A Sorry Action for a State That Helped Lead the Fight Against
Racial Injustice and Segregation
The civil rights
movement of the 1960’s is largely known today for the courageous actions of
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., his fellow compatriots and the people of Alabama, Mississippi and other deep
south states where men and women took courageous, sometimes life threatening
action to end racial prejudice. But part
of the fight took place in North Carolina , and
the sit-ins in Greensboro
in the early 1960’s set a pattern for non-violent protests. North
Carolina can be proud of its role in bring in an era
of greater equality for the nation.
So it is particularly
sad that the voters of the Tar Heel state approved an amendment to the
state Constitution which takes the bigotry and hatred of people who regard men
and women who lives their life in a way that they do not approve of and
codifies it. The amendment to the North Carolina state constitution
doesn’t just ban same sex marriage, it says that the state will only recognize a relationship that is marriage between a man and a woman. Any
couple that lives together, regardless of gender is considered inferior in the
state.
The basic concept of
freedom is that anyone in America
can live their life as they see fit, and believe whatever he or she wants to
believe. But Conservatives are not
satisfied with this, they believe that government can be used to force their
views on others. And they frequently
wrap this view in the concept of moral superiority, when in fact promoting
intolerance is the exact opposite of moral superiority.
The situation in North Carolina will be reversed. No, not next year, but eventually. The nation is moving in the direction of
greater, not less tolerance and at some time in the future the voters in North
Carolina will amend their state constitution to allow anybody to lead their
life the way they choose to, and not be forced to live a life that conforms to
someone else's idea of what is morally right.
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