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AL
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VERBATIM
Today the term "come together" has a much different meaning to some in the black community than it did when I was growing up. It
use to mean that no matter what the differences were between all
Americans that we focused on the things we all had in common and
concentrated on improving them for the benefit of all, especially this
country.
Now,
according to those few, "come together" means that if you don`t agree
with everything I believe, then they cannot possibly improve on the
things we all agree on, for the best interest of all Americans.
While
I and many others might not agree with whom you choose to vote for or
whom you have as your heroes or even which sports programs you root for,
it is understood by reasonable people that you have a right to do so in
America.
On
the other hand, no one has to agree with my Southern history, heritage,
culture or any symbols of it. Just as you are, I'm entitled to
it without interference from anyone in a free country. This is called
respect and if you want respect for those things which you honor and
cherish then you have to afford that same respect for the things all
others hold dear whether you personally agree with them or not.
Today
some in Selma and Memphis are having a come apart over monuments and
parks for Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest. All while no one is complaining
about about those places named in honor of your Civil Rights heroes. Not
because they agree with them but, because they respect your right to do
so no matter what they personally might think of them.
To
claim there is no room for everyone to have a place where they can put
monuments and statues in memory and honor of their heroes is the same
thing the segregationist did to blacks prior to them gaining their civil
rights. Now you practice the same thing against others that make you
the new segregationist and no better than the old segregationist.
To
deny the same rights you claim for yourselves to others is the most
un-American act there is. In order for there to ever be any "coming
together," you must first learn to respect the rights of others, like it
or not.
Billy E. Price
Ashville
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