On the far left, there is often grumbling
that we don't celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr.'s legacy in
toto. King was a socialist, and stridently
antiwar. This tends to get swept under the rug; if it didn't,
it would be hard to countenance a national holiday. That part of
King's legacy belongs only to the left.
What we celebrate is not what is divisive but what is unifying
about King's legacy: his fight for equality against racism, his
dream of a colorblind society -- what can be
plausibly described as "King's Conservative Legacy," but which
of course is bigger than that.
We're not celebrating a man so much as a beautiful idea that he
stood for and articulated. And that's another reason -- Steve
Sailer, focusing making observance of MLK Day more popular,
has
floated others -- to move this holiday from King's birthday in
January to the anniversary of the "I Have a Dream" Speech in
August.
sidnee| 12.10.09 @ 4:18AM
adidas adicolor shoes
adidas classic shoes