Blog with us at “All the Way Live” Election Watch Party

On Election Night, Dallas South, Friendship-West, KRNB, and 97.9 The Beat will host the livest watch party in the city.  Guests include Fred Hammond, Don Diego, and Geno Young.

Also that night we will have a bloggers lounge set up to cover election returns from across the country online.   We’re offering two spots to Dallas South readers to participate in this one time opportunity.  These two spots will fill up fast, so email me at shawn@dallassouthblog.com if you are interested.

You will have to provide your own laptop, but the bloggers lounge will be equipped with internet connetions, both wired and wireless.  Here’s your chance to get your blog on, even if it’s only one night.

Blog Talk Radio Thursday Night, Last Show Before the Election

Join Jazzy and I Thursday night at 10 p.m. for our final Blog Talk Radio Show before election day.  Casey Thomas, President of Dallas Branch NAACP  will join us to discuss voter protection and recent attacks against ACORN.

Janet Morrison who blogs her Community Commentary, and is also part of Central Dallas Ministries.  She’ll also share some of her discussion of the presidential election with her rural Missouri relatives.

Click here to listen to Thursday’s show and shows from week’s past.

TATTOO REMOVAL CELEBRATES ELECTION 2008 BY OFFERING FREE TATTOO REMOVAL TO NORTH TEXAS VOTERS

A Dallas medical clinic specializing in laser tattoo removal, in celebration of an election season filled with calls for “change” and “reform”, is offering free treatments to tattooed voters on November 4, 2008. 

New Look Laser Tattoo Removal is opening their clinic on Election Day from 9am to 9pm for a first free treatment to remove an unwanted tattoo up to 4” by 4”.  A North Texas resident that brings in an “I Voted” sticker, their voter registration card, or is willing to promise that they fully punched their “chad” will be given a free consultation to discuss laser tattoo removal and their first treatment at no charge.

“You can’t turn on the television, radio, or open a newspaper without hearing a candidate talking about change” says New Look’s President, Ryan N. Lambert.  “We figured that voters with unwanted tattoos are probably regretting their old policy of bad ink and are looking for some fresh skin this November.  Voters may be discouraged if their candidate doesn’t win this election, but they can rest assured that we’ll start removing their ink without wrecking the budget.” 

New Look’s website has a page with more information, click here  if you are interested in finding out more.


2008 Top 10 Places to go in Dallas

10. Bishop Arts Theatre Center

interior_of_a_empty_theater.jpgThe newly renovated Bishop Arts Theatre is a wonderful backdrop for Teco Theatrical Production founder Teresa Coleman Wash’s unique vision. In October, Leonard’s Car played to enthusiastic crowds and rave reviews. Southern Dallas now has it’s best performing arts venue since…since ever.

9. House of Blues

The House of Blues has been a welcome addition to the music scene, even though some local venues have suffered due to HOB’s strict policy on their acts playing at other spots. But you can’t beat the combination of good food and good music. Make sure to check out the Gospel Brunch that has two show times each Sunday Morning.

8. Deep Ellum

Deep Ellum continues to be at a tipping point. Elm Street seems to be ahead of Main, as I’ve been to Cafe Brazil and Daddy Jacks more in recent months than any other D.E. location. Will DART’s green line help the struggling district return to the days of blues glory? Only time will tell.

7. Cedar Crest Golf Course

cedarcrest.jpgCedar Crest is the best municipal course in Dallas an one of the finest in Texas. The home of the 1927 PGA Championship The new layout designed by D.A. Weibring’s has amazing views of downtown Dallas and is fun for golfers of any level. The recently renovated clubhouse is good for unwinding after a round, and also serves the community by hosting various events.

6. Bishop Arts District

The Bishop Arts District has it all, food, shopping, art, music, you name it. The wonder of Bishop Arts is no longer a secret, but because it doesn’t rest near a highway, people have to work a little to get there. That helps the area keep its quaint neighborhood feel, without ever becoming pretentious.

5. West Village

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If you’re looking for pretentious -as we all do from time to time- then West Village is your place. The prices for food and shopping are attainable, a trait that keeps West Village on this list and Victory Park off. Its proximity to the Dart Rail is also a plus, as well as the Magnolia Theatre.

4. Fair Park

I took a lot of heat for leaving Fair Park off the list last year. Besides the year long attractions -like the African-American museum, the State Fair has become a yearly event for our family. We’re counting the days until the light rail rolls through for next year’s fair. The renovated Cotton Bowl has added new life to the State Fair Classic and Red River Rivalry. And the food….enough said.

