sheer numbers by white racist hate groups. Check the SPLC's compendium of hate groups and you'll see what I mean: they outnumber anti-white racists by about 99 to 1.

Oddly enough, we never get any reporting about these hate groups from Fox News -- except when they want to attack the Department of Homeland Security's bulletin warning about the rising likelihood of violent terrorism from right-wing extremists. Then, they're all too eager to simply whitewash away the very existence of white supremacists and far-right

http://crooksandliars.com/david-neiwert/full-video-new-black-panthers-scene-
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21 comments // Full video of 'New Black Panthers' scene reveals GOP attorneys orchestrating the affair // Video

  • timetide
    • +1
      timetide  
    • Now here's a question. Does anyone honestly expect Fox news to appolagize for the hype they created, or is this going to be the boogy man in the closet for a lot of dumb ass people out there.

    • 1 year ago
  • VoyagerFilms
  • keithponder
    • +2
      keithponder  
    • Image
    • http://www.speakoutnow.org/userdata_display.php?modin=50&uid=23
      { BLACK PANTHER PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT }
      Serve the People: Images of a Vision
      This exhibit of 70 black-and-white framed photographs captures the spirit and original vision of the Black Panther Party as expressed through the slogan “Serve the People.”

      They go behind the headlines of the armed militants, focusing on the community programs for children and elders, the free health clinics, the student educational and tutorial programs. There are photographs of Party leaders meeting with heads of state and images of rank-and-file members.

      Former Black Panther leaders Elaine Brown, Ericka Huggins or David Hillard can speak in conjunction with these exhibits.
      ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
      It is becoming increasingly easy for people on this site to at anytime criticize anyone and anything that they really don't know a damn thing about.

      This new group has nothing at all to do with the original 'Black Panther Party'. Nothing at all. The original party was a National co-op neighborhood based group that actually served the Black community in a positive light. Only the name 'Black Panther Party' is what frightened both Black and White people that allowed themselves to to be negatively influenced by a racist media. Remember, this was in the 60's and during that time, America was on fire. There were riots going on in every major city in the country. The phrase, 'Police Brutality' was actually coined during that period of time. America had not yet been integrated and Black people were literally being murdered by the police in all parts of the country. Dr. King and Bobby Kennedy had just been murdered and we needed protection from FBI and police from somebody. J.Edgar Hoover was looking for and trying to stuff out 'the Black Messiah'. All of this created the foundational platform for the birth of the Panther Party.

      The Panther Party was born in California. They initially started out with programs to feed the needy in their own community. They also set up health clinics all through out the west coast, but most importantly, they set up protection. California's governor at that time was Ronald Reagan. He along with Hoover, more than the Panthers themselves, help create the negative image that haunts the party still today. The Panthers also were draft resisters. The CIA,FBI and local police used this as a basis to infiltrate the party with government agents and worst of all, drugs. The party eventually split into to 2 different factions. Southern California was run by the founder of the party, Huey P. Newton while the north and the rest of the country was run by Eldridge Cleaver and Bobby Seale. Unlike Newton, Cleaver and Seale were highly intelligent college graduates. Because of this they garnered the most fear from the government. They spoke on college campuses like Princeton, Harvard, Yale, Kent State, UCLA, California @ Berkely and Georgetown University on a regular basis .People and groups like Abby Hoffman, Neil Young, John Lennon, and the Weathermen understood and supported the party's agenda. AMERICA WAS NOT A DUMB-DOWN NATION IN THE 60's LIKE IT IS TODAY. The original Black Panther Party was actually en-vogue in the counter culture of young America. Only the Republican Party was really in fear of them.

      Newton eventually succumbed to drugs and was later murdered in small drug deal in California, while Cleaver eventually fled the country and found political asylum in Cuba and on the Africa continent. Cleaver later returned to the country and became a college professor.Seale entered into the political spectrum in Chicago where he was defeated by a young Barack Obama for a senator's seat with that state in recent years. Most of their other leaders like Fred Hampton were killed in shoot outs with policemen and government agents during the 70's and early 80's.The original Panther Party members were not just about mouth. They not only believed and preached revolution like some some of you here do today, the exercised, took up arms, gave up their lives and died in the revolution.

    • 1 year ago
  • samthesixth
  • trut
    • 0
      trut  
    • You had me until you brought up the Southern Poverty Law Center, those guys are shills for the Israeli lobby in the USA.

