What do you think I didn't comprehend?
So here is the post I made:
, with the line you responded to in bold. . . . . to which you asserted some naivete on my part.Ah, the dreamy musings of a serious social engineer. . . . .
Ostracizing a fundamental human choice, then another, and another. Just can't teach humans without these displays of hate, huh? Maybe sometimes you have to fight fire with fire, when you can't raise the level of discussion to an abstract ideal, oh, say like religions sometimes do.
Let's take the whole "Whites Only" sort of business that used to thrive on the commonplace ignorance and fear. A lot of businesses feared that whites would ostracize them if they did let the "different" folks in. Nobody had the courage to break with the establishment in place. So of course you had to have northern liberals and Republicans pass federal laws and send in the federal jackbooted troops. You couldn't win this one by discussing American ideals, right? If it was only the jackbooted cops/soldiers who could secure inviolate human rights, why did Martin Luther King gain impressive audiences?
The blacks did not have it as bad as another "minority" I can think of. The blacks were obviously valuable workers, with no way to escape, and sometimes they were kept alive. The indians were "savages" that just needed to be killed. Even Abraham Lincoln just thought they should all be killed. We raised armies to do that, and when they couldn't just finish the job, we gave them pitiful little reservations and posted soldiers nearby to make sure they couldn't roam out to hunt. Some of the plains indians were so troublesome we had to have US Grant and our Congress give out free guns and ammo, and free rides on trains across the plains with the express mandate to wipe out the buffalo herds.
This to people who had lived and traded with the trappers for decades.
Government force is always the preferred tool of progressives, right.
I guess I could interpret this as an assertion that a lot of folks never would have opened their doors, or their school district doors, to blacks on the level of acknowledging that all people have inviolate, inate human rights and should be treated with respect and in the eyes of government operations, equality.
I think some people were dissatisfied seeing blacks being treated as second-class or worse, and with blatant disregared for common human rights, with the impudence of government backing up the ignorance it takes to do that.
I think a lot more folks would have been swayed with rhetoric and ideas, with substantial gains in relation to the mistreatment of blacks. I was in the context of my statement attempting to attribute a lot of that to Martin Luther King's speeches as being significant in their effect.
Gandhi in India had achieved something in his non-violent teachings and example which even caused the British government to consider it prudent to give India independence. I don't think that recognizing the strength and power of a truly great teacher is any kind of naivete.