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CELEBRATING JULY 2, AMERICA’S OTHER INDEPENDENCE DAY

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Fifty-nine years ago today, legal apartheid in America came to an abrupt end. President Lyndon Johnson addressed the nation from the East Room of the White House:

Afterward, ours was a changed nation, prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, and national origin. The back of Jim Crow, with its false promise of “separate but equal” public accommodations, was broken, as America fulfilled its most sacred ideal: “All men are created equal.”

On July 2, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law the Civil Rights Act, which ended our nation’s apartheid system.

Since then, the Civil Rights Act has become as fundamental to our national identity as any of our founding documents, deeply rooted in the fabric of a nation that strives to be “more perfect” and to move ever forward.

In a deeply-divided America, where faith in government has ebbed, and affirmative action is under siege, it’s worth reflecting on the fruition of the Civil Rights Act as a snapshot of our country at its best …

A time when Martin Luther King and an army of non-violent warriors put their bodies on the line to expose the worst of bigotry and racial tyranny …

Source : CBS NEWS

When a bipartisan Congress – Democrats and Republicans alike – joined together to overcome a bloc of obstructionist Southern Democrats who staged the longest filibuster in Senate history, and force passage of the bill …

And when a President put the weight of his office behind racial justice, dismissing adverse political consequences by responding, “What the hell’s the presidency for?”

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