3. Southside on Lamar

When I’m looking for a place to get away to, I often seek out the Southside on Lamar. It’s eclectic mix of people and activity make it a perfect spot for hanging out and or people watching. Recently my wife and I caught a concert at the Palladium Ballrom and a couple of days later I was back for some Off the Bone Barbeque. In the old Sears building, there’s coffee at Opening Bell, and jerk chicken at Texas Caribbean Foods. Am I leaving anything out?????

2. Nasher Sculpture Center

garden.jpgI’m not sure if I go to the Nasher Sculpture Center for the art or for the building itself. I think I’d go to the Renzo Piano designed building even all the wonderful pieces were removed. The same holds true for the one and a half acre garden out back.

1 Brooklyn Jazz Cafe

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You can never go wrong when choosing Brooklyn for a night own on the town. Sunday morning brunch is also a treat . Brooklyn has expanded with Jazzy’s Sports Bar on the back side and private rooms for special occasions. The Brooklyn experience is created equally by the music, the food, and the people.

For the second year in a row, Lorna Tate’s jazzy place is Dallas South’s number one spot in town.

Paris Texas (Lamar County) District Attorney’s office/Gary Young part of the problem, not the solution

In Monday morning’s Dallas Morning News, Richard Abshire follows up on the death of Brandon McClelland in Paris, Texas. Two suspects are in custody for running over Brandon and dragging him after a night of drinking. Richard worked on this story for weeks, and though there’s not a lot of new ground here for Dallas South readers, there are some things that stuck out to me. Read Black man’s death reopens old racial wounds.

Here are a few excerpts:

  • District Attorney Gary Young, who is white, said there’s no evidence that the killing was a hate crime. But his office welcomes any information on the case, he said.
  • “Gary Young decided from the start it was not a hate crime,” said Brenda Cherry, who is black and a co-founder of Concerned Citizens for Racial Equality. “They’re not going to do anything to make Paris look bad. That’s the main thing around here.”
  • “(The Shaquanda Cotton case) was a wake-up call,” said Pike Burkhart, who is white and president of the Lamar County Chamber of Commerce. “We don’t perceive ourselves as a racially divided community. We want to make sure we have more dialogue between our black and white communities.”

  • Ms. Cotton spent a year in a juvenile lockup and was freed after protests alleging racial bias. Still, authorities insist they followed the law. “We did nothing wrong,” said district attorney spokesman Allan Hubbard.
  • “The fact that they were white and he was black does not alone constitute a hate crime,” said Mr. Hubbard, the district attorney spokesman. “We can’t act on speculation, and there’s too much of that going on by people on blogs and elsewhere who are treating rumor as fact.”

Anyone in Paris, Texas who is concerned about the perception of Paris, Texas should point straight to the District Attorney’s office. Ms. Cotton is right, they have more interest in image than justice. I can understand the Chamber of Commerce or City Hall having this attitude, but it has no place in the court system.

What the Dallas Morning News article leaves out are the circumstances that lead to suspect Shannon Findley’s manslaughter conviction, a crime for which he served about two years. Let’s revisit those facts as told by the Chicago Tribune and Howard Witt:

  • Lamar County District Atty. Gary Young, who five years ago, before he was elected prosecutor, served as Finley’s court-appointed defense attorney when Finley pleaded guilty to manslaughter for shooting a friend to death.
  • Although the victim in Finley’s 2003 manslaughter case was white, race played a role in the incident. Finley told police he was sitting in a pickup with his friend in a park when two gun-wielding black men supposedly walked up alongside and tried to rob them. Finley said he grabbed his friend’s handgun and fired at the robbers, but instead shot his friend. An autopsy determined that the victim suffered three gunshot wounds to the head.

Before Mr. Hubbard points fingers at “people on blogs and elsewhere” he should look at his own office and how it distributes justice. They should also look into a report that I received last week of perceived swift jury selections that respect the process. Parisians should be thankful to “people on blogs and elsewhere” for helping to expose what could be easily be swept under the rug.

While “people on blogs and elsewhere” learned of the ShaQuanda Cotton case from the newspaper (reported first nationally by the Tribune), the newspapers (both the News and Tribune) learned of Brandon McClelland’s death from “people on blogs and elsewhere.” Who’s to say that this wouldn’t still be investigated as a hit and run were it not for “people on blogs and elsewhere?”

The flippant nature in which Mr. Hubbard -the D.A. office spokesperson- dealt with the media during the Cotton case was off putting to many. If his quotes in the Morning News are any indication, he hasn’t learned from . His CYA stragtgy may be good for the D.A’s office, but it’s terrible for Paris.

Back to the Shannon Finley manslaughter case. I have friends and classmates in Paris who spent years and years in jail for much less than putting a gun to someone’s head and pulling the trigger. Of course most of them were involved in the drug game and much of that deals with U.S. drug laws I get that.

