Barack Obama dedicates the MLK memorial

Posted on: October 16th, 2011 by ecthompson md No Comments

President Barack Obama, from the transcript:

An earthquake and a hurricane may have delayed this day, but this is a day that would not be denied.

For this day, we celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s return to the National Mall. In this place, he will stand for all time, among monuments to those who fathered this nation and those who defended it; a black preacher with no official rank or title who somehow gave voice to our deepest dreams and our most lasting ideals, a man who stirred our conscience and thereby helped make our union more perfect.

And Dr. King would be the first to remind us that this memorial is not for him alone. The movement of which he was a part depended on an entire generation of leaders. Many are here today, and for their service and their sacrifice, we owe them our everlasting gratitude. This is a monument to your collective achievement. (Applause.)

Some giants of the civil rights movement –- like Rosa Parks and Dorothy Height, Benjamin Hooks, Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth –- they’ve been taken from us these past few years. This monument attests to their strength and their courage, and while we miss them dearly, we know they rest in a better place.

And finally, there are the multitudes of men and women whose names never appear in the history books –- those who marched and those who sang, those who sat in and those who stood firm, those who organized and those who mobilized –- all those men and women who through countless acts of quiet heroism helped bring about changes few thought were even possible. “By the thousands,” said Dr. King, “faceless, anonymous, relentless young people, black and white…have taken our whole nation back to those great wells of democracy which were dug deep by the founding fathers in the formulation of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.” To those men and women, to those foot soldiers for justice, know that this monument is yours, as well.

Nearly half a century has passed since that historic March on Washington, a day when thousands upon thousands gathered for jobs and for freedom. That is what our schoolchildren remember best when they think of Dr. King -– his booming voice across this Mall, calling on America to make freedom a reality for all of God’s children, prophesizing of a day when the jangling discord of our nation would be transformed into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood. (more...)

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Obama speaking at the MLK memorial is like spitting on the grave of Republican Dr. King. Obama's support and comparison of the Occupy Wall Street people to the civil rights movement is a dishonor and a disgrace. The majority consensus that prevented Congressman Lewis from speaking at their movement was a slap in the face to the civil rights movement and what they stood for. Democratic support of this movement and its descent into chaos will surely come back to haunt them.

I'll sure that you have read King's letters from a Birmingham jail. I'm sure that you have read or listened most of King's speeches. I'm sure that you read King's many books and especially the book that his wife Coretta wrote about him and the movement that he fueled. I'll bet dollars to donuts that you have done none of this. Yet, you think you have some idea of what King stood for. If you are going to complain about the memorial I would point you in the direction of the inscription on the statue. It completely misses the point of King's drum major speech (which you have read or listened to). Thanks for your comments.