AP – Hoping to win the hearts of Southern conservatives, Newt Gingrich leaned into his argument that President Barack Obama is a “food stamp president” and that poor people should want paychecks, not handouts — a pitch that earned him a standing ovation in South Carolina during a presidential debate on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

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GOP campaign rhetoric raising racial concerns
(AP)

AP – President Barack Obama evoked Martin Luther King Jr.’s own words about public service Monday as Obama and his family celebrated the life of the late civil rights leader with a volunteer project.

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Obamas mark King’s birthday with volunteer outing
(AP)

SC rally marks MLK day with voting rights message (AP)

On January 16, 2012, in Uncategorized, by BiddieDezeeuw515

AP – Thousands commemorating the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday Monday outside South Carolina’s capitol heard a message that wouldn’t have been out of place during the halcyon days of the civil rights movement a half-century ago: the need to protect all citizens’ right to vote.

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SC rally marks MLK day with voting rights message
(AP)

Reuters – President Barack Obama on Monday paid tribute to slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. by helping build a library reading nook at a local school, saying service and diversity make America the “strongest, most extraordinary country on earth.”

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Obama honors Martin Luther King Jr with school project
(Reuters)

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has ordered a disputed inscription on the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington D.C. be changed. It reads, “I was a drum major for justice, peace and righteousness.’’ (Charles Dharapak/Associated Press)

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has ordered an inscription carved into the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington be changed, after complaints that the quote does not accurately reflect the civil rights leader’s words. The inscription, “I was a drum major for justice, peace and righteousness,” paraphrases a sermon King delivered in 1968, two months before he was assassinated: “If you want to say that I was a drum major, say that I was a drum major for justice. Say that I was a drum major for peace. I was a drum major for righteousness. And all of the other shallow things will not matter.” Poet Maya Angelou was one of the leading critics of the inscription when the memorial was dedicated last year . As The Blaze previously reported , Angelou slammed the quote, saying it makes King look like “an arrogant twit” outside its proper context. According to the Washington Post , Salazar has given the National Park Service 30 days to come up with a more accurate alternative. “This is important because Dr. King and his presence on the Mall is a forever presence for the United States of America, and we have to make sure that we get it right,” Salazar told the Post. Ed Jackson Jr., the executive architect of the $120 million project, previously said King’s words were shortened due to space constraints. He said in an emailed statement to the Associated Press Friday that the cost to make changes to the inscription will be assessed but none of the existing stone work will be removed. “A few very carefully selected words will be added to the existing phrase; that will further amplify his statement about his role in America during the mid-20th century as a leader, a social advocate, a messenger, a voice of the people … for freedom, justice, hope and peace,” Jackson said. Harry Johnson, president of the King Memorial Foundation, told the AP it wasn’t yet clear what the alternatives might be. The group would look at all the ways a change could be made, he said. The ongoing inscription dust-up is just one of the controversies that’s surrounded the King memorial. Others have complained that its sculptor Lei Yixin is Chinese, not American, and have charged that King’s stern-looking facial expression does not portray his peaceful nature .

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Interior Sec. Orders Quote on MLK Memorial Be Changed Following Complaints

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Rev. Jesse Jackson addressed a crowd of Occupy London protesters Thursday, during which he said Jesus, Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela were all Occupiers.

Rev. Jesse Jackson told a crowd of Occupy London protesters that they’re in good company as their demonstrations stretch past the two-month mark, because Jesus was an Occupier as well. “Jesus was an Occupier, born under a death warrant, a Jew by religion, born in poverty under Roman occupation,” Jackson told the 200-person crowd in front of St. Paul’s Cathedral Thursday, MSNBC reported . ”Gandhi was an Occupier, Martin Luther King was an Occupier, [Nelson] Mandela was an Occupier.” London’s Occupy movement has been going strong since October, camping out on the steps of St. Paul’s Cathedral. Jackson urged them to hold strong to their convictions, insisting that King would absolutely support the movement if he were still alive, according to French news agency AFP . “If Dr. King was here today, he’d be occupying. Occupying is a just cause, a moral cause,” said Jackson, who was an aide to the late civil rights leader. That King would have approved of the Occupy Wall Street movement is a call that was heard during the dedication of his national memorial in Washington, D.C. in October. Leading the crowd in a chant of “Keep hope alive! Keep hope alive!” Jackson’s speech touched on other familiar themes of poverty, capitalism and homelessness, the Telegraph reported . “We need a new bank policy, we have lost checks and balances in the system,” he said. “The Occupy cause is a moral cause, a global spirit. It’s a just cause and they shouldn’t be dismissed but heard.”

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Jesse Jackson: ‘Jesus was an Occupier’

A couple of days ago in the Jolt , I wrote: Part of me marvels that so many still find [President Obama] so likeable, and I can’t help but get the feeling that a lot of people are wedded to the notion that the first African-American president of the United States would be a healing, wise, visionary statesman, like the second coming of Martin Luther King, Jr., instead of an over-promising, under-delivering, self-pitying narcissist. Keep reading this post . . .

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Obama Supporters and the ‘Sunken Costs’ Theory

Midday snacks 11.29.11

On November 30, 2011, in Uncategorized, by

Happy Tuesday! BREAKING: Herman Cain is ” reassessing ” whether he’ll stay in the race. Shaq says President Obama has work to do, just like Martin Luther King , Jr. did. Like guns? Retired Navy Seals chief names his top five favorite assault rifles. Obama wants to ask you for “a favor.” Jon Huntsman doesn’t like how “cozy” Wall Street and Washington are.

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Midday snacks 11.29.11

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Shameless, simply shameless. After listening to many wonderful speakers (and some who decided to interject their own political messages) discuss Martin Luther King, Jr., (NM)President Obama couldn’t resist interjecting his own far left politics and pandering (Washington Times) Drawing parallels between civil rights legend Martin Luther King Jr. and his own leadership challenges, President Obama on

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Obama Hijacks MLK, Jr. Celebration to Support Occupy Movement