Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Yeah, we want Civility!! None of that uppity stuff - Martin Luther King Jr. was a Teddy Bear

Hey Folks -

Pretty soon we'll be celebrating "Independence Day" in honor of "The War of Independence."

Isn't that nice!! Not a word of "revolution."

We don't mention that!! Don't want to stir anything up. Concentrate on hot dogs and fireworks, parades and barbecues. Don't mention overthrowing governments that oppress the people - too threatening to our apple pie civility.

So let it be with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. - we don't have a "race problem" in the good ol' USA - we don't need some commie Chinese Mao-sculptor carving an uppity statue of Dr. King !!! - don't need to threaten civility on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

King was just a big Teddy Bear - let's not have a memorial that could make people think he was hated, despised, demonised, jailed, threatened, and murdered because he dared demand - confrontationally - that "American values" include ALL Americans . That could mar civility.

The radio story below deals with the D.C. Memorial controversy. It's clear to me that what is important to the power ginks is keeping everything warm and fuzzy - avoiding the truth to maintain order - the social order - the pecking order.

- Uke Man

http://www.npr.org/templates/player/mediaPlayer.html?action=1&t=1&islist=false&id=90348208&m=90359645

in case the link doesn't work, here's the transcript:


Commission Calls for MLK Statue's Redesign
by Elizabeth Blair

All Things Considered, May 11, 2008 ·

The Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial is going to be big. The site for it is a four-acre plot on the Tidal Basin, not far from the Jefferson and Lincoln memorials on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

Water, stone and trees are the primary elements in a design inspired by a line in the Rev. King's "I Have A Dream" speech:


"With this faith, we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair a stone of hope."
In the original design for the MLK memorial, a bust of King emerges almost organically out of the side of the Stone of Hope. To get to the stone, a visitor would walk through two rocks symbolizing the Mountain of Despair. That design won the competition set up by the U.S. Fine Arts Commission, the federal agency that approves anything that gets built on the National Mall.


But in the new model for the statue, King is much bigger. His arms are crossed defiantly and he has a solemn look on his face.


In a letter calling for revisions to the statue, Thomas Luebke, who heads the commission, said King's character had gone from "meditative" to "confrontational."


"It looks more like the Stone of Hope is just background. There's now a more full body sculpture of Dr. King. It's a much more rigid, symmetrical stance," Luebke said.


The architects of the memorial are considering what modifications they'll make to meet the commission's request. But Harry Johnson, president of the Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial Foundation, likes the idea of King standing tall.


He says he agrees King's facial expression needs softening, but he wants the statue to be an expression of strength.


"The bottom line is, do you want an African-American man not standing tall?" Johnson says. "The Dr. King we want to see is a warrior of peace, not a warrior of wars."


The new design for the statue was carved by Chinese sculptor Lei Yixin. And any controversy about his work is fodder for the people who opposed the decision to hire him in the first place.


The MLK National Memorial Foundation was criticized for not hiring an American artist. Lei has carved many Chinese officials over the years, including Communist leader Mao Zedong.


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