It’s been almost 50 years since Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous speech about dreaming of the day when blacks would “not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” Sadly, many black political leaders still haven’t gotten his memo.
The alleged purpose of the civil rights movement was to bring about an end to racial discrimination, but the Orwellian nightmare we’ve built around race in this country requires that we pretend some racial discrimination is good, while other racial discrimination is bad.
In the county where I live, the city government of Birmingham — which includes the core older parts of the metro area, but almost none of the suburbs — is building a $60 million baseball stadium for a minor league team. In a newspaper story that came out Sunday, the mayor’s chief of staff bragged about the fact that 61 percent of the money is being contracted to minority-owned firms, suggesting that the color of the owners’ skin was a bit more important than either the content of their character or the quality of their work:
What if repairing my worst flaw meant losing my greatest power?
Italy sending seismologists to jail for failing to predict big earthquake
Anonymous attacker hit me hard, but I can’t let coward change me
Step in the right direction: U.S. ad group bans cosmetic photoshopping
Global warming or a new ice age? Anyone who claims to know is lying
They won’t listen to arguments; they might listen to honest art
My old fear of looking foolish is strong incentive to do good work
If you believe watching porn won’t hurt anyone, you’re wrong
We often live in the tension between known and unknown