Dr. Marc Lamont Hill is a CNN Political Contributor and speaker. Dr. Lamont Hill’s speech, which took place in the Sheldon Ballroom at SUNY Oswego, was part of “I am Oz, Diversity Speaker Series Events”, a program to help inform college students about social justice and racial unrest within our nation and around the world. The majority of students who attended this event was made up of African-Americans, with less than ten white students. There were also a few professors and residential life advisors there, who were also mostly African-American. This was due in part by the matter of the speech, which did not include a title, but was focused on the black lives in America. This event started with opening remarks from Kimberly Chung and Imani …show more content…
Cruz, two students involved in the black student organization at SUNY Oswego. Kimberly and Imani praised Dr. Lamont Hill for his previous work in social activism as well as his published books about politics. Dr. Hill started his political energy in Philadelphia as a board member of My5th, which is an organization that devotes educating the youth about their legal rights and responsibilities. He also was named “One of America’s 100 most influential Black leaders” by Ebony Magazine in 2011. Today, Dr. Marc Lamont Hill hosts BET News and works with CNN as a political contributor. To start his speech, Dr.
Marc Lamont Hill stated that he was not here to preach or to educate us, or even to inform us; His main goal of that night was to unsettle us. He had three main talking points in the speech, all of which were actions he wanted each of us to achieve. These three actions were to listen, to remember, and to act bravely. He wants us all to listen to each other, and by doing so, committing ourselves to moral practices. Dr. Hill had the entire audience stand up and sing the Black National Anthem, “Lift Every Voice”. This engagement made the audience fell what blacks had to endure in the hardest times. He said, “America; listen to yourself and your promise”. This, referencing to the promise of life, liberty, and the pursuit of …show more content…
happiness. Dr.
Marc Lamont Hill’s second point was to remember. This is where Dr. Hill softened his voice to show condolences on lives we have lost in the struggle of equality. America seems to have only focused on the good that came from the racial movement, but leave out and forget the broken shards or reality. Dr. Martin Luther King Junior was seen as a savior, a voice, a symbol to blacks around the world, but what isn’t talked about is the constant threats he received, the thousands of other people who walked with him in the million-man march, the reality that nothing was changing like they had hoped. Dr. Hill wants us to go deeper into history so that we do not make the same mistakes as we have in the past. The third point in this speech was about acting bravely. The first word, act, is hard enough to do alone, but to do it in a brave manner seems impossible to us. Dr. Hill raised his voice in a passionate tone, crying out for others to act bravely like he has. “To act bravely”, he said, “is to ask a different question than what has been asked. We mustn’t let them tell you the question, we must find that questions ourselves.” The best way to find the right question is to join organizations and tell the truth. It is best to tell the truth when it is hard, not when it rolls off the
tongue. Dr. Hill concluded with a sporadic amount of words and statistics at a fast pace. These included “1st class jails and 2nd class schools, culture of violence, don’t just repair change, unemployment, insufficiency” and much more. The point of this was to point out all of the things we do not talk about, yet we think about on a daily basis. No one is using their voice in a way that can be heard. His voice sounded defeated, knowing that it will be a struggle to make this movement come to life, but time is of the essence. Without a voice there is no action, there is no one to listen, to remember, to act bravely. There is only now and only us to change society. Even if our voices seems to only carry down the hall, the result of a million voices can carry across the globe.
It is no secret that Martin Luther King Jr. did great things. We have learned in school that he was a leader in the movement to desegregate the South. He has served as a role model for people across the globe. But even though Martin did change the world for the better, it was not without hardships. We gathered new information on Dr. King in the essay, “Heeding the Call” by Diana Childress. From his childhood to his last days, Martin faced massive opposition. Still, all of these challenges brought Martin the wisdom and idealism he used throughout his life.
“Always remember that you are absolutely unique. Just like everyone else.” This mantra from Margaret Mead is a somewhat humorous yet slightly satirical spin on how people tend to think of themselves as one-of-a-kind, irreplaceable human specimens. However, one English teacher from Wellesley High School takes this critique one step further with his polemic presentation at the school commencement. David McCullough, a Massachusetts English teacher, gave a seemingly somber sendoff to his graduates in 2012, with a speech that contained some unapologetically harsh sentiments. However, by looking past the outwardly dismal surface of the speech, the students can infer a more optimistic message. By incorporating devices of asyndeton, paradox, antimetabole, and anadiplosis, McCullough conveys to each student that even though none of them is unique, their commonality is not a fault they all have merit and should strive to view the world through a more selfless lens.
Martin Luther King Jr’s Dream has said to have been fulfilled. However, others claim that the dream has only been taken at face value, thus, misunderstood. In John McWhorter’s article, “Black People Should Stop Expecting White America to ‘Wake Up’ to Racism,” he refers to past and recent events to establish the difference between society’s fantasy and the misinterpreted Dream of Dr. King.
“As we walk, we must make a pledge that we shall always march ahead.”(MLK , I have a Dream Speech). Martin Luther King JR. was a remarkable man. He helped the community like no other did. He is a great character and role model towards all African Americans and others. He shows bravery, kindness, and has the eyes to make change happen. He was an inspiration to many less fortunate people than him, and people who had more than him. Do we have the bravery and courage that this man had? Do we have the eyes for change? MLK had something many didn’t. MLK made a change because something was bothering him in his community, he brought people together, was an inspiration to many because of his patience, and had a dream.
