Just How Far Have We Come?
Jessica Cross, O&B Editor
Issue date: 1/30/09 Section: Opinion
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Reverend Joseph Lowery gave the benediction at President Obama's inauguration. Lowery, known for co-founding the Southern Christian Leadership Conference with Martin Luther King Jr., used this time to ask God to encourage America to make "choices on the side of love, not hate, on the side of inclusion not exclusion, tolerance not intolerance." He then ended his prayer with a famous notation from the 60's by saying, "Lord, in the memory of all the saints who from their labors rest, and in the joy of a new beginning, we ask you to help us work for that day when black will not be asked to get back, when brown can stick around, when yellow will be mellow, when the red man can get ahead, man, and when white will embrace what is right." How can you go from an encouraging prayer to ending with that statement?
Racial stereotyping and discrimination still exist, but why is it always just that the black cannot get ahead and that the white are always wrong? Each separate race has different prejudices against others. It is not just the whites that are not embracing what is right. Too often than not, I hear more negative racial comments about whites than certain other races. For example, the song "My President is Black." The song states, "Obama for mankind. We ready for change, so ya'll let the man shine. Stuntin' on Martin Luther, feeling just like a king. Guess this is what he meant when he said that he had a dream." The song continues to say, "Our history, black history, no president ever did nothing for me. Had to hit the streets, had to flip some keys so a n**** won't go broke." I do not believe that MLK's dream was just to see an African-American in power. I believe that he wanted equality for ALL people. How can we ever have equality if we continue to use negative slang to refer to different races? The past should not still be bearing down on our futures. Why do we choose to let situations of the past allow us to still discriminate? We have made progress, but in order to change, we need to change ourselves. We need to be able to accept people for who they are, instead of judging them by their skin color, their background, their religious affiliation, their sexuality, etc. God created us all different, but in his eyes, we are all the same. Why can we not be the same in each other's eyes also?


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posted 1/31/09 @ 12:57 AM EST
Jessica very good story with great research and background knowledge. I am with you all the way on every single point made in this paper. Nobody should have the right to down another person based on race black to white or white to black its racism either way! But really good article and well written!
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