ablongman | But freedom is not enough. You do not wipe away the scars of centuries
by saying: Now, you are free to go where you want, do as you desire, and
choose the leaders you please.
You do not take a man who, for years, has been hobbled by chains,
liberate him, bring him to the starting line of a race, saying "you are
free to compete with all the others," and still justly believe you have
been completely fair.
Thus it is not enough to open the gates of opportunity. All our citizens must have the ability to walk through those gates.
This is the next and the more profound stage of the battle for civil
rights. We seek not just freedom but opportunity--not just legal equity
but human ability--not just equality as a right and a theory, but
equality as a fact and a result.
For the task is to give twenty million Negroes the same chance as every
other American to learn and grow--to work and share in society--to
develop their abilities--physical, mental, and spiritual, and to pursue
their individual happiness.
To this end equal opportunity is essential, but not enough. Men and
women of all races are born with the same range of abilities. But
ability is not just the product of birth. It is stretched or stunted by
the family you live with, and the neighborhood you live in--by the
school you go to, and the poverty or richness of your surroundings. It
is the product of a hundred unseen forces playing upon the infant, the
child, and the man.
This graduating class at Howard University is witness to the indomitable
determination of the Negro American to win his way in American life.
The number of Negroes in schools of high learning has almost doubled in
fifteen years. The number of nonwhite professional workers has more than
doubled in ten years. The median income of Negro college women now
exceeds that of white college women. And these are the enormous
accomplishments of distinguished individual Negroes--many of them
graduates of this institution.
These are proud and impressive achievements. But they only tell the
story of a growing middle class minority, steadily narrowing the gap
between them and their white counterparts.
But for the great majority of Negro Americans--the poor, the unemployed,
the uprooted and dispossessed--there is a grimmer story. They still are
another nation. Despite the court orders and the laws, the victories
and speeches, for them the walls are rising and the gulf is widening. . .
.
We are not completely sure why this is. The causes are complex and
subtle. But we do know the two broad basic reasons. And we know we have
to act.
First, Negroes are trapped--as many whites are trapped--in
inherited, gateless poverty. They lack training and skills. They are
shut in slums, without decent medical care. Private and public poverty
combine to cripple their capacities.
We are attacking these evils through our poverty program, our education
program, our health program and a dozen more--aimed at the root causes
of poverty.
We will increase, and accelerate, and broaden this attack in years to
come, until this most enduring of foes yields to our unyielding will.
But there is a second cause--more difficult to explain, more
deeply grounded, more desperate in its force. It is the devastating
heritage of long years of slavery; and a century of oppression, hatred
and injustice.
For Negro poverty is not white poverty. Many of its causes and many of
its cures are the same. But there are differences--deep, corrosive,
obstinate differences--radiating painful roots into the community, the
family, and the nature of the individual.
These differences are not racial differences. They are solely and simply
the consequence of ancient brutality, past injustice, and present
prejudice. They are anguishing to observe. For the Negro they are a
reminder of oppression. For the white they are a reminder of guilt. But
they must be faced, and dealt with, and overcome; if we are to reach the
time when the only difference between Negroes and whites is the color
of their skin.
3 comments:
Is pseudo-freedom so great? We can buy big screen TVs to be brainwashed into being stupid consumers and go to expensive restaurants to show White folks that we have arrived.
How is it that White people can think they are FREE when their educational system doesn't explain to them that mandatory accounting would be a good idea when it is 50% older than Shakespeare but they get 4 years of English literature in high school. We have attained equality with the White slaves. Ain't that impressive?
Read some article a few weeks ago about a yachtsman sailing in the Pacific. He was writing about dead zones and pollution in the Pacific and how much it has changed in only 10 years. I suspect freedom will be mostly a joke for the rest of the century and Black Americans still believe in the American Dream that has probably been obsolete for 20 years.
http://mfile.akamai.com/5020/wma/rushlimb.download.akamai.com/5020/shanklin_archives/OK_to_Spank.asx
Hey! If Obama had a half-brother, he would look like ---> http://dailykenn.blogspot.com/2013/12/fleeing-home-invader-cut-in-half-by.html
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