this post was submitted on 15 Jan 2024
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[–] [email protected] -1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (2 children)
  1. I ain't reading all of that in that format

  2. I have never heard anyone misinterpret the I Have a Dream speech, why put so much effort rebutting someone who is either malicious or an idiot?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

US Republicans, in particular, love to quote MLK out of context, cherry picking from his words in ways that purport to support their dogma.

"Judged not by the colour of their skin" is a line that gets thrown around a lot by right wingers (and, of course, "enlightened centrists"), primarily in the context of their hatred of affirmative action, diversity, representation, or anything that even sounds vaguely like those things (and yes, those are even their own complex can of worms, but they're not interested in having a nuanced conversation about that). Suppose, say, that a TV show decides to cast a non-white actor for a role that's typically been imagined in the popular consciousness as white. Like, say, a Lord of The Rings adaptation decides that Aragorn should be played by a PoC actor, because they specifically want to make the story feel more inclusive to non-white viewers. There's nothing wrong with this as a casting decision, it doesn't break the story, but of course a lot of racists would get very upset about it. Then, when challenged on their obvious racism, they will declare that actually it's the people casting the show who were being racist by only considering non-white actors for the role, and that MLK would be ashamed of these people, after all, they're supposed to be judging by the content of the character not the colour of the skin.

Their use of this particular line sits firmly in the realms of "I don't see colour." It's a thing that people say either a) as a deflection from examining their own racism, or b) in well meaning naivete. It fails to understand that while race should not be something that divides people, it absolutely is something that divides people. You can't just close your eyes and ignore it, because the moment you do you're ignoring the much larger systemic issues that affect people of colour. A white person choosing to personally inhabit a post-race world does nothing for the non-white people who live in the real world where race, even though it shouldn't, is very much a thing that matters.

Anti-racism is hard work. It involves both constantly examining your attitudes and the ways in which your behaviour is subconsciously influenced by attitudes to race, and working to dismantle massive self-sustaining systems of oppression that have existed longer than any of us have been alive. It's the work of inheriting a broken world and having to accept the responsibility for making it better. But the people who don't want to do that work would much rather have you believe that the solution to every problem of race is contained within a simple mantra of personal responsibility, that basically as long as you're not a card carrying member of the KKK you're all good and your responsibility ends there.

This is a huge and complicated topic (that's kind of the point of the OP), and I'm inevitably oversimplifying in my attempt to explain, but I hope that gives you some idea of whats going on here.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

I can't even tell what the misinterpretation being rebutted is. Early on it sounded like the misinterpretation was people in general vs his children, but that doesn't make sense because "umm akshually MLK only wanted equality for his children" is not a good look. Then later on it sounded like it was present vs future, but that's not so much a misinterpretation as a wrong answer to the question of "has MLK's dream been achieved yet?"

[–] [email protected] 0 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I’m all for Martin Luther King Jr. info and his mission, but the formatting of this post is terrible and distracts from the message.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

Do you know what sub you're in?

[–] [email protected] -1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Black boys, Black girls, white boys, white girls, superstar deejay, here we go… interesting capitalisation in that there text.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (2 children)

You know MLK didn't write that transcript, right?

Why are you getting sidetracked from a message of unity with somthing so trivial. It almost seems intentional, like you'd prefer whites and blacks be separate.

[–] [email protected] -1 points 10 months ago

I can’t help thinking and worrying about your reply… from my understanding of written English (my adopted language) capitalisation versus non-capitalisation does suggest separation - or at least a difference of some sort. I always thought some humans are black, some humans are white; most humans are both or neither. The way that speech has been transcribed - NOT SPOKEN - creates a difference. If I wrote I was wearing a Black jacket and a white hat that would be nonsensical. My problem is the subtext of the capitalisation process. (Having said that some lovely person pointed out that apparently this is in AP’s style guide - so maybe it’s well intentioned; but poorly understood by those of us outside the… “yankosphere” (Does that word exist?)

[–] [email protected] -1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I do. That’s why I highlighted that particular usage of capital letters. When written like this It seems a really subtle remix of the great man’s original speech… perhaps it’s just me. EDIT: first sentence went from “I am” (aware) to “I do”