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Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. & 1964 Nobel Peace Prize The 35-year-old was honored for promoting the non-violent principle in the civil rights movement. Oslo, Norway, December 10, 1964 |
So its worth noting the nation's annual slighting of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Day holiday is not just in the shadow of all our other abuses of privilege. It is truly tragic that this day can't be better celebrated, and not just from the sweet coincidence of President Barack Obama's Inauguration. Or is a portion of the country really that upset about the government forcing citizens to take a day off? In a sense that speaks well to the fact that so many private citizens own so much of this country. But that doesn't change the fact Martin Luther King, Jr. died for this country's sins. No its not that he alone stood out because many stood up, it's just he took the cause the necessary step further.
Presidents Washington, Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr. symbolize the liberation of the United States of America. A country that against its better instincts commonly does what's against our interests. Such as claiming money spent, for whatever reason, on medical care, just disappears. Or else why would it really matter how much is spent on health? Etc.
Too many American businesses do not recognize Today's Holiday, forcing those who take The Federal Holiday off to use their vacation day or sick leave as on any other normal workday. Technically designating those businesses as abnormal in light of their dishonoring today, or just ornery?
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Rev. Ralph Abernathy, left, and Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., are taken by a policeman as they led a line of demonstrators into the business section of Birmingham, Alabama. April 12, 1963 |
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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rev. Ralph Abernathy
ride one of the first desegregated buses with
Montgomery, Alabama, December 21, 1956
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The Rev. Ralph Abernathy, right, and Bishop Julian Smith, left, flank Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., during a Civil Rights March in Memphis, Tennessee, March 28, 1968. |

When Martin Luther King Jr. and Richard Nixon Were Friends, THE DAILY BEAST
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Martin and Coretta Scott King |