Stories

To Dream a Possible Dream: MLK’s Famous Speech, 50 Years Later

Bradley Doucet
August 25, 2013
Were he still alive today, some victories would cheer him, but remaining indignities would test his spirit.
Stories

To Dream a Possible Dream: MLK’s Famous Speech, 50 Years Later

Bradley Doucet
August 25, 2013
Were he still alive today, some victories would cheer him, but remaining indignities would test his spirit.
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter

Fifty years ago this month, Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. He looked forward to a world in which people are judged not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character—a world in which we are all truly free at last. He could have reasonably hoped we would be closer to fulfilling his dream by now.

Soon after King’s historic speech on August 28, 1963, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 addressed the many injustices of countless state and local Jim Crow laws. In the years since, blacks have served as mayors of major US cities, Supreme Court justices, Secretaries of State—and of course, in 2008, Barack Obama became US President, something that would have been inconceivable in King’s day. African Americans have also narrowed the racial income gap somewhat. Black men in 1940 earned just 50% of what white men earned; that figure has climbed to roughly 75%.

The picture north of the border is similar: Blacks have been elected to our provincial and federal legislatures and, in 2005, Michaëlle Jean became the first black Governor General of Canada. Yet, black men in Canada earn roughly two thirds what white men earn, and higher unemployment rates for blacks (9 percent compared to 4 percent for whites in the US in 2008) undermine this progress.

And why does the earnings gap persist? The education gap may offer a partial explanation. In 2008, a third of white adults in the US had at least a bachelor’s degree, compared to only one in five black adults. But then, what explains the education gap?

A Promissory Note

As he addressed the crowd of thousands gathered in the Washington Mall, King spoke of the US Constitution and the Declaration of Independence as a promissory note, one on which America had defaulted, since not all of her citizens were yet guaranteed the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Clearly some funds have yet to clear.

One reason for the post-secondary education gap is the dismal state of the US public school system, which disproportionately hurts African Americans. For example, according to a recent New York Times report, eight of the nine school districts in the St. Louis area that are predominantly white scored 14 out of 14 on Missouri’s performance scale, while the six predominantly black districts scored an average of 7. School segregation persists in the rest of the country as well, with three quarters of black students attending schools with largely minority student populations.

And of course, there is the drug war which, whatever else you might think of it, foments racism against blacks due to racist enforcement practices. According to the Drug Policy Alliance, “African Americans comprise 14% of regular drug users, but are 37% of those arrested for drug offenses.” The mass criminalization of young black men has left many a fatherless home in its wake. In Canada, although we at least fight the drug war with less zeal, nine percent of the federal prison population is black, whereas only three percent of Canadians are black—roughly the same level of over-representation found in the United States.

Sometimes, the implicit racism of the justice system is made explicit. Duane Buck, a black man, was convicted of murder in the state of Texas in 1997 and sentenced to die. Astoundingly, the prosecutor in this case elicited testimony from a psychologist who argued that the mere fact of Buck’s race increased his “future dangerousness,” a prerequisite for a death sentence in Texas. While murderers surely deserve to be punished, race must not enter into the calculation of their punishment. Buck has been granted a temporary stay of execution, but has yet to receive a new, racially-neutral sentencing hearing.

This is Our Hope

King was cut down in his prime before the 1960s were over. Were he still alive today, an 84-year-old voice of conscience, some of the gains blacks have registered would cheer him, while some remaining indignities would test his spirit.

Harking back to the Emancipation Proclamation, King noted in 1963 that “one hundred years later, the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination.” That sentiment still rings true another fifty years on, but quieter with each passing year—in no small part due to a man who had a dream.

King said he would not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream. Let us, with him, eschew both bitterness and despair, and focus instead on the important, difficult work of securing dignity for all. On this anniversary, let’s look forward with hope and determination, and not be satisfied until the day when freedom truly rings from every mountainside.

~

Bradley Doucet is a Montreal writer and the English Editor of Le Québécois Libre, a bilingual web magazine promoting individual liberty, free markets, and voluntary cooperation. He is also a regular contributor to The New Individualist, an Objectivist magazine published by The Atlas Society. He has studied philosophy and economics, and is currently completing a novel on the pursuit of happiness.

Love C2C Journal? Here's how you can help us grow.

More for you

Give This Idea an F: The Problematic Push to Eliminate Letter Grades

B.C.’s decision to abandon letter grades in favour of four vague “proficiency” categories is the latest example of the move to do away with objective standards throughout Canada’s public education system. Traditional grading methods are too hard on the tender egos of young students, the logic goes. And the possibility of failure is outdated, if not downright racist. Christina Park reveals how this new system is failing parents, who have a right to know how their child is doing, and harming students, who may be denied the help they need. She also uncovers some “gritty optimism” about the possible return of coherent educational standards.

The Price of Foolish Pride: What Germany’s Social and Economic Decline Can Teach Canada

Germany was postwar Europe’s most successful nation – until it was seized by an arrogant leftist ideology that led it down a ruinous path. Its government abandoned safe, zero-emission nuclear power for inefficient wind and solar plus natural gas from Vladmir Putin. It threw open its borders to millions of asylum-seekers with barely a thought to the enormous costs or the difficulties of social integration. Today, at the 11th hour, Germany is at last struggling to turn around its decade of economic decline and social disintegration. In this cautionary tale, Gwyn Morgan sees a profound warning for Canada.

What’s Yours is Ours: Why Canada’s Charter Ignores Property Rights and What That Means for Everything You Own

“The whole meaning of life,” famed comedian George Carlin once observed, “is trying to find a place for all your stuff. That’s what your house is, it’s a place for your stuff with a cover on it.” If so, then Canadians should be very concerned about their stuff. Unlike nearly every other modern nation, Canada lacks constitutional affirmation of the right to own property and as protection against its unjust seizure. With a recent B.C. Supreme Court ruling putting the very notion of home ownership at risk, Peter Shawn Taylor seeks out legal opinions on Canada’s surprisingly lax attitude towards property rights, how it differs from other countries and what that means for everyone’s possessions. If Canadians really want to protect their homes, belongings and personal finances, Taylor concludes, now’s the time to get loud.

More from this author

The Future of Free Trade in Québec

Support for free trade has tended to be high in Quebec: federalists supported it for economic reasons and sovereignists because it would allow the province to be less economically dependent on the rest of Canada. Will this change with the rise of the NDP? Bradley Doucet and Jasmin Guénette believe it could…