But Gary Young and his team apparently went with Finley’s “two gun-wielding black men” defense. And look at the reward that you get in America for shortening the sentence of a murderer to manslaughter: District Attorney. Shannon Finley should never have been walking the streets, and were he black he would not have been.

I’m not bothered by the D.A.’s office reluctance to prosecute this murder as a hate crime, but I’m pretty pissed at how insensitive the D.A.’s office has been to the family’s desire to have it investigated as such.

I’m even more upset by the quotes this morning from Mr. Hubbard which follows a pattern that he set last year. And the fact that America can’t see a case like Finley’s as pure evidence of the unfair, racially biased distribution of justice in this country makes me sick.

Paris, you need to blame the D.A.’s office and your courts for the public relations fallout you are about to be subjected to. Not “people on blogs and everywhere.”

Sarah Palin “going rouge” & “diva” staffers tell CNN’s Dana Bash and John King/ Politico’s Ben Smith

When I visited Barack Obama’s campaign headquarters last summer, I left with two words on how his campaign was to be run: NO DRAMA. Some of the staffers even had the words posted in their cubes. Looks like the McCain camp could use this advice right about now.

CNN is reporting that tensions between the McCain and Palin camps are now spilling out into public view. Here are some of the highlights I found on CNN’s website after originally seeing Dana Bash’s report late Saturday night:

  • Several McCain advisers have suggested to CNN that they have become increasingly frustrated with what one aide described as Palin “going rogue.” A Palin associate, however, said the candidate is simply trying to “bust free” of what she believes was a damaging and mismanaged roll-out.
  • McCain sources say Palin has gone off-message several times, and they privately wonder whether the incidents were deliberate. They cited an instance in which she labeled robocalls — recorded messages often used to attack a candidate’s opponent — “irritating” even as the campaign defended their use.
  • “She is a diva. She takes no advice from anyone,” said this McCain adviser. “She does not have any relationships of trust with any of us, her family or anyone else. “Also, she is playing for her own future and sees herself as the next leader of the party. Remember: Divas trust only unto themselves, as they see themselves as the beginning and end of all wisdom.”
  • They insisted that she needed time to be briefed on national and international issues and on McCain’s record. “Her lack of fundamental understanding of some key issues was dramatic,” said another McCain source with direct knowledge of the process to prepare Palin after she was picked. The source said it was probably the “hardest” to get her “up to speed than any candidate in history.”
  • “She’s no longer playing for 2008; she’s playing 2012,” Democratic pollster Peter Hart said. “And the difficulty is, when she went on ‘Saturday Night Live,’ she became a reinforcement of her caricature. She never allowed herself to be vetted, and at the end of the day, voters turned against her both in terms of qualifications and personally.”

Looks like we got us a good old family feud. It’s pretty bad when people inside the campaign are calling you a diva. I never really thought of Palin as such, but I guess that’s something that people on the inside know first. Here are some examples to think about when considering divas according to The Blurb.

  • Mariah Carey – asks for bunny rabbits, puppies, and kittens to keep her company backstage, Cristal champagne, a box of bendy straws to sip it with, and the requirement of a special attendant to take care of all her needs.
  • Britney Spears – demands a private phone line in her dressing room for outgoing calls only and fines the promoter $5,000 for any unauthorised incoming calls.
  • Jennifer Lopez – trailers furnished all in white with flowers, tablecloths, drapes, candles, and couches, a VCR and CD player, and 43 music CDs selected by her covering all the latest R&B, hip-hop, and salsa. Oh, and she also demands that her coffee be stirred counter-clockwise only.
  • Sarah Palin – I don’t know, maybe the $150,000 wardrobe, $22,000 stylist (for 2 weeks)

Actually Ben Smith at The Politico was the first one to report the whole “rouge” story.

  • “She’s lost confidence in most of the people on the plane,” said a senior Republican who speaks to Palin, referring to her campaign jet. He said Palin had begun to “go rogue” in some of her public pronouncements and decisions. “I think she’d like to go more rogue,” he said.
  • Palin’s partisans blame Wallace, in particular, for Palin’s avoiding of the media for days and then giving a high-stakes interview to CBS News’ Katie Couric, the sometimes painful content of which the campaign allowed to be parceled out over a week. “A number of Gov. Palin’s staff have not had her best interests at heart, and they have not had the campaign’s best interests at heart,” the McCain insider fumed, noting that Wallace left an executive job at CBS to join the campaign.

Not looking good for the home team. I’d advise Governor Palin to jump off the ship and save here career now before things get much worse next Tuesday. She can take the next 4 years studying up for her first national press conference (the one on Saturday Night Live doesn’t count).

I voted today

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This campaign has lasted so long it didn’t seem real when I was in line to vote today. The line at the Duncanville Library was long, it took us about 30 minutes to get through. I can only image what things will be like across the country next Tuesday. High voter turnout is a Republicans worst nightmare.

