Posted on 01/17/2006 3:52:06 PM PST by Ellesu
Former candidate honors MLK with call to fight poverty
The ideals and dreams of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. are being forgotten, former Democratic vice presidential candidate John Edwards said Monday.
The great moral issue is the 37 million people in our country who live in poverty, Edwards told about a thousand people attending Mondays service for King at Mount Zion First Baptist Church on East Boulevard. How can we turn our backs on 37 million people who had to beg for health care?
Edwards, who served as a U.S. senator from North Carolina, cited a void in moral leadership in America and criticized the federal government for reducing spending on health-care and child-care programs, such as Head Start, that benefit the poor.
Lets stand up in the tradition of King and fight against poverty and for moral leadership in America, he said.
The annual programs theme, Baton Rouge, Our City Running the Race, Keeping the Pace, commemorated the birth and vision of King with a three-hour program featuring music, dance and speeches. It culminated with about 1,800 people marching to the River Center Plaza downtown where another program was held, said the Rev. Betty Claiborne, chairwoman of the MLK Committee that coordinates the program and parade.
King, who would have turned 77 Sunday, led a series of nonviolent demonstrations during the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 60s which earned him the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize. He was born Jan. 15, 1929, in Atlanta and died in 1968 in Memphis, Tenn. Edwards, who started a poverty center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has traveled throughout the United States including to Baton Rouge following Hurricane Katrina and to poorer nations studying poverty.
Stereotypes that label poor people as lazy are a lie, he said. What Edwards found on his visits were regular people, often single women, raising large families and working at several low-wage jobs.
We need to give these people a chance, Edwards said. He said New Orleans victims who lost their jobs and homes as a result of Hurricane Katrina should be the recipients of the billions in federal aid that is instead going toward corporations.
The country saw the face of poverty in America, and largely its a face of color, he said. Edwards said he hopes New Orleans is not rebuilt as a racially segregated city.
AFL-CIO executive vice president Linda Chavez-Thompson also said the country has a moral obligation to make life better for laborers.
We are still struggling and fighting for decent wages throughout the country, Chavez-Thompson said.
Mayor-President Kip Holden said the parish faces challenges to confront homelessness and to transition hurricane evacuees out of trailers. East Baton Rouge Parish shall rise to the fulfillment of our true nature. I truly believe we shall overcome one day.
This years Trailblazer Award winner, Martha White, was honored for helping organize and carry out the 1953 Baton Rouge bus boycott.
In 1953, the movement that shook America was birthed out of this woman, Claiborne said. We want to thank you for the stand you took and for your bravery.
Area ministers from several religions also spoke and lit candles signifying the flame of infinite hope. The Rev. Robin McCullough Bade said Hurricane Katrina helped unify churches.
Walls between churches, denominations and religions came tumbling down, Bade said. We in the faith community came together.
Hundreds of young marchers helped lead the procession along Government Street. Many were members of high school bands, youth leadership clubs and youth ministries. The march was a first for Jasmin Hughes, 14, who joined other members of the Feliciana Youth Institute, a church-based program.
It feels good because I have the freedom to be doing this, Hughes said.
The march inspired Ashleigh Williams, 15, also a member of the Feliciana Youth Institute, to show the community that young people still care about Kings ideas and dreams.
Its an honor to be marching today the way the civil rights workers once had in the 1960s, Williams said. Its showing how we still care about what Dr. King did.
We have more Americas than this idiot has topics.
That is terrible but why am I laughing?
Once a huckster, always a huckster.
Plantation Politics.
The only dream that has faded is Edwards dream of turning us all in to slaves of the state.
Yeah....me too.
Snake Oil will make a comeback in 06.
LOL
Who is this Edwards? Is/was he someone important?
In addition to everything else, the dimple in his tie is off-center. Has he no decency?
You think this is funny check this out!
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1559905/posts
Ahh, I see, all black people are poor. Nice stereotype Edwards......
Caption to that photo: "If John Kerry were president, Dr. King would be alive today!"
We've been fighting this war on poverty for years. It's a failed strategy. We need an exit strategy.
I guess he's literally getting ready to get on the soapbox.
Thanks for the link FP
"The great moral issue is the 37 million people in our country who live in poverty, Edwards told about a thousand people..."
Edwards is worth a couple hundred million dollars. That buys a lot of people out of poverty. Oh, that's right, Edwards and all the other super-rich democrats are only moral if they can use other people's money. Their own money they hide in tax-sheltered, off-shore accounts. It's part of that 2 Americas thing Edwards is always talking about.
at least the mole is gone and not hanging down his face anymore
Wow he sure is purty.....He should be in one of them Brokenback Mountain deals
In the freezer
LOL...YOU are correct! He had a little "work" done!
And which party made (and continue to make) all of the promises to minorities that they didn't or wont keep?
The Democrats wouldn't care a bit about minorities if they didn't need the votes.
Which naturally leads to the statement:
The country saw the face of poverty in America, and largely its a face of color, he said. Edwards said he hopes New Orleans is not rebuilt as a racially segregated city.
The classic stereotype of black America as being poor and oppressed with no hope of escape from their impoverished condition.
Of course libs like that one.
It gripes my ass to no end everytime I hear a politician say health care when he means health insurance. It is flat out dishonest, but what can I expect from a group of wastrels who should all be arrested for taking money under false pretenses.
It's Selma, all over again!!! (Sarc)
Shut up, Dennis.
Of course, he doesn't live in a black neighborhood. He never has. He doesn't live among the poor. On the contrary, Mr. Sillky Pony is a filthy rich trial lawyer and phony.
Divide and conquer - Old school socialism at its finest.
He made his millions in disproved tort accusations and litigation. Now he has money, he craves power. Someone should take the evidence that MS is caused by a virus and not doctor mistakes and use it to get a class action lawsuit against lawyers who made a living out of suing doctors and raising the price of medicine above the affordability level for millions of Americans. Who will take on this case?
Another thing that is particularly galling is hearing him bemoan the lack of available funds for health care, the very system from which he personally lifted a few hundred million dollars.
That money he confiscated for himself is exponentially magnified as a drain on the system because of the spiraling costs of medical malpractice insurance that is necessary to ward off the sorts of frivilous and damaging law suits he launched.
I am a lawyer and have seen the system at its worst. Reform is needed. The recent reforms in class action lawsuits was a start. Our legal system has a lot going for it. Unfortunately, it sometimes it takes too long for reform.
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