It's MLK Day, the day in America when politicians who absolutely would have opposed Martin Luther King Jr. quote him to cast a sheen of legitimacy on their causes.
MLK Day is also the day when people say they are inspired by MLK Jr., despite undermining his legacy.

Left: MLK Jr. at the signing of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
Right: The person most responsible for blocking a restoration of VRA, refusing to even give it a vote in the Senate.
MLK Day is the day when people like Ted Cruz seek to repurpose MLK Jr., pretending that a man who led protests and argued for radical notions of social equality is actually a conservative hero, alongside Churchill and Reagan.
As an immigrant, one of the most insightful things I read was Huntington's Promise of Disharmony: the idea that American politics was a long battle between its ideals and actions. MLK Day is a prime example of people trying to claim those ideals *despite* their actions.
MLK has become a latter day Founding Father - everyone claims some nominal allegiance to him in order to legitimize their political standing.
But he is also too close to us for this to really work - the issues he fought for are out issues today. He would have been 91 this year.
At the center of MLK's philosophy is a call for robust government intervention on issues of voting rights, racial discrimination, fair wages, housing and other social rights. And so it becomes more patently hypocritical to claim him if you opposed his stances on those issues.
Anyway, happy MLK Day. If we allow him to be turned into a silent statue, we effectively give up on learning from the real person.

Feel free to reply with the worst examples of MLK misappropriations on this day.
Whole thread of MLK misappropriations here. Rand Paul is esp. bad since he suggested that the Civil Rights Act was excessive: “It’s not all about race relations. It is about controlling property, ultimately.” cnn.com/2014/07/02/pol…
The White House chose today to release its "1776" report, which argues that MLK and the civil rights movement were betrayed by undefined "programs" and "identity politics" which are, in fact, the legacy of John Calhoun. Just insane revisionist history.

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More from @donmoyn

18 Jan
This is not the first time that student surveys have been used to create exaggerated fears that students are opposed to free speech, and the liberal students are the worst transgressors. If you have story to tell, its not hard to get the numbers to line up with it.
The truth of it is that most of us are not survey method experts, and even those who are are not going to dig into the methods. We just look at the headlines framed by the authors. So its all the more important to do it right. Prior example (thread).
One technique used in both the Thompson Center & RealClear Politics/Fire survey to exaggerate liberal intolerance is to use questions about issues which liberals are more sensitive toward, but not having a equivalent set of questions that would draw out conservative students.
Read 8 tweets
17 Jan
The most striking thing about looking back on the attack of a professor who correctly identified the threat of a Trump Presidency is that those making the attacks still don’t think they did anything wrong and see themselves as victims.
By way of background, Ken is a friend and co-author. He tagged me b/c I blogged & tweeted about what happened at the time as an example of the ecosystem of right wing attacks on academia
this piece @HdxAcademy: heterodoxacademy.org/blog/academic-…
& thread:
.@KellyMeyerhofer, a Madison reporter did something I was always tempted to do: she went back to those who drove the attack on the faculty. Rep. Dave Murphy, and a student who had worked in Paul Ryans office. madison.com/wsj/news/local…
Read 8 tweets
17 Jan
So, an emerging conventional wisdom is that the rapid COVID vaccine development and slow vaccine rollout is evidence of private sector success and government failure respectively. This is wrong for a number of reasons. 1/
The rapid vaccine development depended upon:
*building on years of NIH research
*massive government financial subsidization
*turned govt regulatory sequential processes into parallel processes
*used emergency use authorization to waive regulations
newyorker.com/magazine/2020/…
We should think about the vaccine development as an extraordinary public private partnership. The private sector would not have developed it on its own, but were very much necessary. 3/
Read 9 tweets
13 Jan
Those seeking to downplay an insurrection have made it a conventional wisdom that protestors were not prosecuted this summer. That is wildly untrue. Protestors faced felonies and terrorism charges often for little more than property damage or pushing back against a police charge.
Again, and again, prosecutors and police targeted protestors with the harshest possible penalties. Here are a couple of examples.
DOJ officials made it a priority to prosecute protestors to the maximum extent of the law, including applying terrorism laws. theintercept.com/2020/08/27/bla…
Read 4 tweets
11 Jan
New from me @ArcDigi: calls for unity or moving forward are pointless as long as Trump supporters believe the election was a fraud.
As long as this Big Lie is not debunked by Trump, the GOP, and right-wing media, expect more political violence.
arcdigital.media/the-big-lie-de…
I wrote this piece b/c of statements like this from Graham. Yes, Trump finally conceded he will not be President but he refuses to tell his followers the truth: that he lost a legitimate election. If the GOP sees this as good enough, he will repeat the Big Lie for years to come.
It is unlikely that Trump will ever reject the Big Lie. But a willingness to do so serves as a reasonable criterion in assessing if GOP politicians and conservative media stand with American democracy or not. Some encouraging signs. arcdigital.media/the-big-lie-de…
Read 4 tweets
11 Jan
Thread: I'd argue that its not just that defaults matter, but that they matter more in situations of choice overload where the choices are enormously complex. Medicare is just extraordinarily complex to navigate.
Nudges work when people need information or to direct attention. That is not the problem here. It is that people cannot manage the learning costs. They need help, not a nudge. Other options: fewer choices, or use AI to create better matches
Making bad decisions more costly does not help people when they are overwhelmed by the volume of information that they are being asked to process, and don't understand the outcomes.
Read 4 tweets

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