It was a fascinatingly specific error (yes, let's just call it an "error," shall we?), but they left it up overnight, finally deleting it this morning, and a lot of the Twitterverse noticed. My personal favorite response was this.
Let's remember that Biloxi, Mississippi was the site of the infamous "wade-ins" in 1960, to protest the fact that the miles of available beach in Biloxi were "whites only," with only tiny "colored" bits of beach available. (That one didn't end well for the protesters in Biloxi, by the way, although it did bring the city to national attention).when u see what @CityofBiloxi did for the day acknowledging you pic.twitter.com/C6PufnXECK— Large ☀️☀️of Anarchy (@JumpinJackFlask) January 14, 2017
Of course, the whole state has a terrible history in the civil rights annals - they didn't call the movie "Alabama Burning," after all.
And let's add this little detail to that list of Mississippi's record on civil rights:
- In 1910, the state passed a law to honor January 19 as Robert E Lee's birthday.
- In 1983, Reagan made Martin Luther King's Day a federal holiday, observed on the third Monday in January
- In 1987, calling it a "cost-saving measure," the state of Mississippi combined the two holidays, in a move that most people understand was a backhanded insult to King (MLK Day was already a Federal holiday - you want to lose a holiday? Accept that you probably shouldn't have a day honoring somebody who committed treason.
Remember, as we enter the Trump Era, undercover racists are going to keep trying to do this kind of crap.
It IS Martin Luther King Day! That's the legal name for the holiday.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, I don't like Presidents Day. I don't revere Bush as much as I do George Washington, or Thomas Jefferson. I'd rather go back to Washington's birthday and Lincoln's birthday, but corporate America won that issue also.
Just as I don't like it when every kid gets a trophy just for playing.
There are winners and losers, and there are better people than others. It's un-American to try and take the individuality out of achievements.
I don't think Lincoln's birthday was all that popular down here in the bilges of America either. Calling it president's day allows you to ignore him and still get the day off.
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