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When Did Martin Luther King Become The Most Important Person In American History?
toogoodreports.com ^ | January 20, 2003 | Lowell Phillips

Posted on 01/20/2003 6:40:40 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe

Asking is akin to blasphemy? Actually it's worse than that. Posing the question might draw more serious condemnation than standing on the steps of the Vatican and screaming, "There is no G-d!!" Come to mention it, it is far more likely and acceptable for someone to critically examine the Pope, Jesus and the Almighty himself than Martin Luther King. Considering he was a Christian leader, as well as a civil rights leader, he certainly would think this odd.

Wondering aloud about such things makes me a bona fide racist in some eyes. Not at all surprising in a paradoxical, political environment where disagreeing with judging people based on skin color, euphemistically called "affirmative action", somehow makes one a racist. On the contrary, my respect for Mr. King is far purer than that alleged by people who have appropriated and distorted his legacy of race neutrality to justify exactly the opposite. The hysterical or, more likely, calculated reactions aside, these musings in no way should be construed as questioning the correctness of honoring the man. I believe him to be one of the most praiseworthy figures of the 20th century and indeed he should be recognized amongst the greatest Americans in our nation's history. But the question that I have is, at what point, and by what justification did he become THE most important figure in our history?

The fact that this is the position that King now occupies is not really arguable. Surely historians would have something to say about it, but if public remembrances and general reverence are at all indicators, and they're the only meaningful indicators, the debate has been settled. To see this, all we need do is open our eyes and uncover our ears. The observances of his birthday are all encompassing. Businesses, churches, the media and state, federal and local government institutions pause in unison and reflect. Public officials, led by the president, make obligatory statements and attend celebrations in his honor. And perhaps most important to the nation's attitudes, now and in years to come, the education system, private and public, makes a concerted effort to see to it that our youth understands who King was and what he has meant to this country. The same can be said about no one else in our history.

His birthday being a national holiday officially verifies Martin Luther King's historical preeminence. He is the one and only "American" deemed to be deserving of an official day of remembrance. Christopher Columbus still has a federal holiday bearing his name, but with the exception of it being a paid day off, it's largely ignored. As political correctness creeps ever forward and his image increasingly becomes that merely of the commander in the first way of European invaders to the "New World", the future of Columbus Day looks bleak. He was not an American in any event. Though his importance in shaping the modern world was immeasurable, his role in birth of The United States and in forming the democratic principles that guide us is nonexistent.

That's it.

Oh, we do have President's Day, but it is likewise remembered as a day off to the few people that get it, rather than anything used as an educational opportunity or deserving of ceremony. Actually the third Monday in February officially remains Washington's Birthday according to section 6103(a), title 5 of the United States Code. But since a proclamation by President Richard Nixon in 1971 it has, in effect, been a day to commemorate all past presidents. So we now have a day set aside to honor Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter along with Washington and Lincoln.

Martin Luther King as an image of courage and nobility in the face of hate should never be undervalued. He was steadfast in his nonviolence and eloquence, even as more radical factions in the civil rights movement began to dismiss him. King's assassination canonized him just as Mao-inspired fanatics, and other violent militants, threatened to take control. But he was not the only believer in nonviolence, and despite his charisma, the ultimate victory in the struggle for civil rights is conceivable without him.

It is far less likely that the Civil War would have come about or ended as it did without Abraham Lincoln. It was mainly due to his strength of will and moral convictions that the war evolved from a secession and state's rights conflict to one of a crusade against slavery. Strangely enough, it is many who benefited the most from Lincoln's leadership that have attempted to discard his attitudes and actions. But what can't be denied is that in a time of unimaginable bloodshed and with the Union faltering he rebuilt the moral underpinnings of the war effort. Though the Emancipation Proclamation freed not a single slave, making it changed the course of the nation. And it made Martin Luther King, as we know him, possible. King paid homage to this in the first lines of his "I have a dream speech",

"Five score years ago, a great American, in whose symbolic shadow we stand signed the Emancipation Proclamation. This momentous decree came as a great beacon light of hope to millions of Negro slaves who had been seared in the flames of withering injustice. It came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of captivity."

