Turquoise wrote:
lowing wrote:
For the most part I agree. However, when one builds an image of morality and righteousness for themselves, then preaches it, all with a goal of forwarding an agenda, I find it harder to excuses their trespasses, as those trespasses are more meaningful and their message has less credibility and merit.
How would you react to a book written by Mark Sanford on the sanctity of marriage, or a book written by Don King on the integrity of a good clean fight?
Fair points...
How about this then... MLK had his problems, but his "agenda" was still righteous. I support the spirit of what he achieved even if he himself was a flawed man.
I have no problem with that. The thing is the civil rights movement has nothing to do with the issue of his integrity honesty or morality, his actions do.
Just because MLK championed the movement, it does not deter from the fact that he was a liar, a cheater, a thief, and a fraud.
I will also go out on a limb and say Rosa Parks was more of a champion to that cause than MLK. She was not looking for fame or self promotion. Her heart was pure in that regard.
MLK sought fame, publicity, notoriety and power, ( and he lied cheated and stole his way to that end). Jesse Jackson, and Al Sharpton are of the same ilk.