Paul Krugman: How Fares the Dream?
“I have a dream,” declared Martin Luther King, in a speech that has lost
none of its power to inspire. And some of that dream has come true.
When King spoke in the summer of 1963, America was a nation that denied
basic rights to millions of its citizens, simply because their skin was
the wrong color. Today racism is no longer embedded in law. And while it
has by no means been banished from the hearts of men, its grip is far
weaker than once it was.
To say the obvious: to look at a photo
of President Obama with his cabinet is to see a degree of racial
openness — and openness to women, too — that would have seemed almost
inconceivable in 1963. When we observe Martin Luther King’s Birthday, we
have something very real to celebrate: the civil rights movement was
one of America’s finest hours, and it made us a nation truer to its own
ideals.
Yet if King could see America now, I believe that he would be
disappointed, and feel that his work was nowhere near done. He dreamed
of a nation in which his children “will not be judged by the color of
their skin but by the content of their character.” But what we actually
became is a nation that judges people not by the color of their skin —
or at least not as much as in the past — but by the size of their
paychecks. And in America, more than in most other wealthy nations, the
size of your paycheck is strongly correlated with the size of your
father’s paycheck.
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
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