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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Mon Jan 16, 2012, 12:08 PM Jan 2012

From the Archive: A Bold Design for a New South {MLK 1963 The Nation}

http://www.thenation.com/article/157763/archive-bold-design-new-south

An arresting paradox emerged in 1962. History will doubtless judge the year as making a favorable turning point in the struggle for equality, yet it was also the year that civil rights was displaced as the dominant issue in domestic politics. Although thundering events in Oxford, Miss., and Albany, Ga., captured public attention, there was a perceptible diminishing in the concern of the nation to achieve a just solution of the problem.

Part of the blame must be laid to the Administration’s cautious tactics. Early in the year, the President backed away from the Senate I fight to amend Rule 22, the so-called filibuster rule; had he entered the fray, the amendment would probably have passed and the greatest obstacle to the passage of civil-rights legislation would have been smashed. (Despite this experience, the President again remained aloof, under similar circumstances, in January of this year, and again the amendment failed to carry.) True, 1962 was the year of the Cuban crisis, which understandably tended to dwarf all other issues. Yet even in the shadow of Cuba, such issues as trade legislation and tax reform took the play away from civil rights in editorial columns, public debate and headlines.

The Administration’s circumscribed actions, in the civil-rights field was generally accepted by, the public;. even liberal forces proved watchful rather than anxious, hopeful rather than insistent. The demand for progress was somehow drained of its moral imperative, and the issue no longer commanded the conscience of the nation as it had in previous years.

The decline of civil rights as the Number One domestic issue was a direct consequence, I believe, of the rise and public acceptance of “tokenism.” The American people have, not abandoned the quest for equal rights; rather, they have been persuaded to accept token victories as indicative of genuine and satisfactory progress.

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From the Archive: A Bold Design for a New South {MLK 1963 The Nation} (Original Post) xchrom Jan 2012 OP
an overly cautious administration blaming filibusters and offering token victories... yurbud Jan 2012 #1
+1 you would think we would be on a different footing. Nt xchrom Jan 2012 #2
the same foot's on our neck--it was just forced to take a bit of the extra weight off black folks yurbud Jan 2012 #4
K&R Solly Mack Jan 2012 #3

yurbud

(39,405 posts)
1. an overly cautious administration blaming filibusters and offering token victories...
Mon Jan 16, 2012, 07:11 PM
Jan 2012

how much things have changed in the last 49 years.

yurbud

(39,405 posts)
4. the same foot's on our neck--it was just forced to take a bit of the extra weight off black folks
Mon Jan 16, 2012, 08:01 PM
Jan 2012
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