Topic: Martin Luther King Jr

A Tale of Two Marches in Washington D.C. September 11, 2023 Steve McCann On August 28, 1963, I participated in my first protest march on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.  On January 6, 2021, I participated in my last. 
The Quota States of America May 31, 2023 Brian C. Joondeph In America today, everything is viewed through the eye of race and gender, ignoring experience and skills, in favor of fulfilling some arbitrarily defined quotas, all in the name of diversity.
April 5, 1968: One of my nine lives was used up that day April 5, 2020 Peter Barry Chowka The riots in Washington, D.C. following MLK’s assassination came close to doing me in
Frederick Douglass vs. MLK: Competing visions for social justice? January 20, 2020 William Sullivan While we should all remember the fantastic speech made by MLK in 1963, perhaps it'd be better if more of us remembered the brilliant and timeless ideas of a man who, nearly 100 years before, laid out the method by which we all might truly be appraised as free people.
Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Dead Man’s Rule May 29, 2019 Lynne Lechter Whether King's detractors are eventually proven correct, they do not diminish the gift of peaceful transformation King gave our nation.
A Half-Century of Adolescent Agitators April 6, 2018 Alexander Riley The foul-mouthed children trying to run the national gun control debate have a fifty-year-old precedent.
Civil Rights Renaissance to Remember Martin Luther King April 4, 2018 Ben Voth A look at the real civil rights movement of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the false ones that have followed suggests that the real one is in need of revisiting.
The Progressive Degradation of Freedom November 10, 2013 Daren Jonescu Socialized medicine teaches that you must not value your life above that of other men. Not only should no doctor care about your personal survival, but you yourself should stop thinking your survival is any kind of priority.