The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Voting changes send wrong message

- By Morcease J. Beasley Dr. Morcease J. Beasley is superinten­dent of Clayton County Schools.

To be clear, if we allow and support such legislatio­n and actions, it tells our children that the rules we create are arbitrary and useful only when we win by those rules and should be changed without considerat­ion of what is just if we do not win by those rules. This misguided and wrong lesson on rule-changing can and may possibly be applied to all types of competitio­ns, including those that are academic, athletic and artistic.

Early last Saturday morning, I found myself up reading, preparing to teach a class, and now I’m responding to a topic that is fundamenta­lly important to our democracy and our lives. The slew of legislatio­n to change the voting rules being voted upon by the majority, only after an election loss, is a dangerous slide towards the demise of our democracy and perpetual minority rule.

As a father, Christian, and educationa­l leader, what message does this give to our children? To be clear, if we allow and support such legislatio­n and actions, it tells our children that the rules we create are arbitrary and useful only when we win by those rules and should be changed without considerat­ion of what is just if we do not win by those rules. This misguided and wrong lesson on rule-changing can and may possibly be applied to all types of competitio­ns, including those that are academic, athletic and artistic.

If and when this occurs, we have basically demonstrat­ed it is not about truth, working hard, and winning fair and square. If we support this, we are sharing that it is not about having a truthful, right, and just political platform or ideology that appeals to the majority of thinking and moral voters. The clear message is that winning should occur at any cost -- whether one lies, cheats, rigs the game, or harms the minority or losing entity.

Is this the message or lesson we want our children to

learn from us as adults? I sure hope not. If it is, then we must accept the consequenc­es of our actions with history providing plenty of examples of what happens when you implement unjust rules and laws that are void of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, that harm the minority, and that are designed to keep certain people or parties in power perpetuall­y. As we have heard throughout our lives, absolute power corrupts absolutely.

The erosion of our democracy and quality of life should be of no surprise if we sacrifice the long-term health and stability of our state and nation for short-sighted,

immoral, and unjust legislativ­e wins. We live in a moral and just universe. We should not delude ourselves in thinking that laws that are diabolical­ly opposed to the concepts of justice, morality, fairness, and considerat­ion of all — and of those in the minority, will be implemente­d without consequenc­e.

St. Augustine, St. Thomas, and our very own 20th-century prophet from Georgia, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., speak from the grave as we are reminded and warned, lex iniusta non est lex, an unjust law is no law at all.

In closing, I appeal to Georgia state legislator­s to

renounce all efforts to adopt voting laws that are unjust and unfair to all people, including those in the minority. We should reject all voting legislatio­n not grounded in bipartisan oversight, accountabi­lity, and transparen­cy.

Legislator­s should be reminded that majority or minority status is very fluid. It is unwise and shortsight­ed to make voting laws that you embrace when in the majority but disdain if in the minority. This would be one of the indicators as to whether the law is unjust and unfair.

And if doing justly is of no considerat­ion as we make laws, then we should not be

surprised if we and our children experience the paroxysm of injustice which will only hasten the end of the American experiment of democracy. This is the historical legacy of unjust laws, states, and nations.

Our children and future generation­s deserve and need the American experiment to continue its trajectory towards being that more-perfect and just union. This will only occur if our leaders and citizens advance justice and fairness for all.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Legislator­s should be reminded that majority or minority status is very fluid. It is unwise and shortsight­ed to make voting laws that you embrace when in the majority but disdain if in the minority. This would be one of the indicators as to whether the law is unjust and unfair.
COURTESY Legislator­s should be reminded that majority or minority status is very fluid. It is unwise and shortsight­ed to make voting laws that you embrace when in the majority but disdain if in the minority. This would be one of the indicators as to whether the law is unjust and unfair.
 ??  ?? Morcease J. Beasley
Morcease J. Beasley

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