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22/01/04
Martin Luther King Day
Paul Craig Roberts
Lew Rockwell
As time passes, the controversy once associated with Martin Luther King Day
fades. People who remember the controversy die, and new generations are only
thankful for the three-day holiday. Eventually, people may forget why the
holiday is celebrated.
King was a brave and courageous person. I agree with him that a person should
be judged by the content of his character and not by the color of his skin. To
those who stress King’s loose sexual morals, I reply that sin is that for which
we ask God’s forgiveness.
My problem with Martin Luther King Day is that it celebrates a civil rights
revolution that achieved the opposite of King’s intention. Today we are judged
by the color of our skin.
This conclusion is inescapable wherever we look. Those with darker skins have
become "preferred minorities" with rights to employment, promotions, training
programs, university admissions, and federal contracts that are greater than
those of "whites."
New crimes known as "hate crimes" are being created that only "whites" can
commit and only "preferred minorities" can suffer. If a "white" assaults a
"black," the charge will be assault and a hate crime. If a "black" assaults a
"white," the charge is only assault.
"Preferred minorities" have special rights to be offended that "whites" do
not have. Indeed, a "white" who offends a "black," whether intentionally or
unintentionally, can be charged with racial discrimination or with a hate crime.
Preferred minorities can call whites names, but whites cannot call preferred
minorities names.
Ordinary language has become a minefield for whites, who must tiptoe around,
aware that the slightest mishap can bring a lawsuit or destroy a career.
These persecutions happen in the name of "diversity," but diversity suffers.
There can be black fraternities and organizations, but not white ones. Southern
cultural symbols, together with all symbols of the South’s defense of states’
rights, are headed down the memory hole. Is there never to be an end to
Reconstruction?
Whites are demonized in movies, theater, rap lyrics, and school textbooks.
Christopher Columbus and the American Founding Fathers have been reduced to evil
racists who practiced white male European hegemony over minorities and women.
Any textbook author who described preferred minorities in comparable language
would be driven from academic life.
Was there ever a time when whites were taught to judge blacks by the color of
their skin? Many people may have had prejudices that produced a similar result,
but blacks were not demonized.
If we insist that blacks were demonized, how is it an improvement to demonize
whites? Today, blacks are taught skin color judgments, just as feminists teach
gender judgments, and communists teach class judgments. Whites are taught the
same skin color judgments, which explains the predominance of "white guilt."
The great paradox of the civil rights revolution is that instead of enforcing
and expanding equality before the law, the revolution created differential
rights based on race, gender, and, any day now, sexual orientation. The great
liberal revolution, centuries in the making, that brought forth equality in law,
has been overthrown. In its place we see rising a new feudal legal order of
status-based rights.
Lawrence Stratton and I documented the rise of the new feudalism in complete
detail in our book, The New Color Line. Not a word of refutation of our account
has ever appeared. Americans have accepted the overthrow of liberalism. As the
new feudal order arises, strife will be its handmaiden.
What would Martin Luther King do if he were alive today? Would he endorse
redistributive "racial justice," which means the end of limited government and
the death of legal equality, or would he come to the defense of equality before
the law?
Martin Luther King knew that legal equality was the promise of the American
compact. Those who take his name in vain assume that they will always be the
ones who determine the boundaries of discord. But the evisceration of legal
equality overturns the promise of liberty. In the wake of liberty’s demise will
follow evil, plunder, and violence.
Dr. Roberts is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy,
Senior Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and
Research Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former associate editor of
the Wall Street Journal and a former assistant secretary of the U.S.
Treasury. He is the co-author of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions.
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