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SYNOPSIS American Blackout |
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The ways in which African-American voters
have been marginalized in the
electoral process are examined in this activist documentary. In the
investigation of ballot counting in Florida in the much-contested 2000
presidential election, it was discovered that many of the communities
where inaccurate tabulating took place were largely populated by
African-Americans, who have traditionally been loyal Democratic voters.
Filmmaker Ian Inaba digs into the controversy over the 2000 ballot
count and the ways in which race played a hand in the legal decisions
that resulted in George W. Bush's appointment as president. Ianba's
research also leads him to Representative Cynthia McKinney, a
congresswoman from Georgia who spearheaded an investigation of the firm
that created voter lists for the State of Florida (and had ties to
high-ranking Republican figures) and was also an outspoken opponent of
Bush's policies regarding terrorism and the war in Iraq. In the 2002
election, McKinney had reason to believe she had fallen victim to the
same corruption she sought to expose when she lost her House of
Representatives seat in a hotly contested election. American Blackout
received its premiere at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival.
Mark Deming, All Movie Guide Source: www.alibris.com
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