It’s ridiculous and, in some ways, a folly to say, ‘Can’t we all just get along?’ But it is the truest thing that I don’t understand why we can’t.
Luis Alberto Urrea
It’s ridiculous and, in some ways, a folly to say, ‘Can’t we all just get along?’ But it is the truest thing that I don’t understand why we can’t.
Luis Alberto Urrea
Vincent Harding was wise about how the vision of the civil rights movement might speak to 21st-century realities. He reminded us that the movement of the ’50s and ’60s was spiritually as well as politically vigorous; it aspired to a “beloved community,” not merely a tolerant integrated society. He pursued this through patient-yet-passionate cross-cultural, cross-generational relationships. And he posed and lived a question that is freshly in our midst: Is America possible?
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April 14, 2005
The American public supports the principle of capital punishment, but there is a growing consensus among Jewish and Christian thinkers — across traditional liberal/conservative lines — that it should be abolished in this country or suspended while the system for imposing it is made more just. Reflections on justice, forgiveness, and the nature of God shed new light on America’s death penalty debate.
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