General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCEO of King Center & Daughter of Dr. Martin Luther King & Coretta Scott King posted this on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/OfficialBerniceKing/posts/10158320528270571
Link to tweet
BSdetect
(8,999 posts)That is great but I still want to use Scrotus
flygal
(3,231 posts)George II
(67,782 posts)....all the childish references to Romney and now trump - "Rmoney" and "tRump" and others. Just never saw the point of it. After a while I refused to read anything that referred to Romney that way.
Ellen Forradalom
(16,160 posts)But point taken. Wise advice from people who have been there before.
pangaia
(24,324 posts)Fritz Walter
(4,292 posts)Denmark nailed it with their "second" video:
Tak skal du have!
progressoid
(50,000 posts)This is a group effort and they ALL bear responsibility.
PoiBoy
(1,542 posts)This IS a concerted effort... they let 45 be the distraction/bully frontman while they happily do the heavy lifting of drowning our government "in a bathtub..."
jaxind
(1,074 posts)I also agree with the post saying we shouldn't even be referring to him as 45. We should only be referring to him as President Bannon!
Cosmocat
(14,575 posts)That has been put forward.
I will admit I am very guilty of #6, but that is in great part because we don't have this kind of leadership.
This should be pinned here!
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
(108,304 posts)Dolt 45 was what I saw him called on Twitter
Raster
(20,998 posts)Last edited Wed Feb 8, 2017, 01:18 PM - Edit history (2)
...and these are definite actions that I have incorporated and or will incorporate into my life, and have SHARED WIDELY.
I am a white Gay man, and I support equality, especially marriage, social and economic equality for all. FOR ALL.
I believe in the words and actions of Dr. King. To this day, to this minute, Dr. King's stirring call for all of us to rise up and be better than we are, and as best as we can be brings a lump to my throat and tears to my eyes. I believe all should be judged NOT by their money, their power or their position, nor by the color of their skin or the concepts of their Gods, but truly by the content of their character, by the way they treat their fellow men and women.
That said, some of Ms. King's actions speak as loud -or louder- than her words:
March against same-sex marriage
On December 11, 2004, King participated in a march against same-sex marriage in Atlanta. This action was in contrast to the advocacy of her mother, Coretta Scott King and her older sister Yolanda Denise King, both longtime, outspoken supporters of gay rights. She was joined by senior pastor at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church Eddie Long, who said in a written statement that the march was not "to protest same-sex marriage, but to present a unified version of righteousness and justice." At the time of the march, King said she had become a "spiritual daughter" of Eddie Long and the issue of same-sex marriage legalization had left many divided. "The question is, how do you overcome that pain?" she said. "It may be the wedge that stays with us for a long time. We have to get to a place where it does not become the most defining issue of our time."
She used the King Center and the eternal flame at her father's tomb as part of the march. The King Center denied her permission to begin the march at her father's tomb and accused her of doing so to "provide support for her own personal cause" and "to enhance her personal standing in New Birth." The event was also criticized by gay rights organizations, which stated it betrayed the legacy of Bernice King's father. Chuck Bowen, a spokesman for Georgia Equality, stated that he was surprised to learn of the march. "I think it's very sad," Bowen said. "I think she's abusing the good name of Dr. King and the work he did creating equality for all Americans."
<snip>
Gay rights
In 2005, she led a march to her father's gravesite and at the same time called out for a constitutional ban on gay marriage. She once said to LGBT supporters that her father did not take a bullet for same-sex marriage.
During Atlanta's 2012 Martin Luther King Jr. Day rally, King included LGBT people among the various groups who needed to come together to "fulfill her fathers legacy." When speaking at Brown University in 2013, King made statements regarding her beliefs about the origins of marriage: "I believe that the family was created and ordained first and foremost by God, that he instituted the marriage, and that's a law that he instituted and not... that we instituted" and about the origins of same-sex attraction: "I also don't believe everybody's born that way. I know some people have been violated. I know some people have unfortunately delved into it as an experiment". King has publicly stated that her father would have been against gay marriage.
Abortion
King is opposed to abortion. She believes that life begins and should be protected by law at conception. On August 22, 2013, King expressed her belief that "life begins in a womans womb.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernice_King
Hugin
(33,222 posts)Call out the Republicans on every single bit of dis- and mis-information. Every single time.
It can't be allowed to stand un-challenged.
HopeAgain
(4,407 posts)I will simply use "Trump," sans the President title, and no epithets because name calling debases me, not the person who I call a name. Maybe I'm old fashion as hell, but that is a deep belief of mine.
I agree 100% with the rest.
Mc Mike
(9,115 posts)I'm going to have to work on 1/2 of number 4, and number 5.
Fantastic Anarchist
(7,309 posts)I am pro-peace, but I'm not a pacifist. I do admire Tolstoy, Gandhi, King, Jr. et al, and believe initiating resistance in a peaceful manner is the way to go ... but I would never take violence off the table. In self-defense, I will fight as hard as I possibly can. I don't think that it plays in the regime's playbook at all. Revolutions were accomplished by fighting. See our own Revolution for details.
bear425
(2,888 posts)Is the perfect moniker.