screamingeagle
Mentor
If Hispanics take over MLK day will disappear. He means nothing to them.
Now that we have a Black president, what do we need MLK day for anyway?
Now that we have a Black president, what do we need MLK day for anyway?
Freedom said:The left has also hijacked the legacies of many black "paleoconservatives," around pre-1960. Despite popular belief, many of the so called "civil rights" activists were in fact right wing. Booker T. Washington is the only one that gets recognition because his Tuskegee Institute was so successful in its heyday.
The poster boy for the "caste system," the guy that supposedly proved black athletic supremacy, James Cleveland "Jesse" Owens, would have loathed the myths that have formed around him if he were alive today. He was more or less "right wing."
Freedom said:Well, JFK had a really really weird presidency, particularly because of his father's bizarre influence. Oh, btw, I'm pretty sure JFK was an America Firster and wrote a thesis sympathetic to Neville Chamberlain; talk about apostasy. Joe was made ambassador to the Court of St. James despite hating English people except for Nancy Astor. So JFK's views were pretty messed up to begin with. Also, I think his assassination specifically caused a move towards the left, taking note of how Goldwater got the crap kicked out of him.
That aside, I'm accusing MLK and his cronies of hijacking other people and labeling them "civil rights activists."
Don writes, "Your supposed "right wingers" from today's perspective were merely adopting the most "extreme" (left wing) views that they thought they could foist on American society at that time."
No, definitely not the case for Hurston and Owens. Richard Wright, Langston Hughes, and W.E.B. DuBois were all compensated handsomely for their Communist sympathies. Hurston died in relative obscurity for her right wing views.
Jesse Owens repeatedly denied the myth that Hitler especially snubbed him despite news videos teaching it all over America. He even said, "Hitler didn't snub meâ€â€it was FDR who snubbed me. The president didn't even send me a telegram."[quoted in Triumph, a book about the 1936 Olympics by Jeremy Schaap.] It would appear that FDR thought that Owens was not an American.
He took a lot of heat for opposing the "Black Power Salute" too. That was in 1968. By 1968, there were plenty of Communist sympathizers in power that would've embraced Owens. Heck, if Owens had embraced the "Black Power Salute," as a symbol of black athletic supremacy(which many view it as,) UC Berkeley would've made him a professor.
They didn't consider themselves "civil rights" activists. They were retroactively declared "civil rights" activists.
Freedom said:Yes. I've got to study for a few tests, but give me time and I'll produce a bunch. Here are some very cursory examples.
Starting with just wikipedia:
The article "In Search of Zora Neale Hurston" by Alice Walker was published in the March 1975 issue of Ms. Magazine. This article revived interest in her work.
Alice Walker and Ms. Magazine are about as Communist as you can get. Oh, and Oprah's been endorsing Hurston's work. If Hurston saw Obama's politics, she'd be fuming. It is indisputable that Hurston was an America Firster. I'm pretty sure she even called FDR's "arsenal of Democracy" the "arse-anal" of Democracy, or something to that effect. Communist beatnicks in the 1950s effectively blocked her literature because of her campaigning for Robert Taft. Now, she is considered a "civil rights" activist.
As for Owens, my memory is less vivid, but I know for a fact that he was politically involved with right wing causes. He also praised German athletes, something that seems to contradict the caste system.
Wright, Hughes, and DuBois were all funded by Communist causes. They, in turn, largely wrote about African Americans from a Communist perspective. Here is one instance.
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/40/
They viewed Washington like he was an inferior precursor to their Communism. Also note that debates were arranged between Lothrop Stoddard and DuBois, while they both advocated Communist principles.
Freedom said:Don, I'd be interested in knowing what you thought about what I've shown. I know it's not conclusive, but it's still revealing nonetheless.