What has been in the news recently about Ferguson is something that has been there since the very beginning but now lives under a new name; racial profiling. This issue, in line with affirmative action is proof that the words spoken by Martin Luther King more than 50 years ago have lost focus. Although segregation is no longer a legal issue, it is still a social issue, a gap that everyone sees but no one knows how to fill. King never believed that equality was going to be straightforward, but he provided America with a perspective, a common understanding and a (peaceful) plan of action. The violence comes from raw emotion and frustration, but if this keeps going, the violence will lose track of its purpose and only create a larger gap.
If there would be a movement, how would you think this would happen? Is a 21st century MLK possible? Has social media created too many voices, or could it make one voice heard, so that those people that share those same feelings can unite and get back on track?
And what would do you think could/should be achieved by a movement? Could anything (legislation, Supreme Court case) prevent these occurrences from happening on a short term basis?
Thursday, 27 November 2014
Tuesday, 25 November 2014
Obama taking a leap
There are
two interesting things that happened in Obama's presidency this week, which I
found to be interesting to what we have been discussing in class.
Firstly,
Obama seems to have put his foot down in the ongoing conflict he has found
himself in with the 'gridlock' Congress. Whether his bold words to Congress
saying 'pass a bill' were necessarily through his desperation to 'allow
millions of undocumented immigrants to remain in the country and work legally
without threat of deportation' (1) is questionable. Especially after the Republican take- over in the midterm elections it
seems as though he is feeling the pressure to leave his footprint, but equally
to stick to his promises, which he is so widely criticised for not doing. Such
a bold move (finally) enforcing his executive power is well received in the
Latino community, and I don't think this goes unnoticed with the polltakers. To
put it simply: he has just bought himself a super size economy pack of fresh
enthusiastic supporters in the sale. This also relates to this 'footprint' that
our imperial presidents were so keen on making, is this move his way of turning
the last two years of his presidency into a good and lasting memory, or is
intended as a middle finger to his Republican counterparts meaning he will not
let the Democratic party back down, not now and not in two years time?
Well,
leaving his footprint was all great yesterday, but he sort of threw that out of
the window with his proposal 'to authorize a more expansive mission for the
military in Afghanistan in 2015'. (2) Of course, like any proposal to let a war go
on 'for at least another year' (3), there are a lot of reasons as to why it is no one's fault in
particular. A shaky relationship between the executive and the Pentagon has put
pressure on Obama to make such a decision. As I cannot put myself in his shoes,
I can't fully appreciate what this means. I can however see a recurring theme
that we have discussed in class; what seems to be more important is finding a
valid and acceptable reason as to why this is needed. Firstly, the rule that
applies to pulling off a bandage, does not apply to wars, but to put it
metaphorically, putting more bandages on a wound that is trying to heal won't
be very beneficial either. Secondly, thankfully we can all take a deep breath
because the war now has a different name: Operation Enduring Freedom. The
mission has had a game change and it is now a set of 'appropriate measures to
keep Americans safe' (4), that does
sound a lot nicer I guess. What the real underlying reason is, we probably
won't know, but sending more people out there to help and protect the people
that are already out there for reasons that are already quite skewed, seems a
little dubious, even if it does have a fresh new label.
For someone
who got the Nobel peace prize, things don't seem to be going too peacefully.
(1) Michael D. Shear and
Ashley Parker. (21.11.2014). Amid
Attacks, Obama Presses Congress to Move on Immigration. Available from:
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/22/us/in- school- visit- obama- urges- congress- to- act- on- immigration.html?ref=politics.
[Accessed:
22/11/2014].
(2) Mark Mazzetti and Eric Schitt.
(21.11.2014). In a Shift,
Obama Extends U.S.
Role in Afghan Combat. Available from: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/22/us/politics/in- secret- obama- extends- us- role- in- afghan- combat.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Home page&module=first- column- region®ion=top- news&WT.nav=top- news. [Accessed: 22/11/2014].
(3)
Ibid.
(4)
Ibid.
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