Posts Tagged ‘Barack Obama’

Honoring MLK

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr day is not only a day of service and day to honor the heros of the Civil Rights Movement, but also to remember and examine the words of Dr. King. Here are a few of my favorite thinkers reflecting on Dr. King’s legacy:

Jay Smooth @ ill doctrine:

Dwight Furrow @ Rants and Reasons:

It is fashionable to sneer at Obama’s appeal to  “hope” during his campaign. But that is all liberals have because it supports the will to persist. Conservatives have the power and money. All we have is hope that through extraordinary effort some injustice can be removed.

That is Dr. King’s legacy.

Pam Spaulding @ Pam’s House Blend remembering one of our less-known heros, Mr. Bayard Rustin:

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s hallowed “I Have a Dream Speech” is an iconic moment in the history of civil rights. But this historic moment would probably have never happened if it weren’t for a man standing in King’s shadow, Mr. Bayard Rustin.

Bayard Rustin was a man with a number of seemingly incompatible labels: black, gay, Quaker… identifications that served to earn him as many detractors as admirers. Although he had numerous passions and pursuits, his most transformative act, one that certainly changed the course of American history, was to counsel MLK on the use of non-violent resistance. Rustin also helped to engineer the March on Washington and frame the Montgomery bus boycott.

President Obama In Remembrance of Martin Luther King, Jr.:

Our predecessors were never so consumed with theoretical debates that they couldn’t see progress when it came. Sometimes I get a little frustrated when folks just don’t want to see that even if we don’t get everything, we’re getting something.  (Applause.)  King understood that the desegregation of the Armed Forces didn’t end the civil rights movement, because black and white soldiers still couldn’t sit together at the same lunch counter when they came home.  But he still insisted on the rightness of desegregating the Armed Forces.  That was a good first step — even as he called for more.  He didn’t suggest that somehow by the signing of the Civil Rights that somehow all discrimination would end.  But he also didn’t think that we shouldn’t sign the Civil Rights Act because it hasn’t solved every problem.  Let’s take a victory, he said, and then keep on marching.  Forward steps, large and small, were recognized for what they were — which was progress.

Thank you, Dr. King, for your wisdom and sacrifice and for the chance to learn from such a powerful legacy decades later.

Health Care – Let’s Get It Done!

Monday, August 24th, 2009

This is the week members of Congress head back to Washington. This means we’ve got one more week to take back the health care debate from the tea-baggers and let our legislators know that the people’s will is for a public option!

Organizing for America is hosting “Lets Get It Done” events around the country and there’s probably one in your area! Participate in a phone drive or attend a Congressional send-off rally like my family and I will be doing. Click on the icon below for details.

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420: Cops for Pot?

Monday, April 20th, 2009

hemppo11Another April 20th has come to an end with the usual fan fare: stoner-historians hypothesizing about the origins “4:20,” email and text message chains with clever innuendos to smoking pot, and hippies, activists and cops advocating legalizing Marijuana. Wait, wait…cops advocating legalization? 

Its true. And not just any cop – a former police chief. Norm Stamper is a blogger at Huffington Post and a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition . This is what he says about LEAP:

We at LEAP are current and former cops and other criminal justice practitioners who have witnessed firsthand the futility and manifold injustices of the drug war. Our professional experiences have led us to conclude that the more dangerous an illicit substance–from crack to krank–the greater the justification for its legalization, regulation, and control. It is the prohibition of drugs that leads inexorably to high rates of death, disease, crime, and addiction.

Stamper’s post, 420: Thoughts on Pot and Alcohol From A Police Chief compares various aspects of alcohol consumption and pot use. Seems to me his basic argument is, “we know alcohol use can be  dangerous, but a lot of us use it and have a right to do so as long as we follow the law. Marijuana isn’t nearly as dangerous as alcohol, so it doesn’t make sense that its still illegal.” He cites the following facts to back up his argument:

  • Hundreds of alcohol overdose deaths occur annually. There has never been a single recorded marijuana OD fatality.
  • Alcohol is one of the worst drugs one can take for pain management, marijuana one of the best.
  • Alcohol contributes to acts of violence; marijuana reduces aggression. In approximately three million cases of reported violent crimes last year, the offender had been drinking. This is particularly true in cases of domestic violence, sexual assault, and date rape.

My favorite part of the article is a story he tells about other cops’ experiences:

Over the past four years I’ve asked police officers throughout the U.S. (and in Canada) two questions. When’s the last time you had to fight someone under the influence of marijuana? (I’m talking marijuana only, not pot plus a six-pack or a fifth of tequila.) My colleagues pause, they reflect. Their eyes widen as they realize that in their five or fifteen or thirty years on the job they have never had to fight a marijuana user. I then ask: When’s the last time you had to fight a drunk? They look at their watches.

When President Obama said “what the cynics fail to understand is that the ground has shifted beneath them,” he wasn’t talking about Marijuana. But, the recent surge in serious (and not so serious) public discourse about legalization makes you wonder if what the American people really wants is change they can believe in…and toke up to.