I’m old enough that I remember Martin Luther King. I read about him in
the newspapers. I saw him on television. I heard his “Dream” speech. I
wept when he was murdered.
I have no patience for those who claim
that America is just as racist as it was in years gone by. I remember
those days. I remember federal troops in Little Rock. I remember Gov.
George Wallace blocking the school door. I remember Sheriff “Bull”
Conner and the fire hoses being turned on marchers in Birmingham. I
remember the Freedom Riders. I remember separate drinking fountains and
“white only” signs. I remember the fear. I remember the hate.
But
mostly, I remember the sound of a Georgia preacher’s voice calling out.
I remember him calling out, not just to his followers, but to his
enemies as well. He told us that we were better men and women and that
hate and fear shouldn’t divide us. He reminded is that we were all one
people, regardless of skin color or religion. He didn’t defeat his
enemies; he converted them.
That voice was heard. In 1964, the
Civil Rights Act became the law of the land with the support of more
than 80% of the Republicans in Congress and slightly more than 60% of
the Democrats (among those opposing the measure were Klansman Sen.
Robert Byrd of West Virginia and Al Gore’s late father who was a senator
from Tennessee).
Those were heady days. Then the dream started
to sour. Government programs aimed at aiding African Americans ended up
causing mortal harm. The welfare structure effectively destroyed the
black family. Other programs, such as affirmative action, conveyed the
message to both African Americans and others that blacks were incapable
of competing. Some claimed it was needed to fight vestiges of racism
against minorities, while completely ignoring the success of Asian
Americans, some of whom in modern times faced incarceration solely based
on their ethnicity.
Whatever the intent, the effect was to make
African Americans dependent upon government largess and intervention
rather than encouraging their own genius.
What was perhaps even
worse were Dr. King’s successors. They stood in the footsteps of a giant
and were found wanting. His inheritors stood at the threshold of
greatness … and stepped back.
Instead of following Dr. King’s
message of inclusion, they preached a message of separation and
divisiveness. Instead of finding strength in self and family, they found
dependence upon the government.
Some of their leaders,
specifically Jessie Jackson, Cynthia McKinney and Al Sharpton, have
preached a strong message of anti-Semitism. Many leaders have refused to
denounce or even distance themselves from such vile demagogues as Louis
Farrakhan.
As a nation, we honor Martin Luther King. His spirit
soars in the heavens with angels, while many of his successors slither
in the mud with an entirely different creature.
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