From Deseret News archives:

Blacks who blame discrimination dishonor race

Published: Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2005 7:19 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Last month, when Rosa Parks was laid to rest in Detroit, her eulogy contained well-deserved praise for her brave defiance of segregation laws that led to the 1955 Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott and later the 1956 Supreme Court ruling that banned public transportation segregation. The passing and remembrance of her generation of blacks, who made sacrifices to deliver today's opportunities, might also be an occasion for condemnation of what's no less than a gross betrayal of that generation's struggle.

Having lived just about one-third of our nation's existence, I know, as well as experienced, the uglier parts of our history. During the '30s, '40s and '50s, civil rights progress meant yearly black lynchings were down to single digits, as opposed to 50 or more in previous decades.

In 1954, when I graduated from Philadelphia's Benjamin Franklin High School, rare was the opportunity for a black student to go off to college. While segregation was mostly in the South, it nonetheless existed in northern cities. There were entire Philadelphia neighborhoods where, regardless of socioeconomic status, blacks could not rent or buy. There were business establishments, including movie theaters and restaurants, where black patronage was not welcomed.

While not every vestige of racial discrimination has been eliminated, it is nowhere near the barrier it was yesteryear, but you'd think discrimination is everywhere listening to some of today's black politicians and civil rights leaders. One wonders what those blacks, who lived during the era of gross discrimination and are now deceased, would think about so much of today's behavior, rhetoric and excuses.

Story continues below
What would they think about black neighborhoods, once thriving economic centers that have been turned into economic wastelands by a level of criminal activity previously unknown? During my youth, walking through some of Philadelphia's predominantly white neighborhoods, one felt a sense of relief as we approached a black neighborhood. Today, it might be the other way around. What would they think about predominantly black schools where violence and intimidation are the order of the day, with police cars outside and metal detectors inside? What would they think about black students who seek academic excellence being mocked, intimidated and assaulted by their peers for "acting white"?

By any assessment, black Americans have made the greatest progress, over some of the highest hurdles and in the shortest span of time than any other racial group in the history of mankind. If one added the earnings of black Americans and thought of us as a nation, we'd be the 14th richest nation.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

Gun laws becoming more loose

Gun law's get looser because we NORMAL PEOPLE are going to take back America...

Letters: Global warming a lie

Oil companies get together and decide they can make a lot more money if...

Depleted uranium OK'd for storage

Wow, someone on this thread (paid by EnergySolutions?) is really working the...

Re: just me: Unless I missed it in the article, I didn't catch why Natalie...

When he returned from his supposed "camping trip", did he also return with...

@Cowboy Joe: Howard can not shoot outside of 4 feet. Since when did someone...

Utah needs good examples

Let's hope the Smithsonian doesn't read this article.

'I can't vouch for the original person who took you to task for your stupid...

Letters: Global warming a lie

If CO2 didn't come out of tail pipes the only theory I can think of that it...

While driving southbound on US Highway 395 in rural Gardnerville, NV in...

Advertisements