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marmar

(77,081 posts)
Tue Nov 6, 2012, 12:44 PM Nov 2012

Leonard Pitts Jr.: Conservatives still long for the sad days of yesteryear


By Leonard Pitts Jr.
The Miami Herald


Well, I sure got that one wrong.

Four years ago, on the eve of the last presidential election, I wrote in this space of how the country has spent much of the last three decades "relitigating" the 1960s, arguing over the changes wrought in that decade. As far as social justice is concerned, of course, the 1960s stand second only to the 1860s as the most profoundly transformative decade in American history. It was in those years that black folks came off the back of the bus, women came out of the kitchen, Hispanics came off the margins, and gay people first peeked beyond the closet.

Conservatives have been trying to repeal the decade ever since, a crusade that seemed to reach its greatest clarity and lowest depth in the rush to define a certain jug-eared senator from Illinois who was, in 2008, running for president. He stood to become the first black man to hold that job. This was not an incidental thing.

For his supporters, it helped make him the embodiment of "hope" and "change," the renewal of inchoate liberal promises that died with Robert F. Kennedy. For his detractors, it was the realization of every paranoia-drenched, racially tinged threat to the white picket fences and Mom's apple pie of status quo. .....................(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.freep.com/article/20121106/OPINION05/311060014/Leonard-Pitts-Jr-Conservatives-still-long-for-the-sad-days-of-yesteryear?odyssey=mod|newswell|text|FRONTPAGE|p



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Leonard Pitts Jr.: Conservatives still long for the sad days of yesteryear (Original Post) marmar Nov 2012 OP
I've always liked Leonard Pitts. But yes: to be succinct, I'm very disappointed and surprised in codjh9 Nov 2012 #1
It warms my heart that 'progress' is the root of progressive. paparush Nov 2012 #2

codjh9

(2,781 posts)
1. I've always liked Leonard Pitts. But yes: to be succinct, I'm very disappointed and surprised in
Tue Nov 6, 2012, 12:50 PM
Nov 2012

this country and the way social issues (and environmental) have gone during my lifetime (I'm nearly 55). We've gone backwards, and especially in the last 10-15 years - on race and racism/sexism, and more. I would've never predicted this in the 70's.

paparush

(7,964 posts)
2. It warms my heart that 'progress' is the root of progressive.
Tue Nov 6, 2012, 12:52 PM
Nov 2012

I do not understand people who refuse to evolve, to move forward, to progress.

People are scared of change.
People are scared of new paradigms.

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