Global Times

King’s dream shattered as incidents of racial hatred increase in US

- By Yang Shilong The author is a writer with the Xinhua News Agency. The article first appeared in Xinhua. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

Nearly 50 years after Martin Luther King (MLK) Jr.’s assassinat­ion, the famed civil rights activist’s dream is yet to be realized. Racism remains a serious problem in a still divided America.

“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character,” said MLK in his iconic “I Have A Dream” speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, Washington D.C. on August 28, 1963.

If MLK were alive today, “he would be disappoint­ed by our large homeless population­s, our failing schools and struggling healthcare system,” said Tchanori Kone, a fifth-grade girl from Houston, Texas, in her speech, which won first place last weekend at the Annual Gardere MLK Jr. Oratory Competitio­n.

Few Americans would disagree with Kone. Although racism and race-based discrimina­tion are considered evil by the majority of Americans, racism is still a serious problem in the US today. Often it can be more subtle or even built into the system, as seen by racial profiling by law enforcemen­t officers and other government officials, as some experts pointed out.

Radical US fringe groups came into the spotlight last August in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, after a violent white nationalis­t rally resulted in the death of a 32-year-old woman, who was killed by a white supremacis­t when he plowed a car into a crowd of counter protesters.

The number of hate crimes in 2016 stood at 6,121, almost a 5 percent rise from 2015, according to statistics released by the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion. About half of those incidents were motivated by race.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, which keeps tabs on hate groups, documented 917 active hate groups in the US in 2016. The number was 892 in 2015.

Also on the decline is America’s economic inequality. In 1980, the top one percent of adult Americans earned on average 27 times more than the bottom 50 percent. Today, they earn 81 times more.

As of 2016, the latest year of data publicatio­n, the average hourly wage for black workers is $14.92, 25 percent less than that of white workers, according to an analysis of the current status of economic equality between black and white Americans published recently by the Economic Policy Institute. However, the wealth gap significan­tly widens when measured by median household income and is even worse by median family net worth, the report said. Median income for black households is 40 percent lower than that for white households. Median household net worth is just one-10th of their white counterpar­ts.

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