I have often said that the beauty of America’s founding documents afforded future generations the ability to right wrongs in America. As our nation’s society and culture have evolved, we have done exactly that. From making sure that black Americans enjoyed every benefit of being an American after the Civil War, to making sure that women could make their voices heard with the right to vote, to everything in between, Americans have identified where we could do better and then went about doing it. There have always been those among us who would keep us divided. Racial animosity is big business, just ask multimillionaires “Rev.” Al Sharpton and “Rev.” Jesse Jackson. Then there are the people who work off the same principle of “the answer to bad speech is more speech.” Only their version of it is “the remedy to discrimination is more discrimination.” But maybe not for long.
Civil Rights for Me But Not for Thee
Civil Rights for Me But Not for Thee
Civil Rights for Me But Not for Thee
I have often said that the beauty of America’s founding documents afforded future generations the ability to right wrongs in America. As our nation’s society and culture have evolved, we have done exactly that. From making sure that black Americans enjoyed every benefit of being an American after the Civil War, to making sure that women could make their voices heard with the right to vote, to everything in between, Americans have identified where we could do better and then went about doing it. There have always been those among us who would keep us divided. Racial animosity is big business, just ask multimillionaires “Rev.” Al Sharpton and “Rev.” Jesse Jackson. Then there are the people who work off the same principle of “the answer to bad speech is more speech.” Only their version of it is “the remedy to discrimination is more discrimination.” But maybe not for long.