Martin Luther King Jr. Day offers Americans time to reflect and measure our progress toward building a civil society. An honest examination of history makes it clear that the law has not been able to cleanse our nation of racism.
The 15th Amendment has been in place for more than a century. The landmark 1964 Civil Rights Act has been on the books for over a half century.
Yet just this month, the U.S. House of Representatives felt compelled to pass a formal resolution that “once again rejects White nationalism and White supremacy as hateful expressions of intolerance that are contradictory to the values that define the people of the United States.”
While our founding document states that all men are created equal, clearly not all Americans have bought into that article of faith.
There is a limit to what laws can accomplish. While they instruct as to what we can and cannot do, laws are incapable of guiding our hearts to love our neighbor and our minds to process thoughtful and appropriate communication with our fellow man.
In December 1964, in accepting the Nobel Peace Prize, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called the Civil Rights Act the beginning of “a second emancipation.” Forty-five years on, there’s still much emancipating to be done.
Throughout that period, conservative leaders have echoed Dr. King’s call to end racial insanity and the silent hate that continues to divides us. In response to incidents of bigotry and violence, President Ronald Reagan delivered a stern message to “those individuals who persist in such hateful behavior. “You are the ones who are out of step with our society,” he said. “You are the ones who willfully violate the meaning of the dream that is America. And this country, because of what it stands for, will not stand for your conduct.”
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[Kay Coles James is president of The Heritage Foundation. James formerly served as director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management and as Virginia's secretary of health and human resources.]
I'm sure there is racism out there but I haven't seen any. In fact I feel it has been reversed for white individuals.
ReplyDelete55 years on , it's gotten worse ! People are trying to find racism where it does not exist .
ReplyDeleteThe problem here is the redefinition of racism. If you do not like people that set and live low standards, you’re a racist, if you don’t like criminals, you’re a racist, if you don’t want to be around dangerous ghetto thugs that fantasize about getting rich becoming a rapper, you’re a racist. It’s all about the muddying of absolutes with the dilution of good and bad, right and wrong. Leftists and Democrats think it’s all relative and can change to suit their moronic agenda. Idiots. But, it makes them easy to point out in a crowd. I guess that’s discrimination. Nothing wrong with that either. Another leftist redefined term. We discriminate between right and wrong every day.
ReplyDeleteThis "racism" bullsh!t in America started when Obama became President and people are totally ignoring the fact that he started it.
ReplyDeleteWe were a nation free of most racism until then and now it has gotten worse. It is the new "race card" that blacks, Dems and Progressives never leave home without.
It is so bad that white people are so brainwashed that they actually believe there is racism. In fact, the only racism is black on white racism and now unfortunately white on white racism.
We are a country full of some serious mental illnesses.
True! It was started by Obama! Racisism is not what you used to think of ......whites about blacks. NO....it is now blacks about whites. It's more than a total reversal. Seems that now the only people who are racists are whites. We know that is just not the case. Whites are hated by blacks, ore now than ever before Obama.
ReplyDelete