In a symposium at National Review Online about where Dr. King’s dream stands, 50 years after his historic speech, Anthony Bradley writes:
Fifty years ago, Dr. King provided America with a provocative vision, in which our republic would e a place of greater political and economic liberty for African Americans. However, in 2013, when we examine the black underclass in cities like Detroit, Chicago, and Washington, D.C., we can see how the politics of progressivism singlehandedly turned King’s dream into a nightmare.
For example, e black families were obliterated by welfare programs that emerged out of the Johnson administration’s failed “War on Poverty.” Welfare destroyed the incentives for men to marry and care for their children, remain employed, and save money for the long term. Today, as a result of progressivist social visions, only about 26 percent of black women pared with 51 percent for white women. In 1950, 64 percent of African American women pared with 67 percent for white women. Without flourishing families, e blacks were doomed to government dependency and cyclical poverty.
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