Just as Lincoln made King possible, so too did George Washington make Lincoln possible. It is all but unimaginable that the War of Independence could have been won, the constitution could have been ratified, or that the presidency would have evolved as it has without him. And here again King's victories centuries later would not have come to pass. Washington's image has suffered greatly by a recent focus solely on the fact that he was a slaveholder. No one should be above scrutiny, but Washington was no lover of slavery and expressed his wish to have "a plan adopted for the abolition" of the institution.

No less a liberal outlet than PBS recognizes this:

"He possessed and displayed in his life courage, self-control, justice, judgment and an array of other virtues in such full harmony and to such a degree, and he surmounted such great challenges in so many circumstances of war and peace, that to see how he lived his life is to see much more vividly what it means to be a man. This is by no means to say that he was flawless any more than Babe Ruth was a perfect baseball player. It is merely to say that, if he had not lived, such greatness could hardly have been believed possible." And had Washington not lived the greatness of King could hardly have been believed possible.

I don't doubt for a moment that Martin Luther King is deserving of a place of honor in our history. But he is by no means the only or most deserving. There are others that could easily be named from Thomas Jefferson to Benjamin Franklin and beyond whose shoulders King stood upon to accomplish what he did. And dismissing these men does a disservice to them, to this nation, to our children, and to King as well.


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To: sarasmom
My daughter came home from elementary school several Januaries ago to inform me that MLK freed the slaves. I had to inform her that it was the nation's first Republican president who did that.

There's no way to raise a child color blind in today's public school system. She played with children of African and Asian heritage and never noticed a difference in peoples' skin colors before the school system taught her about it.

I thought it was interesting that when she studied native NW cultures they omitted the fact that coastal Indians were notorious slavers, and used to kill slaves wantonly for sport in demonstrations of wealth at potlatches. Makes the white European history of slavery look 'enlightened' in comparison.

By the way, history indicates that more black Africans were sold into slavery to Arabia than to the Americas. Where's the big black population today in Arabia? You'd think the Religion of Peace would have ensured their preservation.
21 posted on 01/20/2003 7:59:13 PM PST by PeoplesRepublicOfWashington
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To: jraven
You apparently didn't read past the title.
22 posted on 01/20/2003 8:03:22 PM PST by savedbygrace (Jesus is Lord)
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To: yooper
True. A few others come to mind: Colin Powell, Clarence Thomas, Jackie Robinson, Jesse Owens, Frederick Douglas, Booker T. Washington. All of these men rose to fame and prominence in the face of racism and inequality. All of these gentlemen had America's best interest at heart. That remains to be seen of Dr. King after the FBI releases its secret file on MLK in 2050.
23 posted on 01/20/2003 8:04:22 PM PST by ctnoell70
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To: goodseedhomeschool
I really is a crying shame that public school kids know more trivial things, than things of real importance.

Not really. My child is being privately educated; I assume yours is? They are going to need servants someday. Servants need only a public education and to content themselves with trivia.

24 posted on 01/20/2003 8:05:26 PM PST by templar
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To: sarasmom
My child is in second grade, and is being told that MLK is the greatest man who ever lived in this country.She has no idea who Abe Lincoln was.She was taught that George Washington was greedy, and that all whites are greedy

Really? What are you going to do about this?

25 posted on 01/20/2003 8:10:09 PM PST by Captainpaintball ( If Rush Limbaugh and Michael Savage had a kid...)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
George Washington deserves his own day, and it should be celebrated on his birthday, whether or not his birthday falls on a Monday.

What are we supposed to be celebrating, Washington or three-day weekends?

26 posted on 01/20/2003 8:21:50 PM PST by Age of Reason
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To: ctnoell70
That remains to be seen of Dr. King after the FBI releases its secret file on MLK in 2050.

It won't matter.

By 2050, immigration will have created a new America, with a different view of what matters in history.

27 posted on 01/20/2003 8:24:54 PM PST by Age of Reason
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Granting that contempories are guilty of the hyperbole, we honor in King precisely that in him which upholds Jefferson, Washington and Lincoln.

