Everything I hear about CRT directly contradicts everything Martin Luther King stood for. You cant have it both ways. So if you are for CRT you are against MLK and while you are cancelling culture remove all MLK statues and memorials, school and street names etc.
I grew up in the 60s and remember well Selma, Rosa Parks on the news and was most impressed with MLK's insight. I think his memorial in DC is impressive.
I'm an ethnic minority and CRT is racist towards the minorities.
We came here to integrate and be treated like equals. We didn't come here to be treated differently, even if it's to our benefit. If you see us being different from you, even if it's in the name of "affirmative action", it's fucking racist.
lol the people pulling the levers do not intend for any of this to benefit "ethnic minorities" long term. It's a short term plan to turn "ethnic minorities" into golems to achieve global governance because they're the ones who fall for it - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=irqfSwrntkE
I put ethnic minority in quotes because brown people are only minorities in white countries. In the world, they're the majority.
Two words: Cognitive Dissonance.
Martin Luther King was a communist subversive. The fact that no one in America is willing to say it, and most are still to indoctrinated to see it doesn't make it false. The color revolution was started a long time ago in America.
Rosa Parks is actually documented as having attended communist meetings. The bus thing was staged, it wasn't organic.
CRT is a con to get support for a Marxist takeover. Saying it has anything to do with logic or equality is arguing from a false platform. Just like the left lumps all POC in with the LGTBQ crowd. Like all POC have to support it or they are a problem. Just propoganda to increase the number of people on "their side" to try and equal the number of Patriots and Conservatives. So they can start tearing down the US brick by brick. Thats why they cheat in elections, censor opposition, and cancel people. To try and make the sheep think they are the majority and that people have to join or suffer.
Golems
They would cancel MLK, if it were in their interests to do so.
But, given his legacy, that's a non-starter.
There was a small Canadian school club that got heat for sharing MLK quotes ... was nuts. They wanted 'colour-blindness', which was unacceptable to the Leftists.
See ~6 mins 50s here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eUh8i4QUPM
It is only critical of one race.
It's a function of its design. It begins with a message of equality, progresses to a message of equity and results in a message of refocused hatred.
The people guiding these movements have no real motivation of honesty, logic or decency - it's simply power and the rebuilding of society in a way that better facilitates their (evil) desires.
The globalists want everything cancelled. They want the world for themselves and NO REMEMBRANCE of the past.
Exactly, that's the point...communist infiltration government overthrow 101.
"...and was most impressed with MLK's insight. I think his memorial in DC is impressive."
I've always been puzzled by the fact that his statue is chiseled out of white stone.
These blacks have disowned MLK. They think he was too conventional and a white sympathizer.
King himself was a walking contradiction. Turns out the "reverend" had a sweet tooth for adultery.
Honestly no. We hated everything MLK stood for at that period because he was too “pretentious” and too “uppity”. We blindly followed that “i have a dream” quote because that’s the only thing we could agree on at that time when he did speak. Hid other speeches we’re very much anti-white and oppressor BS . i wish we just let the MLK thing go because it’s not what he really stood for. We’d still hate MLK today if we really read the rest of his teachings.
Whites, it must frankly be said, are not putting in a similar mass effort to reeducate themselves out of their racial ignorance. It is an aspect of their sense of superiority that the white people of America believe they have so little to learn. The reality of substantial investment to assist Negroes into the twentieth century, adjusting to Negro neighbors and genuine school integration, is still a nightmare for all too many white Americans…These are the deepest causes for contemporary abrasions between the races. Loose and easy language about equality, resonant resolutions about brotherhood fall pleasantly on the ear, but for the Negro there is a credibility gap he cannot overlook. He remembers that with each modest advance the white population promptly raises the argument that the Negro has come far enough. Each step forward accents an ever-present tendency to backlash.”
— Where Do We Go From Here: 1967
this is the real Mlk we don’t speak on..