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kdsherpa's avatar

One of the things I love the most about "Steady" is your ability as a 90+ year-old reporter to look backward in time to stories in which you were deeply involved. You have a perspective that no other current political writer has, that I have found. I have followed you since I was 10 years old (maybe earlier), and now I'm almost 70. I was there, when MLK, Jr. gave his speech. It was accidental: we were visiting the Smithsonian on our summer trip to see grandparents in Washington, DC. My parents commented on how completely empty the buildings were. Then, as we left one building to go to another, there were wave after wave, thousands and thousands of African American people marching to the Mall. All were immaculately dressed, and walked in neat rows. My father said, "Kids! Get back in the building!" My mother said, "No. Stay here. Look at these people. These are the bravest people you will ever see in your life." And we did. We four children, and our parents, stood, and witnessed our fellow Americans having the courage to take their future into their own hands. It was awe-inspiring. I remember it as vividly as if it were happening right now.

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Emmanuel Annor's avatar

Dan Rather’s long memory and experience are what frighten the antagonists of critical race theory. Why tell a story that there once was a Black preacher who so believed in America that he challenged the white power elite to live up to the true meaning of the creed enshrined in the founding document, “that all men are created equal.” Teaching such a history would make little Ashley feel bad about herself in school.

Isn’t it a sad irony that a country that has produced the most Nobel laureates, sent men to the moon, invented the internet and gifted the world with cutting-edge research and knowledge would spawn a generation of politicians who spurn science, history and truth?

Where do we go next? Dr. MLK would ask? Backward, if you are a realist. But fight on, if you’re an optimist. Thank you Dan for sharing your in-the-moment story.

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