I thought I would post some more pictures. Passing up the people going into the debate hall, there were not many African-American faces in the crowd. Let’s check this out as CNN pans into the crowd during the debate.
Monthly Archives: February 2008
Campus is buzzing, Clinton/Obama debate is all around
When I left Dallas, it was rainy and cold. I got out of my car here in Austin and the whether we beautiful. It was sunny and warm with a slight breeze gently blowing. Only in Texas.
I walked across the street to get a bite to eat and saw that the “Clinton Classic Patty Melt” and “Obama Burger” were on the menu. Though they both sounded great, I opted for the turkey sandwich. Students were walking to and fro with book bags, many dressed in the familiar burnt orange of U.T. CNN’s Situation Room was on the tube.
For those who don’t know UT is considered to be a very “liberal” campus and is home of the LBJ Presidential Library. Contrast that with my alma mater Texas A&M which is home of the George H.W. Bush library and one of the most active College Republican chapters in America. There are nearly 50,000 students here along with a faculty and staff of almost 20,000.
Tonight’s debate will be held in the Recreational Sports Center. The debate hall is set up for about 1,500 people. It looks like the media room where I’m set up would normally be used for dance, while other media members are set up outside the racquetball courts. I’ll try to come up with more as I can.
I MADE IT: CNN Debate is covered from ALL angles
This has to be the Super Bowl, or at least the NFC Championship, of debates. There is media on top of media on top of media, and security is tight. When I turned into the campus supporters of both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama were out in full force.
I’m stationed next to Matt Glazer from Burnt Orange Report who you will see in a photo below (blogging as bloggers tend to do. I also see that the good folks from the Dallas Examiner are scheduled to be here along with every other media member in Texas.
Check back with me throughout the day and I’ll try to give you a feel of what’s going on. Right now I’m hungry, so I’ll catch ya’ll later.
Yes We Will
This is much worse than crying in New Hampshire. How sad is it to have to steal your opponents tag phrase and try to one up him? Even I feel sorry for Mrs. Clinton with this latest meltdown. It takes more than sympathy to get my vote.
Mrs. Grapevine covers Obama rally in Dallas
Please go over to Mrs.Grapevine.com where she has some excellent pictures from Barack Obama’s rally in Dallas. By everyone’s account the rally was an overwhelming success.
Please excuse our excitement, by we’re not used to campaign stops here in Texas. The Democrats usually skip over us in the general election.
Become a Sponsor of 2008 Dallas South Hoops Challenge
Dallas South is soliciting sponsorship of our 2nd Annual College Hoops Challenge. Dallas South readers will again have the chance to pick among the 65 team field, down to the Final Four and eventual champion.
Dallas South has received a half million hits this months alone. Here’s an opportunity to market your company to an audience that continues to grow each day.
Your sponsorship entitles you to the following:
* Title sponsor of the Hoops Challenge means that your entity’s name will appear in all emails and updates distributed.
* A post about sponsoring entity prior to the start of the tournament.
* An additional post about sponsor on championship Monday.
For more information on how your company or business can become part of this event, contact me at shawn@dallassouthblog.com .
Texas Democratic Debate – Dallas South Live Blog from Austin, Texas
DALLAS SOUTH TO BLOG LIVE FROM TEXAS DEMOCRATIC DEBATE IN AUSTIN
On Thursday night I will blog live from the site of the Texas Debate between Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. We’ll kick things off right at 7 (maybe a few minutes before), live from the CNN Spin Room at the University of Texas Recreational Sports Center.
The broadcast will air live on CNN and Univision from 7:00-8:30 p.m. on Thursday. I’d ask you to join me for real time reaction here on the site Thursday night. I’m sure the discussion will be just as lively as the Super Tuesday blog we had a few weeks ago.
Reminder: Banished airs tonight (2/19) on PBS
I just wanted to remind everyone that the Independent Lens documentary Banished airs tonight on PBS stations across the country. Please check your local listings for times. In Dallas, Banished will air on KERA Channel 13 @ 10 pm.
