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Comcast Condemned GA's Racist Voting Law, then Gave Thousands to its Racist Backers [racism white supremacy is conducted by deception and Black people's belief in many, many lies told by racists]

From [HERE] Three months ago, Comcast responded to the passage of Georgia’s sweeping voting law by saying, “Efforts to limit or impede access to this vital constitutional right for any citizen are not consistent with our values.”

That was then.

On June 30, the telecommunications giant contributed $2,500 to Georgia’s attorney general, Chris Carr, who has vigorously defended the law, which critics say will curtail voting access, including by limiting use of drop boxes for absentee ballots and making it a crime for third-party groups to hand out food and water to voters standing in line. President Biden’s Justice Department sued Georgia over the measure last month, saying it discriminated against Black voters, while the bill’s proponents maintain it is necessary to shore up confidence in the state’s elections.

Comcast was one of several companies that raised alarm about the voting restrictions but then contributed more than $20,000 collectively between April and June of this year to Georgia politicians who voted for or publicly defended the legislation, according to an examination by Advance Democracy, a nonprofit research group headed by Daniel J. Jones, a former FBI analyst who led the Senate investigation into the CIA’s use of torture after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The findings are based on new campaign finance disclosures. They highlight how businesses have been thrust into a roiling debate over race and voting access, compelled by their customers to present themselves as bulwarks against GOP-led crackdowns inspired by former president Donald Trump’s false claims about widespread voter fraud.

Georgia was the epicenter of Trump’s quest to use those falsehoods to invalidate the results of the 2020 election. As a result, the state became particularly fraught terrain for corporations, testing their long-standing alliance with the GOP. Many responded by condemning the law.

Chief executives of Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines and Coca-Cola both called the measure “unacceptable,” following an outcry from Black Lives Matter, the national community-organizing group, which urged big business to speak out more strongly against the law. In the furor, Major League Baseball moved its summer All-Star Gameout of the state.

In April, hundreds of major companies and corporate leaders released a statement under the heading, “We Stand for Democracy,” calling voting the “lifeblood of our democracy.”

The statement stopped short of promising to end donations to politicians who advanced the voting restrictions. Nonetheless, many of the corporations that aired concerns have since withheld donations to supporters of the legislation, despite previously helping to finance them. Neither Delta nor Coca-Cola, for instance, has contributed to Georgia lawmakers who voted for the restrictive voting law, according to Advance Democracy’s analysis of filings made public by mid-July.