Tuesday, January 16, 2018

As you can see from the exerpt from this article (note lines highlighted in yellow),...Opinions haven't changed much in 50 years. This is totally proven when you hear the things said by some of the BLACK congressmen / women. No need to name them, they are infamous .....

When Robert F. Kennedy eulogized 
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr

When Robert F. Kennedy eulogized the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in Cleveland: Kerry Kennedy (Opinion)





By Guest Columnist/cleveland.com

NEW YORK -- My father hadn't launched his historic run for the White House when the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. arrived at Ohio Northern University on Jan. 11, 1968 - just four days before King's 39th birthday. Yet Robert F. Kennedy shared King's moral clarity on the need for racial, economic and social justice, and that informed him as he prepared for the monumental undertaking of running for president.
In his Ohio speech 50 years ago, King challenged the most insidious of segregation's lies: that blacks were less suitable citizens than other races. King's remarks framed a society where many viewed black Americans as less intelligent, less patriotic and more violent than whites. The biggest impediment to equality wasn't some imagined racial inferiority, King said, but the societal institutions perpetuating division and low expectations. Policy solutions met with foot-dragging from (white) leaders who said, "You can't legislate morality."
Power, as it does, resists change.
 Read full article HERE

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