One is that educational strides have been great, economic and housing, less, but still improvement.
I don’t think the primary schooling educational “strides” have been great, but rather we have simply lowered the bar tremendously for everyone thus allowing virtually everyone who makes it to school to graduate.
Our justice system as a whole is a black eye on this nation, competing with China North Korea for the most oppressive incarceration rate.
I am also a strong opponent of our justice system, but to compare it with China or NK is ridiculous. We don’t lock up our citizens for political dissent, and we don’t ship a million Uigers to concentration “re-education” camps.
The biggest problem with our judicial system is that it has become a Judicial-Industrial system where a primary purpose of the police, attorneys, courts, bondsmen, clerks, etc is to make money from those who are thrust into the system.
End the war on drugs. It affects the poor disproportionally.
Drug abuse also affects the poor disproportionally. I am pretty libertarian on drugs, but in my job I see the scourge of meth on every shift. It just utterly destroys families and lives on a scale that is hard to comprehend.
palliative care for the unwilling.
What does “palliative care for the willing” look like? We give them injections of their favorite poison until they die?
Integrate the country, not just the south. Forced integration was, in the long run, the best thing that happened to the South. It is regretful that this has not been extended everywhere.
We did, and it was a disaster. Forced busing of kids to “integrate” them was one of the ways that government intervention destroyed vibrant black communities.
I grew up 4 blocks from a small elementary school, walked to school in Kindergarden and 1st grade. Had several black classmates who, for some reason unbeknownst to me at the time, didn’t play with us after school/weekends because they lived a long way away and took the bus.
Then in 2nd grade I was forced to be bused to the other side of town to a school in a black neighborhood. No choice in the matter, the government told my parents I had to get on that bus every day.
School was pretty much the same except…none of my neighborhood friends were in my class. My parents didn’t know my teacher, or my principal, or the lunch lady, or the janitor. It was much more difficult for my dad to make it to the school if he was needed (like when I got a minor injury). And by the time I got home from the bus-ride I didn’t have time to go play with my neighborhood friends.
There’s your forced integration…
but peaceful protests aren’t getting it done.
Because protestors aren’t doing it right.
Look at the tactics that DID make great changes, like MLK, and then do that.
Until the time for a true revolution. Are we there yet? No, not yet.