Of course I cast my presidential ballot for Barack Obama. Looking at the Names Obama and Biden on the electronic voting machine screen was sort of strange. My wife and I took our son, so that one day he can remember the day that his mom and dad voted for a black man for president.

In all, I voted for 22 Democrats, 2 Republicans, and I sat out on two races. Whether your ancestors came over on the Mayflower, or the slave ship Jesus, from Asia or Latin America, make sure you go and vote. We all owe it to those who came before us.

Ashley Todd lied

All day Thursday, conservative talk was going around saying that a McCain campaign worker was assaulted by a 6’4″ black man who was a Barack Obama supporter.  Supposedly the black man robbed her, pinned her against the ground and told her that she will be an Obama supporter from then on.

Ashley Todd, a 20 year old white woman in Pittsburgh  claimed that the man left his mark by carving the letter “B” on her right cheek.  What she forgot to say was that the man was dyslexic.  Dyslexic because the “B” was carved backwards into her cheek.

Ms. Todd forgot, as she was carving this “B” into her own face, that things in the mirror aren’t always what they appear.  Apparently Fox Noose and other conservative talking heads forgot it as well.  They were all too happy to talk about this fake story, and now the Pittsburgh police say that she was lying all along.  Todd failed a lie detector test on Friday.  Back in the day, a black man would have been lynched for this without the courtesy of judge or jury.  You’ve all seen To Kill a Mockingbird.

I’m reminded of Brandon McClelland’s death in Paris, Texas by this incident. That is because reportedly one of the suspects arrested in his case made a similar claim some years ago.  The young white man said he was out with a white friend in the back of a pickup truck when they were approached by some black men looking to rob them.  This white suspect apparently shot his white friend in the head three times as he was aiming at the black robbers.  A Paris jury let him off with manslaughter instead of murder.

Introduce a black man to the story and you automatically get sympathy.  That’s what happened to Ashley Todd as she was contacted by McCain, Palin, and apparently the Obama staff.  This is the race baiting that McCain has chosen to align himself.  Race voting and fear mongering are his only chances for the White House.

NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF/New York Times – Rebranding the U.S. With Obama

I thought you might enjoy this interesting article from yesterday’s New York Times.  Nicholas Kristof talks about how the world views the prospect of an African-American president.

 Click here to read Kristof’s entire article.

The other day I had a conversation with a Beijing friend and I mentioned that Barack Obama was leading in the presidential race:

She: Obama? But he’s the black man, isn’t he?

Me: Yes, exactly.

She: But surely a black man couldn’t become president of the United States?

Me: It looks as if he’ll be elected.

She: But president? That’s such an important job! In America, I thought blacks were janitors and laborers.

Me: No, blacks have all kinds of jobs.

She: What do white people think about that, about getting a black president? Are they upset? Are they angry?

Me: No, of course not! If Obama is elected, it’ll be because white people voted for him.

[Long pause.]

She: Really? Unbelievable! What an amazing country!

  • We’re beginning to get a sense of how Barack Obama’s political success could change global perceptions of the United States, redefining the American “brand” to be less about Guantánamo and more about equality. This change in perceptions would help rebuild American political capital in the way that the Marshall Plan did in the 1950s or that John Kennedy’s presidency did in the early 1960s.
  • In his endorsement, Mr. Powell added that an Obama election “will also not only electrify our country, I think it’ll electrify the world.” You can already see that. A 22-nation survey by the BBC found that voters abroad preferred Mr. Obama to Mr. McCain in every single country — by four to one over all. Nearly half of those in the BBC poll said that the election of Mr. Obama, an African-American, would “fundamentally change” their perceptions of the United States.
  • Europeans like to mock the vapidity of American politics, but they also acknowledge that it would be difficult to imagine a brown or black person leading France or Germany.

    As for Africa, Mr. Obama’s Kenyan father was of the Luo tribe, a minority that has long suffered brutal discrimination in both Kenya and in Uganda (where it is known as the Acholi). The bitter joke in East Africa is that a Luo has more of a chance of becoming president in the United States than in Kenya.

Look out for Wisconsin!

By Earnest Gates 

Could Wisconsin be the new Ohio? Wisconsin’s Attorney General J. B. Van Hollen, is also co-chair for the McCain-Palin campaign in Wisconsin. Sound familiar?

After returning from the Republican National Convention, Van Hollen filed a lawsuit that sought to force Wisconsin elected officials to cross-check new voter registrations. If this does not sound like de ja vu, I would encourage you to come out to Friendship West Baptist Church this Friday night and check out the documentary, “American Blackout!”at 7PM.

In the words of Senator Barack Obama, “not this time.”