The last week of August was the fiftieth anniversary of
Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech.
I’m sure you heard about the observances locally and in Washington DC as
the main stream media was consumed by the story. It was said that King’s speech paralleled (or
plagiarized) Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address.
I was listening to my favorite local black radio personality the other
day and this anniversary observance was a primary topic. His studio guest came in to discuss race
relations and he agreed with Kevin Elkins that the current atmosphere in
Montgomery is very bad and he blamed it on the black community living in the
past and harping on the victim mentality.
Elkin claimed that the black community was responding to the white
community continuously commemorating the Confederacy. If only that were true I thought. If there was a greater knowledge of our
Southern history and heritage and the constitutional principles our forefathers
followed in creating the Confederate States of America paralleling the founders
and framers of our United States of America 100 years prior.
Whereas H.K.Edgerton espouses that blacks should embrace
their antebellum history and heritage which helped build the prosperous Southern
economy and culture and instilled in their people a Christian foundation,
King’s speech while seeking to be visionary, dredged up the same old
victimization excuses that we continue to hear fifty years later despite
inordinate progressive social programs and laws meant to prop up the black
community often at the expense of the greater general societal welfare. King’s speech dreams of a day when men are
not judged by the color of their skin but, the alleged “post-racial” leadership
in Washington promotes racial disharmony selectively interfering or ignoring
“hate crimes” and gang violence. The
federal government continues to demand biased affirmative action and civil
rights measures and socialistic redistribution dictates meant to enslave
everyone, confiscating wealth from the producers and doling out to
dependents.
King claimed that the “negroes” of 1963 were still exiles,
languishing, victims of injustice, “crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination”. Fifty years later after a concerted immeasurably
expensive war on poverty and despite all the “work” of the NAACP, the National
Negro College Fund, the Congressional Black Caucus ad nauseam and after two
Constitutional Amendments and four Civil Rights Acts and myriad other laws and
executive orders, there is supposedly no progress. It’s not enough. Admission and hiring quotas are not
enough. Blacks are still inordinately
poor and so a pure socialistic redistribution agenda is underway throughout our
nation. The prisons have an inordinate
proportion of black men so we must prohibit profiling in criminal
investigations and seek the underlying root cause of the apprehension and
detention of these "victims of the biased system".
While segregation
in public housing, transportation, schools, and organizations were banished,
the black “distrust of all white people” which King decried remains. Voting privileges were bestowed and despite
unprecedented unemployment (even worse in the black community), lackadaisical
economic growth, and a deteriorating position of the United States as the
preeminent superpower in the world community, 96% of blacks voted for the
incumbent in the 2012 Presidential elections.
Was that because “they… judged (the candidates not) by the color of
(their) skin but by the content of (their) character” or record? Is this the result of King’s dream? Chicago and Detroit crumble into desolate
ghettos. Black-on –black crime soars. 50% of the murders in the country are
committed by a 3% population demographic.
Lincoln stated, “There is a physical difference between the
white and black races which I believe will forever forbid the two races living
together on terms of social and political equality.” Was Lincoln right?
All men are
created equal according to our Declaration of Independence cited or plagiarized
in King’s speech. But creation is not achievement,
ability, or desire. Opportunity is
available but initiative and ambition is not inherent. Lack of success is blamed on unfairness. On another of Elkin’s recent radio shows they
were endorsing health care reform such that any and everyone should get the
same medical treatment as Warren Buffett.
Is that true? Akin also rebuffed critics of Montgomery public schools,
that only those with children enrolled in failing schools have the right to
complain, not those fleeing these dangerous schools that have turned their
backs on God and discipline, competition, testing and elementary education for
our children. Those who foot the bill
thru their tax dollars for these schools who fail our children and our society
have no basis to object.
King went on, “I
have a dream that one day down in Alabama little black boys and black girls
will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters
and brothers.” “A 2008 study by Jenifer
L. Bratter and Rosalind B. King conducted on behalf of the Education Resources
Information Center found that interracial marriages are twice as likely to
divorce. 73% of black children are born
out of wedlock. Black fathers are
absent. Is this the brotherhood and
sisterhood King envisioned? Our
great-grandfathers left their children but to defend their families and their
homes in the War of Northern Aggression.
Is the freedom
King shouted about embodied in racially biased socialistic government bureaucracy
and control and regulation and entitlements? Free healthcare? Free food stamps? Free housing?
Free phones? Are they really
free? Have we lost sight of limited
government and constitutional principles, responsibility and self-reliance and
the liberty for which our Confederate ancestors fought and sacrificed? “Let
freedom ring.”
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