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May 3, 2026

The supreme court trusts America not to be racist. I don’t | Jamil Smith

Executive Summary

In a recent ruling, the Supreme Court has suggested that the protections of the Voting Rights Act are no longer necessary, based on the belief that America has significantly changed. However, data indicates that the racial turnout gap between white and nonwhite voters has widened, particularly in areas previously protected by Section 5 of the Act. This ruling has prompted immediate legislative actions in several states aimed at redistricting that may dilute Black voting power, raising concerns about the erosion of representation and civil rights. The implications of this decision could lead to significant losses in Black political representation, necessitating a renewed commitment to civil rights advocacy and protection.

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Stoic Response

Justice & RightsPolitics & GovernanceCulture & Identity

Citizens of the Agora,

Today, we stand at a crucial crossroads, one that tests the very fabric of our democracy. The recent ruling by the Supreme Court suggests that the protections of the Voting Rights Act are no longer necessary, a notion rooted in the belief that America has fundamentally changed. Yet, the data tells a different story. Between 2012 and 2022, the racial turnout gap between white and nonwhite voters has widened to a staggering 18 percentage points. In the very counties once safeguarded by Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, this gap has grown almost twice as fast. This is not merely a statistic; it is a clarion call for justice and equity, echoing the cardinal virtues of justice and courage.

Let us remember the words of George H. White, who prophetically warned Congress over a century ago that the struggle for Black representation was far from over. His words resonate today as we witness states like Florida and Louisiana swiftly maneuvering to dilute Black voting power in the wake of this ruling. The Voting Rights Act was not just a legal safeguard; it was a moral imperative, a constraint on a nation that has historically failed to protect the rights of its most vulnerable citizens. Justice Alito’s assertion that social change has rendered these protections unnecessary is not only misguided—it is dangerously naive.

The implications of this ruling extend beyond mere numbers; they threaten to erase decades of hard-won progress. We face the prospect of losing as many as 30% of the Congressional Black Caucus members before the next presidential election. The very essence of our democracy is at stake, as gerrymandering threatens to dismantle the political power built by Black communities since 1965. This is not just a political battle; it is a moral one. It calls upon us to embody the virtues of fortitude and wisdom, to confront the challenges before us with unwavering resolve.

I urge each of you to rise to this occasion. We must not allow the appearance of progress to substitute for the reality of justice. Let us not be lulled into complacency by the notion that our fight is over. Instead, let us harness our collective strength and demand that our elected officials act with integrity and purpose. We are called to be the guardians of our democracy, to ensure that the rights of every citizen are protected and upheld.

So I charge you, citizens of the Agora: Stand firm in your commitment to civil rights. Engage in advocacy, educate your neighbors, and hold your representatives accountable. The struggle for justice is not a solitary endeavor; it is a collective pursuit that requires each of us to act. Together, let us ensure that the promise of America—of a multiracial democracy—remains not just a dream, but a reality for all.

Article Rewritten Through Stoic Lens

Journal Entry: Reflections on the Supreme Court Ruling

Acceptance of Nature's Order

Today, I reflect on the recent decision of the Supreme Court regarding the Voting Rights Act. It is a reminder that the wheel of fortune turns in ways both predictable and unpredictable. The belief that America has changed sufficiently to render protections unnecessary is a testament to the human tendency to overlook the deeper currents of history. Just as the seasons change, so too do the struggles for justice and equity.

The Cycle of History

In contemplating the words of George H. White, who foresaw the challenges of his time, I am reminded that history is not linear but cyclical. His farewell to Congress was not merely a lament but a prophecy of resilience. The phoenix, as he described, rises not from the ashes of defeat but from the relentless efforts of those who refuse to yield.

The Nature of Virtue

The ruling does not extinguish the flame of justice; rather, it challenges us to cultivate virtue in the face of adversity. It is easy to become despondent when confronted with injustice. Yet, in this moment, we are called to embody the virtues of courage and perseverance. The erosion of protections is not an end but a call to action.

The Illusion of Change

The Court's assertion that social change has rendered the Voting Rights Act obsolete is a dangerous illusion. Data reveals a widening gap in voter turnout, particularly among marginalized communities. This is not a sign of progress but a clarion call for vigilance. We must recognize that the absence of overt discrimination does not equate to the presence of equity.

The Responsibility of the Present

As we witness legislative actions that threaten to dilute representation, we must ask ourselves: what is our response? The burden of history rests upon our shoulders. It is our duty to advocate for justice, to ensure that the hard-won rights of our forebears are not merely preserved but expanded.

The Path Forward

In this moment of uncertainty, we must not succumb to fatigue or despair. Instead, let us draw strength from the knowledge that the struggle for justice is a continuous journey. Each generation must engage in the work of advocacy, not as a burden but as a sacred duty.

Conclusion: Embracing the Challenge

As I close this entry, I remind myself that the path of virtue is fraught with challenges. Yet, it is in these very challenges that we find the opportunity to rise. The struggle for civil rights is not merely a historical footnote but an ongoing endeavor that requires our unwavering commitment. We must remain steadfast, for the phoenix will rise again, not because it is destined to, but because we will it to be so through our actions.