In 1864 in Washington County, Indiana, the white residents made a very simple proposal to the black community: leave or die. Most blacks fled, two who did not were murdered.
A week and a half ago, we hosted a screening of Banished at Friendship-West Baptist Church. Every member of the audience was moved by the sights and sounds portrayed by Marco Williams moving documentary. I urge everyone to Tivo, DVR, or just sit down and watch Banished tonight. And make sure your children watch it too. Below is my initial post on the film.
I thank Ski Chills for passing along the information on a PBS event that all of us need to mark down on our calendars. It’s the story of Black Americans who were forced from their homes and communities between the 1860′s and the 1920′s.
Banished:American Ethnic Clensing
is a documentary by filmmaker Marco Williams that revisits three locations in the American south that ridded their entire communities of black residents. Banished is scheduled for a national broadcast on Independent Lens February 19, 2008.
“I sincerely hope that the film will galvanize Americans to think about the concepts of reparations and reconciliation,” Williams said of his work. “It is about our sense of justice and our sense of fairness. It is about the question of how to redress the past. It is about how to repair what is broken and ultimately how to reconcile our differences.”
Here’s more information about Banished from the film’s website
A hundred years ago, in communities across the U.S., white residents forced thousands of black families to flee their homes. Even a century later, these towns remain almost entirely white. BANISHED tells the story of three of these communities and their black descendants, who return to learn their shocking histories.
In Forsyth County, Georgia, where a thousand black residents were expelled, the film explores the question of land fraudulently taken, and follows some descendants in their quest to uncover the real story of their family’s land. In Pierce City, Missouri, a man has designed his own creative form of reparation—he wishes to disinter the remains of his great-grandfather, who was buried there before the banishment. And in Harrison, Arkansas, home to the headquarters of the Ku Klux Klan, a white community struggles with their town’s legacy of hate.
By investigating this little-known chapter in American history, BANISHED also takes a contemporary look at the legacy of racial cleansing. Through conversations with current residents and the descendants of those who were driven out, the film contemplates questions of privilege, responsibility, denial, healing, reparations and identity.
ITVS Community, NBPC
and the Center for Investigative Reporting
are supporting the broadcast of Banished with Community Cinema screenings throughout the country. From Tacoma, Washington to Ithaca, New York, communities will host advanced screenings of the film as well as discussion. Click here
to see how your city can get involved.
Make sure to take a moment to view the 1 min. 43 sec. video clip that previews the film. The opening lines of the preview give chilling accounts of U.S. civic exterminations:
In 1864 in Washington County, Indiana, the white residents made a very simple proposal to the black community: leave or die. Most blacks fled, two who did not were murdered.
This information is not surprising, but what Mr. Williams presents in this documentary is new to me. I am familiar with the practice of lynching in America. I am familiar with the events of Black Wall Street in Tulsa, Oklahoma. But the expulsion of black families -for me- is a whole new chapter in our shameful history as a nation.
As we watch the tribal violence in Kenya as well as Iraq, many Americans forget about our own sick and bloody past. Were America to be honest about its own long road to so-called “democracy” maybe there would be more patience with the plight of the Iraqi “government.”
All of the images and quotes in this post come directly from the Banished website
. I’d ask for each reader to share this information with someone else so that on February 19th (during Black History Month no less) we can all partake in this historic presentation.
Black Cinematique hosts screening of ‘American Blackout’ this Friday
Black Cinematique is screening American Blackout at Muhummad Mosque #48 on 2429 Martin Luther King BLVD in South Dallas. The screening will take place this Friday, February 22.
American Blackout chronicles the recurring patterns of voter disenfranchisement from Florida 2000 to Ohio 2004 while following the story of former Georgia Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney. McKinney not only took an active role investigating these election debacles, but has found herself in the middle of her own after publicly questioning the Bush Administration about the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
The event starts at 7:00 p.m. with a discussion to follow lead by Dallas Branch NAACP President Casey Thomas. The screening of American Blackout is free of charge.


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