I see nothing wrong with this.
28 posted on 01/20/2003 8:41:24 PM PST by nicollo
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To: John H K
What strikes me as the most strange is that a considerable portion of the whites who line up to pander and kiss ass do not even seem very believable in their adulation. I don't think they are sincere. What's more, I don't think the blacks think they are sincere either. For that matter, I don't think half the blacks give a hoot either. I think that there is a certain percentage of insecure whites who think they have to prove that they aren't prejudice and a certain percentage of blacks that thrive on seeing the insecure whites grovel and pander. To me it's a very strange phenomenon. It makes whites look like closet racists who are continually trying to prove that they are not. It makes the blacks look like they are so self conscious of their blackness that they need to see the world bow down to their leader once a year. Civil rights? Sorry. I don't think civil rights are a big concern these days. Not only does everyone have them, if anything, today's blacks enjoy special consideration. Can you say affirmative action? The whole thing is a joke.

"Did you say something about my momma?"

"No, I didn't say something about your momma"

"So you're calling me a liar?"

"No, I'm not calling you a liar, honest!"

"I think you were talking about my momma"

"No, really! I don't even know your momma."

Etc.

29 posted on 01/20/2003 8:44:03 PM PST by HaveGunWillTravel
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To: Age of Reason
By 2050, immigration will have created a new America, with a different view of what matters in history.

If trends continue, in 2050 our grandkids might be thumping their heads against the floor at the local Madrass, trying to learn the Koran (in Spanish). MLK would be just another forgotten infidel.

30 posted on 01/20/2003 8:44:59 PM PST by dagnabbit
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To: jraven
The manner of his death also made him a martyr

So did Lincoln's. At least to some of us. Evidently not to the P.C. crowd, who mention Lincoln only in an attempt to make jim into some kind of Queer icon, through distortions and lies. Life in "Blue America" is really revolting. I don;t know how long my wife and I can hold out, before moving to the "Red Zone".

31 posted on 01/20/2003 8:46:57 PM PST by montag813
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To: nicollo
They don't have their own holidays though.
32 posted on 01/20/2003 8:47:56 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe (God Armeth The Patriot)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
What's the complaint?

Have you seen a statue of William McKinley lately? Look carefuly, they're everywhere. That martyred President meant the heavens and the earth to a generation. If they had national holiday in his day, there'd be a McKinley day. History has forgotten him. His contemporaries did not.
33 posted on 01/20/2003 8:52:36 PM PST by nicollo
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To: ctnoell70
Not to forget Rodney Paige, who is the first black Sec. of Education! At least I think he is, isn't he? Condi Rice of course, the first black National Security Advisor, a female one also!
34 posted on 01/20/2003 8:54:51 PM PST by dsutah
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Comment #35 Removed by Moderator

To: John H K
My children(private school, 1-2% black)
spent more time, it seemed, on Harriet Tubman than any other American historical figure. The PC cirriculum is as much to blame as anything else. I never heard of Harriet Tubman until my children bacame so well versed about her.
36 posted on 01/20/2003 9:17:47 PM PST by VMI70
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Comment #37 Removed by Moderator

Comment #38 Removed by Moderator

To: Captainpaintball
"Really? What are you going to do about this?"

What I do every day.Tell her the truth, and make her feel comfortable in her own intelligence to the point that she does not have to be overtly combative with her teacher, but teach her the skills to know that when someone is feeding her less than the whole truth, she is not wrong if she questions what she is taught at school.

I teach her a healthy skepticism, and encourage her to use her own mind, and trust her own instincts.I teach her to talk to me, and other adults she knows to be honest.

It is hard to raise a child,but it is my job as her mother, to build the skills she will need to function in the real world, and to prolong her childhood as long as possible.

What do you do with your child?

39 posted on 01/20/2003 9:30:56 PM PST by sarasmom
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To: yooper
What exactly did George Washington Carver do for blacks, or for America. I admit ignorance, all I know is that he invented peanut butter.
40 posted on 01/20/2003 9:37:26 PM PST by Michael2001
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