Historians offer different perceptions of the significance of Martin Luther King and the 1963 March on Washington. Without examining this event within its historical context the media publicity and iconic ‘I Have a Dream’ speech can easily overshadow progress that was already underway in America. It was insisted by prominent civil rights activist Ella Baker, ‘the movement made Martin rather than Martin making the movement.’ What is important not to overlook is the significant change that took place in the United States during the previous 100 years. Such that, many influential figures in support of racial equality opposed the March. The Civil Rights Act proposed by President Kennedy in 1963 was already in the legislative process. Furthermore the Federal Government was now reasserting power over the entire of the United States by enforcing a policy of desegregation. It is important to note that these changes all took place less than one hundred years after the Thirteenth Amendment in 1965 abolished slavery, and the Fourteenth amendment in 1968 acknowledged the rights of former slaves to be acknowledged as U.S citizens. With this level of progress Kennedy was against the March going ahead due to the argument that it was limited in what it could achieve. Today, King’s 1963 Speech is viewed as one of the most iconic speeches in history. However, was it a key turning point in African Americans achieving racial equality? Federal endorsement would suggest yes after decades of southern states being able to subvert the Federal law designed to break down segregation. This support built upon the corner stones of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth amendments in the nineteenth century. Therefore looking at the national status of black Americans fro...
At some point in our life we all hear about MLK and the amazing things he accomplished. But that’s the thing we only hear about the “amazing” things, never the actual truth of how he was as a person. We have been implanted with this image that MLK was “perfect” and had no flaws. Many of the things that Frady wrote in this book were new information to me. Like I’ve said, I have always heard about the most important and positive things about King. I could go on a talk about everything that happened in this book, but I won’t. Most of this stuff we...
Dr. King effectively expresses why his critics are wrong in a passionate tone. He is extremely zealous about the rights that African-Americans have been neglected to have and should have, as well as everyone else. Mr King was criticized for his “untimely” actions in Birmingham. “This wait has almost always meant ‘never.’” (King 264) Martin Luther King isn’t just a bystander witnessing the injustice; he is a victim and one of the few who is willing to fight for justice well deserved.
[2] Most white people who lived through the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960's will often place Malcolm X and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. side by side as representations of Black activism: the former, a model of Black rage and confrontation, uncompromising in his stance; the latter an example of the peaceful, non-confrontational method towards achieving equal rights -- the "right way." Martin has been seen as the good guy and Malcolm as the bad. While Martin usually occupies a few pages in history books, Malcolm is usually found in only paragraphs. Even after his assassination, Malcolm's detractors seek to keep him quiet. I visited my high school in Connecticut back in February, Black History Month, and asked my sister and her friends what they knew about Malcolm X. Those that knew anything replied that he hated white people and that he was assassinated. When I asked several history teachers about how Malcolm was taught, they admitted that he takes a back seat to Mar...
Dr. King first starts out all pumped up on a very light note. He is very optimistic about his speech in the very first line. However he bluntly addressed the issues of hardship, which African-Americans endured while America was beginning to become a stronger symbol of hope and freedom. He acknowledged the experience of wealth which his race became accustomed to, the ghetto poverty. He recognized the right of each color and pale man who contains the right to live, liberty, and the pursuit of true happiness. As bluntly as he began his speech, he boldly pointed out the Supreme Law of The Land- the Constitution - and quoted the Declaration of Independence as all.
Martin Luther King Jr’s most compelling point was that every person has the same rights
King peacefully pleads for racial tolerance and the end of segregation by appealing to the better side of white Americans. His attempt to persuade America about the justice of his cause, and to gain support for the civil rights movement was emotionally moving. He spoke to all races, but his rhetoric was patriotic, and culturally similar to, and focused on African-Americans. He was able to make practical use of a history many Americans are proud of. The use of repetition reinforced his words making it simpler and more straightforward to follow. His speech remains powerful because it is still relevant today, like economic injustices and stereotyping. This reading can be applied to remedying current issues of stereotyping, racism, and discrimination by changing white racial resentment and eliminating racial
The speech given by Martin Luther King, Jr. to the African Americans and to the white Americans in the August of 1963 was undoubtedly a motivator for many. It is no wonder why a vast majority of people living in the United States can recite words from the speech of a now deceased man. Because his language and diction spoke to all believers in freedom as well as to freedom's adversaries, his message was universal and had a meaning to all who heard it. This continues today. Freedom and equality are something to be attained, for all of us.
Whenever people discuss race relations today and the effect of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s, they remember the work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. He was and continues to be one of the most i...
Martin Luther King Jr is one of the wisest and bravest black man the world has ever seen. He has set the path way for the black community and other miniorities. In his Nobel Prize Speech the “Quest for Peace and Justice”, King had three major points that he addressed in the “Quest of Peace and Justice”. One of the points he made was about racial injustice and how we need to eliminate it. King stated that, “when civilization shifts its basic outlooks then we will have a freedom explosion”. Overtime things must change, nothing never stays the same. King’s way of making parallels with this is making the claim is saying, “Oppressed people can’t oppressed forever, and the yearning will eventually manifest itself”. He insisted that blacks have,
There once was a speech made, from a man who was admired and looked up too by many people. His name was Martin Luther King and he had stood up for his own race. Back then “King was arrested, [had] his home bombed, subjected to personal abuse, but at the same time he emerged as a leader for the first rank of blacks” (Life Books). With this in mind, it has showed us that Martin Luther King was a leader for most people. He had wanted everyone to have equal rights and ...