Source Body Text

Six supreme court justices handed down a ruling built, ostensibly, on the belief that the US has changed so much as to render the protections of the Voting Rights Act unnecessary. No one should be that gullible. In 1901, the same year my great-grandfather was born, George H White rose to address the 56th United States Congress for the last time. He was a Republican congressman from North Carolina – the only Black member of the entire body. He was leaving because the state he represented had passed legislation making his re-election impossible. Reconstruction had already been undone. The powers that be had narrowed, then deferred, then erased the promise of multiracial democracy, written in the blood of Union soldiers and freed people alike. White’s farewell was not defeat. It was prophecy. “This, Mr Chairman, is perhaps the Negro’s temporary farewell to the American Congress,” he said, “but let me say, phoenix-like, he will rise up some day and come again.” He was right. It took 64 years, a march across a bridge in Selma, and a president signing the Voting Rights Act of 1965. White’s phoenix did not rise, though, because those in power could be trusted. It rose because our forebears forced America to act against its own instincts. The Voting Rights Act was not a gift or a concession. It was a constraint – imposed on a country that had proven, over a century, that it would not protect Black citizens’ right to vote without one. On Wednesday, the supreme court removed that constraint. The ruling in Louisiana v Callais did not formally strike down section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. The statute remains. What it can do does not. But strip away the procedural language and the ruling rests on a single premise: that America has changed enough that these protections are no longer necessary. Justice Alito wrote that “social change has occurred throughout the country and particularly in the South.” John Roberts has been making this argument since he was in Ronald Reagan’s justice department. It is the core of their position, and it deserves scrutiny. Between 2012 and 2022, the racial turnout gap between white and nonwhite voters has widened, reaching 18 percentage points by 2022. The gap grew almost twice as fast in the very counties that section 5 of the Voting Rights Act once protected. Louisiana has never elected a Black congressperson from a non-majority-Black district. Not once. The mechanism the court just destroyed is, more or less, the only reason Black representation in that state has ever existed. The court removed the umbrella and pointed to the rain as proof it was never needed. That faith is not supported by evidence. It is contradicted by it. The court has essentially ruled that unless a legislator records a confession of their own bigotry, the map is constitutional – making the only person allowed to define a racist act the person committing it. Congress understood the absurdity of this in 1982, which is why legislators wrote an effects-based standard into the law. Discrimination does not announce itself. The intent standard is the cloak of the coward. Roberts sealed the trap years ago: in Rucho v Common Cause, he ruled that partisan gerrymandering is beyond federal review. Now, any map that dilutes Black voting power hides behind partisan strategy, and the courts cannot touch it. The court has achieved something more perverse still: drawing districts to protect Black voters is itself the racial discrimination. Erasing them is not. The court’s premise – that America can be trusted – lasted less than a day. Florida passed a new congressional map within hours of the ruling, engineered to deliver Republicans four additional seats. Louisiana announced it would delay its own primary elections – with mail ballots already in voters’ hands, with early voting days away – so lawmakers could redraw lines and eliminate the majority-Black district the VRA had required. Civil rights groups including the ACLU and the NAACP filed an emergency challenge on Friday, arguing that the governor’s order is illegal and that votes already cast cannot simply be erased. Tennessee and Alabama have signaled they intend to follow. Mississippi’s governor announced a special session to redistrict state supreme court seats. Trump’s former campaign manager posted openly that if states move aggressively, Republicans could hold a permanent House majority. The cost will not be abstract. As many as 30% of the Congressional Black Caucus members could lose their seats before the next presidential election. Republicans could eliminate nearly 200 state legislative seats Democrats currently hold across the South, where half of the Black American population lives. The gerrymandering will not stop at Congress – it will reach state legislatures, county commissions, school boards, every level of government where Black communities have built political power, district by district, since 1965. In the exact states where voting discrimination has been most historically violent, there may soon be no Black congressional representation at all. Democrats may well win a House or Senate majority in November, but it is no vindication after this ruling. Unless the party regards it as preparation for a longer civil rights struggle ahead to restore the Voting Rights Act, it will be a familiar phenomenon in this country: a substitution of the appearance of progress for the thing itself. November will not slow what they are already building behind the ruling. DHS agents have appeared unannounced at county election offices in my native Ohio, demanding voter records and registration data. Records show Doge personnel operating under a secret agreement with outside election deniers, analyzing voter rolls to overturn results in specific states. Seventy percent of the justice department civil rights division’s lawyers are gone – the administration cleared them out before the ruling came down. Taken together, these developments point in the same direction: weakened protections, weakened enforcement and more pressure on the machinery of elections. Trump was the first president in a generation elected without the full protections of the Voting Rights Act. Wednesday’s ruling ensures he will not be the last. There is a particular, bone-deep exhaustion in this moment that I must name here: the fatigue of the repetitive. Every generation of Black Americans that has clawed out a measure of progress has watched the next inherit the exact same fight, dressed in new, more polite legal jargon. We are not building upon the victories of our forebears; yet again, we must spend our lives defending and rebuilding them. It is a staggering waste of time. George H White told the 56th Congress that the phoenix would rise. It did – not because America wanted it to, but because people spent 64 years forcing it to. That is what the Voting Rights Act was: not a gift, not a concession, but a constraint our forebears imposed on a country that would not do right without one. I don’t trust America in that regard. I doubt I ever will. Instead, I ask what we are prepared to do about a country that has never, on its own, done the right thing. Jamil Smith is a Guardian US columnist