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The 2008 Super Tuesday for Equality Campaign Announces the
Missouri Civil Rights Initiative
 |
[Tuesday April 24, 2007] -- In a press conference in Kansas City
today advocates of race-blind and color-blind policies announced that Missouri is a target
for a ballot initiative to ban race and gender preferences in that state in the November
2008 general elections.
The press conference was held at 11:00 am today at the Hyatt Regency Crown Center in
Kansas City. |
| The
operative clause of the proposed Missouri ballot initiative reads as follows: "The state shall not discriminate against or
grant preferential treatment to any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color,
ethnicity or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education or
public contracting." |
Missouri Civil Rights Initiative CONTACT
Info: |
Press

Release |
| State
Contact: |
Tim
Asher, former director of admissions as North Central Missouri College.
Phone (816) 812-4929
Email: ta@missouricri.org |
| Honorary Chair: |
John
Uhlmann |
| Web Site: |
http://missouricri.org (under construction) |
| Alternate
Contact: |
Jennifer
Gratz, Director of State and Local Initiatives
American Civil Rights Institute
P.O. Box 188350
Sacramento, CA 95815Office:
(916) 444-2278
Cell: (517) 281-6738
http://acri.org |
| Super Tuesday for Equal Rights Web Site: |
For
information on all of the Super Tuesday 2008 ballot initiatives,
also be sure to visit the Super Tuesday for Equal Rights Web Site! |

See also: Examples of why Missouri needs the Civil Rights Iniative!
>
PRESS
RELEASE:
MISSOURI CIVIL RIGHTS LAUNCHES ANTI-PREFERENCES CAMPAIGN
Tuesday April 24, 2007
| [Kansas
City, Missouri] -- The Missouri Civil Rights Initiative is forging ahead with plans for a
November, 2008 ballot measure banning government-sponsored race and gender preferences in
the state. The Missouri Civil Rights Initiative will be part of a 'Super Tuesday' campaign
that will offer citizens of several states the chance to end such practices in public
employment, public education and public contracting. Similar measures have already passed
in three other states, all by overwhelming margins. |
Contact

Info |
Missouri Civil Rights Initiative's Tim Asher, former director of admissions as North
Central Missouri College said such a measure has never been more necessary. "Efforts
to assure equal opportunity in Missouri are admirable," notes Asher, whose contract
at the state school was not renewed after he raised questions about the college's
preferential admissions policies, "but discriminating against some in favor of others
is not the answer. That only perpetuates unfairness and ill feeling. We are individuals
and should not be reduced to stereotypes especially by our government."
Also attending the press conference, to be introduced by Honorary Missouri Civil Rights
Initiative Chairman John Uhlmann, will be Ward Connerly, chairman of the Sacramento-based
American Civil Rights Institute.
|
A longtime crusader for a colorblind America, Connerly has been invited by Missouri Civil
Rights Initiative to help with the campaign. "Getting our nation to the point of
applying a single standard to all Americans is one of the most crucial issues of our
time," says Connerly, who helped lead the earlier successful anti-preferences
campaigns in California, Washington state and, most recently, Michigan. |
 |
Connerly continued: "If events of the past couple of weeks have taught us
anything at all, it is that race will continue to divide our nation as long as we insist
on treating people differently based on ethnicity and gender. Both Don Imus, in his
appalling comments on the Rutgers women's basketball team, and those who rushed to
judgment in the Duke lacrosse case made the same mistake: they looked at individuals and
saw only skin color. We have to get past that kind of thinking and we must start by
putting our government out of the business of privileging some citizens based on the color
of their skin or the origin of their ancestors and punishing others. Real lives have been
radically affected by these policies, and great social and economic damage has been
done."
The language of the proposed ballot initiative reads as follows: "The state shall not
discriminate against or grant preferential treatment to any individual or group on the
basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity or national origin in the operation of public
employment, public education or public contracting." 
See also: Examples of why Missouri needs the Civil Rights Iniative!
>
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