Source:
The GuardianTens of thousands descended on Washington today for one of the biggest culture clashes in decades – one that pitted an almost exclusively white crowd against one that was predominantly African-American. Both claimed the legacy of Martin Luther King.
The biggest crowd was for a rightwing rally supported by the Fox Television host and author Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin and Tea Party activists, who gathered at the Lincoln Memorial, where King delivered his "I have a dream" speech 47 years ago to the day.
Beck estimated that the crowd, the biggest show of strength by Tea Party activists this year, numbered in the hundreds of thousands, many of whom had travelled long distances. He claimed he had been unaware when he organised the rally that it coincided with the King anniversary, but insisted that the civil rights leader was an inspiration for all Americans and not any one section of the community.
The other rally, held hours later, was a more traditional event, supported mainly by African-Americans, marching through Washington to mark the anniversary of King's speech. Many of those on the march accused Beck of hypocrisy and of stirring up the black community.
One of the marchers, Chicago student Brendan Yukins, 18, said of the Beck rally: "It is really insulting… the Tea Party always makes a big deal of being open to everyone, but when you look at the crowd it is white, over-45s."
Read more:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/aug/28/us-right-king-lincoln-memorial
Other facts about today's Beck rally:
- There were very few African-Americans in the audience.
- Beck requested that participants not bring banners in order to keep racism away from the overall image.
Yes, I agree with Beck that all Americans deserve civil rights. But are we all really in a colorblind, post-racial society just yet? Obviously not. That's why minorities have been fighting the hardest for civil rights. What a twisted world conservatives inhabit in. Since when have white heterosexual Christians needed Congressional legislation just to be able to vote, attend public school, or not have separate water fountains?