State Sen. Elbert Guillory is among seven people receiving honors this week at, of all places, Angola. The Opelousas Democrat is being inducted into the Louisiana Justice Hall of Fame, a program of the Louisiana State Penitentiary Museum Foundation that recognizes outstanding Louisiana residents whose life work is in law enforcement, the judiciary, criminal justice, civil service or other related professions.
Guillory, according to information submitted by the Angola Museum Foundation, grew up during segregation and led his first civil rights demonstration when he was 16 years old:
Guillory attended Southern University and became editor-in-chief of the Digest, reporting and writing editorials advocating equality and an end to institutional segregation. Because of his advocacy, his mother’s job as a teacher and brother’s job as a police officer were threatened. Guillory was eventually asked to leave Southern.
He joined the U.S. Navy and was posted at Norfolk, Virginia, where he also attended college at Norfolk State University. While there Guillory served as editor-in-chief of the Norfolk State Beacon, and continued his civil rights activities, participating in marches in Virginia,
Delaware, New Jersey and Washington, D.C. After honorably completing his four-year enlistment in the Navy, he attended Rutgers University Law School where he learned to refine his organizational and management skills and move to another level of the civil rights struggle. Guillory began to advise students on how to organize and conduct civil rights demonstrations, focusing on specific goals with achievable results such as living conditions in housing projects and minority employment.Guillory taught at Rutgers University Law School and was instrumental in helping the Affirmative Enforcement Clinic craft most of the nation’s laws and techniques for enforcing anti-discrimination civil rights laws for employment and housing. Now a state senator for district 24, he continues to fight for equality through the legislative process.
Guillory will be honored at a banquet in Baton Rouge Friday night with the six other inductees, which include U.S. District Judge Lance Africk of New Orleans; former Louisiana Attorney General William Guste Jr.; Natchitoches Parish Sheriff Victor Jones Jr.; 21st Judicial District Attorney Scott Perrilloux; retired Bossier City Court Judge Billy Ross Robinson, and state Rep. Ernest Wooton of Belle Chasse.
JUNE 19 Former Saint Steve Gleason, who is paralyzed by ALS, released a statement Tuesday in response to the Atlanta radio station's skit making fun of him and the disease, this Picayune post reports. What did he say? He said he'd accepted the apology of the DJs who did it, notes that at least the incident has got people talking about ALS, and asks anyone who is burning to take action about it to do so -- by helping him fight ALS.
JUNE 19 Blogger Ian McGibboney takes a look at the Gleason incident in this post. He makes a good argument about the difference between having free speech and being free from consequences for your speech (which none of us is). He also admits that many of us got upset before we listened to the skit -- but lets us know that the reality is far worse than we can imagine. It was the incredibly bad judgment, even more than the actual speech, that probably got those DJs fired, he opines.
JUNE 19 Washington Post blogger Aaron Blake writes about Sen. Guillory's switch to the GOP in this post. He writes what most political watchers in Louisiana know: Guillory was a Republican before he decided to run for the senate seat in a mostly-D St. Landry district, and has switched back now that he plans to run for Lt. Gov. in a mostly-R state. But how come Blake missed Guillory's appearance on a TLC pageant show? Now that is a video we'd like to see. (Again).
JUNE 19 Here's another Washington Post blog post about a Louisiana politician, and it's just plain scathing. Ezra Klein says Jindal's Politico post was "insulting" to the intelligence of voters, and adds that Jindal is personifying the "stupid" he's railed against, by being an "elite" who convinces GOP activists of "things that aren't true." Me-ow.
JUNE 19 Here's Gov. Jindal's post in Politico, in which he asks the GOP to get over losing to Obama (again) and stop "the bedwetting." (Uh, what?) He gives his Republican buddies what is probably a nerd's idea of a coach's motivational talk, which starts with a list of accomplishments that they can't seem to exploit and ending with an absurd description of liberals that sounds like a character treatment for a Fox "News" movie scripted by Gordon Liddy. Sure, he's preaching to the choir, but even the choir's not this gullible.
JUNE 19 Lamar Parmentel read Gov. Jindal's post on Politico, but thinks it was so dumb it probably was published in the wrong paper. This post by Lamar on the Daily Kingfish opines that possibly Jindal's post was destined for the Onion -- because the governor couldn't possibly be serious here. If you listen closely, you can hear the staff of the Kingfish giggling.
JUNE 19 Blogger Robert Mann posts from Turkey, a country he has visited several times in the past few years. Mann gives an interesting overview of the current political and societal climate of the country, which -- if you're living under a rock and don't know -- is experiencing protests and turmoil these days. Mann promises to post as much as he can during his trip, which should be fascinating reading.
JUNE 19 Blogger CB Forgotston says the legislature is keeping the vicious cycle going with its funding of new buildings for the community college/technical college system. Universities across the state need maintenance and improvement on existing buildings, and the solution is to build new buildings at other schools? By the time the bonds are paid off, those buildings will be falling down, too, CB says.
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How can someone who lies, cheats, be unfaithful while married, fabricate false evidence and engage in unethical behavior, be considered for an honor dealing with law enforcement, judiciary, and criminal justice ethics?
Instead of being inducted AT Angola, he should be behind bars IN Angola.
Yes, he attended several colleges, including New York Theological Seminary - and lives a life exactly the opposite of what he learned - unethical and unchristian.
See:
http://www.dailykingfish.com/diary/1155/
then follow-up article:
http://www.dailykingfish.com/tag/Elbert Guillory
also:
http://www.thedeadpelican.com/2009/guil.htm