    • 1 year ago
  • Paratus
    • -4
      Paratus  
    • A lot of Justice Department attorneys had a problem with the decision by liberal, Obama appointee Eric Holder to drop charges against the stick men in Philly. It seems that based on their reading of the law and the case, "voter intimidation" was clearly met. I did not read the case but just based on the pictures of stick guys I can see that. Oh well, I guess some would say that Looney Louie, the NOI leader, isn't a racist either. I guess it depends on whose ox is being gored.

    • 1 year ago
  • UtopianSky
  • Paratus
    • +1
      Paratus  
    • UtopianSky:

      I am saying that a lot of people much closer to this case saw fire with the smoke and thought Holder should not have dismissed the case. Since it never got a chance to be aired in open court we may be resigned to argue it back and forth. I don't have a dog in the fight. I did see the photo and while I would not have felt intimidated I can't speak for the rest of the country.

    • 1 year ago
  • Radical_Centrist
  • Stoneyroad
    • +1
      Stoneyroad  
    • Radical_Centrist:

      Yes these guys are hateful douche-bags, but there was less than 10 white people registered to vote at this location. Was this a grand scheme to get Obama elected as Fox news would lead us to believe?

    • 1 year ago
  • Radical_Centrist
    • 0
      Radical_Centrist  
    • Stoneyroad:

      Since 10 is not enough what number in your opinion is sufficient to qualify for Voter Intimidation? lets ASSUME instead of being in the East the Polling place was in the South. Now instead of the New Black Panther Party we had two KKK people standing out front in FULL regalia with clubs. Would this be Voter intimidation in your book with ONLY 10 Black Voters in the precinct?

    • 1 year ago
  • keithponder
    • 0
      keithponder  
    • Radical_Centrist:

      That's a half truth. How dip do you actually dig for information and evidence to support your comment ? It's seem as if you do no research ever at all.

      Your comment here, without doubt, is nothing more than a fear mongering opinion. The New Panther Party are barely an image of a cracked shell at best of the original Black Panther Party being used as tools to manipulate fear and hatred into the dumb-downed minds of mainstream America..

      Try doing research sometime. It's hard for anyone to vote down the facts.

    • 1 year ago
  • Radical_Centrist
    • -1
      Radical_Centrist  
    • keithponder:

      What is there to research? You have "AVOWED RACISTS" standing in front of a polling place wielding Billy Clubs. You KNOW as well as I do if we flipped the script and the black guys were White and we traded the Panther Costumes for Klan ones we would not even be having this debate.

    • 1 year ago
  • keithponder
    • +1
      keithponder  
    • Radical_Centrist:

      Don't even try to compare the history of the Black Panther Party to that of the Ku Klux Klan.

      Your perception of the two groups is not based in reality. Find me some facts on the HISTORY of crimes committed in our society by the Black Panther Party and I'll present books of documented atrocities committed by the KKK against Black people. They weren't even considered to be criminal acts because the law never really even bothered to prosecute KKK members for these heinous acts until recently. It was considered to be a way of life. Business as usual.

      I try not to call people racist but, but your making it real hard buddy. REAL HARD.

    • 1 year ago
  • Stoneyroad
    • +2
      Stoneyroad  
    • Everyone knew this. Whenever Fox repeats & repeats & repeats themselves they are capapulting propaganda.

      It's funny how the Fox audiance thinks angry tea-baggers should be allowed to strap machine guns on their backs while they protest the president , but a black man holding a stick in the ghetto is the real threat to America.

      GOP what's the problem?
      Does the right to bare arms not cover clubs.

    • 1 year ago
  • Paratus
    • -5
      Paratus  
    • Stoneyroad:

      Yeah, I see a lot of machine guns on peoples backs. What a stupid statement. I suppose that now the black panthers are a touchy-feely love group instead of an anti others, racist, black supremacist group. Tough for me to visualize the change. Oh yes, certainly they can carry a stick in the ghetto and bare clubs everywhere. Have at it doesn't bother me at all but be careful what one uses it for. I think a 1911 will trump the piece of wood.

    • 1 year ago
  • Nephwrack
  • ayipis
  • Nephwrack
  • keithponder
    • +6
      keithponder  
    • There are indeed black racist hate groups (the United Nuwaubian Nation of Moors is another).
      =======================================================
      I may have conflict with some of their ideology, but I've hate to meet a Nuwaubian Moor that had a racist hate agenda. Not one. I've met several over the past few years here in Atlanta and none of them were racist, in fact all of them actually displayed a much higher intellect on life sustaining issues than what the normal Christian African American does. Some people are threaten by that. That's the real issue with Nuwaubian Moors.

    • 1 year ago
  • Itsbatman_Durr
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