[Vision2020] Ignorance at Its Sickest . . .

Tom Hansen thansen at moscow.com
Fri Aug 27 06:48:46 PDT 2010


Just when you thought that Glenn Beck couldn't get more insultingly
ignorant . . . The "Beck"oning.

Courtesy of Yahoo News at:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100826/ap_on_en_tv/us_dc_rally_glenn_beck

--------------------------------------------------------

>From King to Beck: Big rally at Lincoln Memorial
By PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Glenn Beck says it's just a coincidence his Restoring Honor
rally on Saturday at the Lincoln Memorial will take place on the
anniversary and at the site of Martin Luther King Jr.'s famous "I Have a
Dream" speech. Civil rights veterans are skeptical.

"This is going to be a moment that you'll never be able to paint people as
haters, racists, none of it," Beck says of the event featuring Sarah Palin
and other conservative political and cultural figures. "This is a moment,
quite honestly, that I think we reclaim the civil rights movement."

"When we heard about Glenn Beck, it was puzzling," the Rev. Al Sharpton
said. "Because if you read Dr. King's speech, it just doesn't gel with
what Mr. Beck or Mrs. Palin are representing."

Beck, a popular figure among tea party activists and a polarizing Fox News
Channel personality, is headlining the event, and Palin, the 2008
Republican vice presidential nominee and a potential 2012 president
candidate, will be a prominent speaker. But Beck told his television
audience again on Thursday that it's not about politics.

The event's website says the rally is to pay tribute to America's military
personnel and others "who embody our nation's founding principles of
integrity, truth and honor." It also is to promote the Special Operations
Warrior Foundation, which provides scholarships and services to family
members of military members.

The website urges citizens to attend and "help us restore the values that
founded this great nation."

The rally, on the 47th anniversary of King's plea for racial equality is
drawing a strong reaction — and several counter-rallies — as the nation
looks toward November's elections.

Beck is known for his strong opinions, including his statement that
President Barack Obama is a racist; he later told CBS' Katie Couric that
he was "sorry the way it was phrased."

But organizers of Saturday's rally are telling attendees not to bring
signs, "as they may deter from the peaceful message we are bringing to
Washington."

Signs at some tea party events have included pictures of Obama embellished
with a Hitler-style mustache, racial epithets and threats to Democratic
officials. Such posters have given tea party critics grounds to claim the
loose organization of activists is motivated by racism against the
nation's first black president.

"Dr. King never had to ask anyone to leave their signs and guns at home,"
said Benjamin Todd Jealous, president of the NAACP. "To say to your
followers, don't bring your signs — it's like saying don't open your
mouth."

"The 8-28 rally is supposedly is about 'reclaiming the civil rights
movement,' but it is being led by someone whose idea of a racist is the
president of the United States," said Jess Levin, a spokesman for the
liberal Media Matters for America. "This rally is about one thing and one
thing only. And that's promoting Beck's political agenda."

Elsewhere in Washington, civil rights activists planned to mark Saturday's
anniversary of the landmark 1963 speech with rallies and demonstrations,
some ending on the National Mall. One group planned a four-story sculpture
in honor of King near the Washington Monument. Others planned to meet at a
Washington school.

Sharpton's National Action Network planned a "Reclaim the Dream" rally
featuring Education Secretary Arne Duncan, National Urban League president
Marc Morial and Martin Luther King III.

In an opinion piece for The Washington Post, King said of Beck's event
that it's "commendable that this rally will honor the brave men and women
of our armed forces who serve our country with phenomenal dedication." But
he also said it was clear the organizers were invoking his father's work.

"My father championed free speech. He would be the first to say that those
participating in Beck's rally have the right to express their views," King
wrote Wednesday. "But his dream rejected hateful rhetoric and all forms of
bigotry or discrimination, whether directed at race, faith, nationality,
sexual orientation or political beliefs."

In the 47 years since King's speech, it has become a staple of civil
rights history.

"I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation
where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the
content of their character," he said on Aug. 28, 1963.

Beck has sought to play down any comparisons to the slain civil rights
leader.

"I know that people are going to hammer because they're going to say,
'It's no Martin Luther King speech,'" Beck told his radio listeners on
Wednesday. "Of course it's not Martin Luther King. You think I'm Martin
Luther King?"

And on Thursday, Beck repeated his claim that he didn't realize he was
scheduling the event on the anniversary.

"I'm sorry, oh so important media, that I forgot the date," he said in a
mocking tone. "It's not the date. It's the message."

Civil rights leaders said they hoped Beck wouldn't exploit the King legacy
at the site. But the imagery — a crowd listening to a speaker standing in
the shadow of Lincoln — was certain to draw comparisons.

"I hope that's not what he's trying to do. I hope that this is a
coincidence," Jealous said. "But more than anything, I hope that he,
having chosen this day and this locations, pushes himself to really honor
the unifying legacy of Dr. King."

--------------------------------------------------------

JEESH!

Seeya at Farmers Market, Moscow.

Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho


"The Pessimist complains about the wind, the Optimist expects it to change
and the Realist adjusts his sails."

- Unknown




More information about the Vision2020 mailing list