Florida and Texas have always been egalitarian states.
p2rismaalapp on
No idea why anyone would glorify the Southern culture.
Whatisgoingonnowyo on
Usual suspects on the wrong side of history, as per usual.
GrandPhilosophy7319 on
Wait till you hear how long it took Mississippi to ratify the thirteenth amendment
12PoundCankles on
It’s always the usual problem children.
hbhfl on
this is a trend that started in libertarian western north america and areas more east like united states and europe were resistant but eventually conceded and was similar with racial stuff
Catch_ME on
Staten Island never disappoints
The_Jousting_Duck on
Certified Staten Island moment
YushclayYstaguan on
The gerrymandering looks more moderated, it’s still there, but imagine if it didn’t get as bad as we have it now.
WiWook on
Trying to figure out what the no area of Wisconsin was. Zoomed in, Yup, that’s about right, still is.
buitenlander0 on
I wonder why Milwaukee, Cincinnat?
daff_quess on
9 members of congress in California looks so cursed lmao
Craigg75 on
Seriously for all the MAGA f*cks who want their own country, just cut Louisiana through South Carolina out of the nation. Let it is circle the drain into a third world impoverished country.
Syndicalist_Vegan on
The usual suspects lol
TheJaice on
Well look at that, exactly who we thought. But WTF Wisconsin?
Urbane_One on
The usual suspects.
tgt305 on
The south always wants those people to count for representation but not let all those people vote.
friendlybaldman on
Democrats strike again.
nine_of_swords on
One of those weird situations where opposite ends agree.
On the higher class end, a big reason for the push for women’s right to vote is to maintain high class dominance in politics. Generally speaking, higher class households theoretically had a higher chance of both spouses being able to vote (having childcare, plus potential poll literacy tests). In the South, for example, the women’s suffrage movement excluded black women. Woman’s Suffrage in the south really was meant to maintain Jim Crow.
On the other end, you get places like Wyoming, where the lack of women in general was a problem. There’s also advocates for fatherless households, since the original idea was that a woman’s vote was her influence on her husband (The original only landowners vote thing that got replaced for the sake of renters during the Jacksonian era is usually construed as the founding fathers wanting to make sure only those invested in an area voted, but there’s a one household one vote aspect to it too.).
moebius21 on
Who would have guessed that racism and misogyny went hand-in-hand.
Ironic that the reps from Rochester voted no….right where Susan B. Anthony lived.
NoBSforGma on
OMG! Almost all of Virginia voted No and all of West Virginia voted Yes. Hmmm.
snoweel on
Kind of wild how sharp the state borders are. Arkansas-all yes, Mississippi-all no. Alabama, Georgia, almost all no. Tennesee, almost all yes.
East-Plankton-3877 on
Can the fucking south NOT be a bunch of ass hats for once?
EvanTheRose on
“Aww horsewaggles! We’re on duh wrong sahd uh hist’ry agayn”
GeorginaWashington1 on
The south has always been a problem.
colossalpunch on
*It’s always the ones you most expect.*
batkave on
Conservatives love voting against anyone but white men
Ratermelon on
The South has seemingly always been on the wrong side of every single issue. Glad I don’t live there. Shame that they don’t learn.
Darth19Vader77 on
It’s always where you most expect
RedditDeezNuts321 on
Repeal the 19th
It’s gone downhill since then
Households should get a vote
Fetty_is_the_best on
Seeing California with so few house districts is wild
BadadvicefromIT on
It still boggles my mind looking at old maps and having to remind myself that California and Texas used to be less populous than Ohio. Crazy how deindustrialization just gutted that whole part of the country in just a few decades.
LTG-Jon on
Distressing that the area around Rochester, NY was either “no” or “abstain.”
Stavi913 on
Every time the 19th amendment comes up I play the Johnny Bravo “Why’d they go and do that?” clip in my head.
37 Comments
Florida and Texas have always been egalitarian states.
No idea why anyone would glorify the Southern culture.
Usual suspects on the wrong side of history, as per usual.
Wait till you hear how long it took Mississippi to ratify the thirteenth amendment
It’s always the usual problem children.
this is a trend that started in libertarian western north america and areas more east like united states and europe were resistant but eventually conceded and was similar with racial stuff
Staten Island never disappoints
Certified Staten Island moment
The gerrymandering looks more moderated, it’s still there, but imagine if it didn’t get as bad as we have it now.
Trying to figure out what the no area of Wisconsin was. Zoomed in, Yup, that’s about right, still is.
I wonder why Milwaukee, Cincinnat?
9 members of congress in California looks so cursed lmao
Seriously for all the MAGA f*cks who want their own country, just cut Louisiana through South Carolina out of the nation. Let it is circle the drain into a third world impoverished country.
The usual suspects lol
Well look at that, exactly who we thought. But WTF Wisconsin?
The usual suspects.
The south always wants those people to count for representation but not let all those people vote.
Democrats strike again.
One of those weird situations where opposite ends agree.
On the higher class end, a big reason for the push for women’s right to vote is to maintain high class dominance in politics. Generally speaking, higher class households theoretically had a higher chance of both spouses being able to vote (having childcare, plus potential poll literacy tests). In the South, for example, the women’s suffrage movement excluded black women. Woman’s Suffrage in the south really was meant to maintain Jim Crow.
On the other end, you get places like Wyoming, where the lack of women in general was a problem. There’s also advocates for fatherless households, since the original idea was that a woman’s vote was her influence on her husband (The original only landowners vote thing that got replaced for the sake of renters during the Jacksonian era is usually construed as the founding fathers wanting to make sure only those invested in an area voted, but there’s a one household one vote aspect to it too.).
Who would have guessed that racism and misogyny went hand-in-hand.
The South was never properly punished.
Short documentary on ending women’s suffrage [HERE](https://youtu.be/0MsnL15oCcY?si=I_pUBW4q1ewDKMYl)
Ironic that the reps from Rochester voted no….right where Susan B. Anthony lived.
OMG! Almost all of Virginia voted No and all of West Virginia voted Yes. Hmmm.
Kind of wild how sharp the state borders are. Arkansas-all yes, Mississippi-all no. Alabama, Georgia, almost all no. Tennesee, almost all yes.
Can the fucking south NOT be a bunch of ass hats for once?
“Aww horsewaggles! We’re on duh wrong sahd uh hist’ry agayn”
The south has always been a problem.
*It’s always the ones you most expect.*
Conservatives love voting against anyone but white men
The South has seemingly always been on the wrong side of every single issue. Glad I don’t live there. Shame that they don’t learn.
It’s always where you most expect
Repeal the 19th
It’s gone downhill since then
Households should get a vote
Seeing California with so few house districts is wild
It still boggles my mind looking at old maps and having to remind myself that California and Texas used to be less populous than Ohio. Crazy how deindustrialization just gutted that whole part of the country in just a few decades.
Distressing that the area around Rochester, NY was either “no” or “abstain.”
Every time the 19th amendment comes up I play the Johnny Bravo “Why’d they go and do that?” clip in my head.