Some decades ago on a daytime TV talk show – I’ll never find it – the African-American public intellectual, Cornel West, was seated next to some Ku Klux Klan members, and the host said something about the KKK representing white people. West gestured at the white supremacists next to him on the stage and replied, “These people don’t represent white people; they represent morons.” That encapsulated the norm in anti-racist discourse in the post-1960s trajectory (post-MLK/post-hippies). It was not black vs white but, as Dr. King called it, a “coalition of conscience” on one side and racists on the other, “for many of our white brothers, as evidenced by their presence here today, have come to realize that their destiny is tied up with our destiny . . . that their freedom is inextricably bound to our freedom” (“I Have a Dream,” 1963).
How times have changed. Many in the…
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3 comments
April 18, 2021 at 3:52 pm
Daedalus Lex
Thanks for this, Arbourist!
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April 18, 2021 at 3:56 pm
The Arbourist
@Daedalus Lex
Insightful commentary, happy to share. :) Thank you for writing it.
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April 18, 2021 at 9:48 pm
Daedalus Lex
:) :)
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