The Right Thing
“My
brother need not be idealized, or enlarged in death beyond what he
was in life; to be remembered simply as a good and decent man, who
saw wrong and tried to right it, saw suffering and tried to heal it,
saw war and tried to stop it,”
The eulogy for Robert
F. Kennedy by Edward M. Kennedy
On March 7, 1965 the marchers
approached the Edmund Pettus Bridge on the way into Selma, Alabama.
The local population did not want them there. While it may have been
legal it certainly was not allowed in the eyes of the populace. As
the marchers began to cross the bridge they were set upon by police,
citizens, dogs, water hoses and any other type of impediment the
citizenry could come up with to deter their entrance into Selma.
Current House Representative John Lewis was there. He was the
President of the SNCC. The Student Non-violent Coordinating
Committee. He was beaten so badly his survival was in question. The
ignominious day became known as Bloody Sunday. After a successful
march led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and under federal protection
the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1965 was guaranteed by the
signature of President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Many efforts had been made to
peacefully achieve the rights enumerated under the 14th
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and all had been
rebuffed. Local ordinances, state law and any other impediment that
could be considered were used to deny these rights by what has become
known as the Jim Crow Laws.
These citizens felt they had exhausted
all avenues open to them to achieve equality and felt obliged to push
against the illegitimacy of the legal system that prevented them from
enjoying the profound rights of citizenship. Their efforts were not
politick or safe, were questionably legal and were sure to draw the
ire of the local inhabitants of their communities but they persisted.
And persisted and persisted and persisted until there could be no
doubt of their legitimacy. But their legitimacy is still questioned
by many of our countrymen and they have become more emboldened in
recent times to express themselves publicly showing that sometimes
doing the right thing doesn't bring peaceful and complete recognition
of those rights. It certainly doesn't mean everyone will like it.
Those white residents of Selma and
other places felt they had every legal right to refuse service to
whomever they chose for whatever reason they chose. If you asked
them why often they would point to the Bible and reference the curse
of Ham, son of Noah. This is not news. Most of us of a certain age
are acquainted with references to this story to justify
discrimination against the black people. One would expect that as
reasoning humans we would learn from our shame and not repeat those
errors. But maybe many don't really see them as errors. Maybe many
see them as just being politically correct or pandering to those who
don't deserve it. After all, it wasn't us that did those things. Or
was it?
On Monday night the Somerset City
Council voted to deny what is described as a “fairness ordinance”
that proposed the LGBTQ people be considered to be a group that
should not be discriminated against. Some of the arguments dealt
with a case recently decided by the Supreme Court and other cases in
the pipeline to the Court and suggested that the City would want to
avoid becoming entangled in court cases that could cost a lot of
money. One council member said that his constituents were against
it and he voted that way. For many it was enough that Scripture
speaks against LBGTQ behavior no matter the United States
Constitution. The Public was congratulated on being engaged and now
we'll move on.
These are exactly the kind of things that
were done in city councils everywhere that allowed the Jim Crow laws
to be enforced. This still leaves some citizens of our country
unable to not be fearful that they will be denied service at places
that most citizens are welcomed. Some see it as a infringement of
religious freedom but those proprietors prior to the Civil Rights Act
saw their religious freedom being infringed upon. Who decides? It
must be that one cannot, in the public sphere, apply his own
religious freedom to another person. In the private sphere one can
be as discriminatory as one wants.
So, what now? My Take on this is that
some groundwork needs to be laid. This is a conservative area and
this decision was not unforeseen. As much of a no-brainier as it was
to some passage would have been unlikely. Perhaps recruit businesses
to post in their windows or in a visible space a sign or sticker
stating they support equality for all. Perhaps building support
among businesses will be helpful because motivations are different.
Community positions are hardened here. As long as this is a cause
that depends on doing the right thing in the face of contrary
opinions progress will be difficult. But gaining allies could turn
some heads.
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