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John Lewis … the last great civil rights leader

<p>With the death of Congressman John Lewis&comma; arguably the last of the GREAT and most notable civil rights leaders of the 1960s – with the possible exception of former Atlanta Mayor and former United Nations ambassador Andrew Young &&num;8212&semi; has passed into history&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I emphasized the word &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;great” because he represented the Martin Luther King-school of social protest&period;  The most often heard word in the movement was &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;peaceful&period;”  When violence broke out&comma; it was not at the instigation of the King movement&comma; but in the hateful&comma; immoral and illegal response of the governing authorities in the Democrat-run south and major cities&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I also see Lewis as among the greatest civil rights leaders even though I have had significant differences with his political polices as a member of Congress&period;  But I see his courage and peaceful resolve in those turbulent days of protest as the crown of his career&period;  No civil rights leader today faces anything close to the entrenched evil and malevolence as did Lewis and his colleagues&period;  No difference in policy can erase that noble history&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Lewis – and all those who marched philosophically and physically behind King – showed the world a clear demarcation between the injustice being committed against innocent Black Americans on a daily basis and the brutality and horror of the Democrat regimes that segregated&comma; suppressed and summarily killed them for the 100 years since the end of the Civil War&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Lewis was the real thing – unlike the civil rights charlatans who have sold out their people for power&comma;  prestige – and most of all – profit&period;  Pseudo- civil rights leaders like millionaires Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton&comma; who promote racial division in the name of ending it&period;  They are the racial snake oil salesmen who offer a bromide that will do nothing to cure the malady – but will only assure future sales&period;  They see racism in America through a stridently partisan lens – and ironically&comma; profit as sycophants of the very political Party most responsible for the historic plight of Black Americans&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When King and Lewis called for and lived the ideals of peaceful protest&comma; they did so at a time of enormous peril to their own reputations&comma; fortunes and even lives&period;  They peacefully faced-down the most vicious political structures and institutions since the Civil War&period;  They were victimized by complete violations of law&comma; civil rights and the Constitution in those institutionally racist governments in the south and big cities&period;  Many died under the rule of the Ku Klux Klan and the fight to end oppression&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As the media eulogizes Lewis&comma; his words from then and now are quoted&period;  But more often than not his full sentiments are not reflected&period;  We hear of his calls for action on the liberal media&comma; but nothing of his appeals for peaceful demonstrations – and his calling out those who undermine the message with a rampage of violence and criminality carried out by Blacks and Whites in the name of civil justice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Lewis called out the promoting of violence within the movement in the 1960s – and he called them out in the most recent days of civil unrest&period;  But those words are not heard on the news because they do not fit today’s narrative that even violence is justifiable&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Lewis and King well understood that to achieve civil justice&comma; they had to clearly show the difference between the peaceful protests of a wronged people and the evil of those perpetrating the injustice&period;  That is what all Americans could see in the 1960s&period;  Those who loot&comma; rob&comma; pillage and burn – and even use vigilante tactics to vandalize&comma; graffiti and topple statues – create a false equivalency between social justice and criminality&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Both Lewis and Young have stayed true to the successful King model of civil protest&period;  They knew it was better to recruit people to the cause than to repel people with counter-violence&period;  Unfortunately&comma; too many of the contemporary civil rights leaders have chosen the low road – by encouraging&comma; supporting&comma; rationalizing and promoting civil violence&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Within the modern civil right movement are those who say&comma; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;silence is not an option” and &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;silence is consent&period;”  But when they are silent against violence&comma; they are violating their own adages&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is highly probable that the infamous Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma&comma; Alabama will be re-named in honor of Lewis – a most fitting memorial in many ways&period;  The current name celebrates the evil side of what happened on that bridge on March 7&comma; 1965&period;  Regardless of the name&comma; that bridge will stand out as one of the greatest symbols of the quest for equal rights for Blacks&period;  And if the Pettus name drops off the radar of history&comma; it is no loss&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Frankly&comma; I often wondered why so many successive generations of Democrat leaders in Selma never made such a change&period;  It is sad&comma; that the bridge was not re-named at a time when Lewis could have seen the honor&period;  It would have been a poignant last chapter in the life of one of the last truly GREAT civil rights leaders&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&period; There &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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