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Video: MLK risked life for civil rights movement

Video: MLK risked life for civil rights movement
Martin Luther King Jr: Risked Life for Civil Rights Movement | Biography

On this federal holiday in which we honor the achievements of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., it is important that we take a moment to reflect upon the strength of this man who strongly advocated against racial segregation and discrimination through nonviolent resistance.

Some 50 years later, the young poet Amanda Gorman reflected on King's dream at President Biden's inauguration, as she spoke of “never-ending shade” and experiences in “the belly of the beast” that she as a Black woman in America has experienced. Yet, she too has a dream, as she said the “dawn is ours” and “we’ve weathered and witnessed a nation that isn’t broken but simply unfinished.”


Our work is indeed unfinished as our nation has yet to fulfill the motto e pluribus unum: Out of many, we are one. America is exceptional because it was launched with a dream to take the diverse many and make them one. Let us not rest until we fulfill this dream.

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Kamala Harris greeting a large crowd

Vice President Kamala Harris is greeted by staff during her arrival at the White House on Nov. 12.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Democrats have work to do to reclaim the mantle of change

“Democrats are like the Yankees,” said one of the most memorable tweets to come across on X after Election Day. “Spent hundreds of millions of dollars to lose the big series and no one got fired or was held accountable.”

Too sad. But that’s politics. The disappointment behind that tweet was widely shared, but no one with any experience in politics truly believes that no one will be held accountable.

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Joe Biden and Hunter Biden

President Joe Biden and son Hunter Biden stepping out of a bookstore in Nantucket, Mass. on Nov. 29, 2024.

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

Pardon who? Hunter Biden case renews ethical debate over use and limits of peculiar presidential power

The decision by President Joe Biden to pardon his son, Hunter, despite previously suggesting he would not do so, has reopened debate over the use of the presidential pardon.

Hunter Biden will be spared potential jail time not simply over his convictions for gun and tax offenses, but any “offenses against the United States which he has committed or may have committed or taken part in during the period Jan. 1, 2014 through December 1, 2024.”

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