Publish Date: 30 October 2011 - 17:29
As many people have voted for Obama in 2008 presidential elections in the hope of continuing the way initiated by Martin Luther king, Occupy movement has created a good opportunity to test the veracity of the Obama promises.
First
Some days ago, President Obama inaugurated the new memorial of Martin Luther King, Jr., the most remarkable leader of the Civil rights, and addressed a speech that "change can come if you don't give up".
This monument is in National Mall and is built in the honor of a man who was neither a president nor a champion of war. King, a Nobel Peace laureate, is also an Afro-American to whom a memorial is being attributed.
By the first time that the name of "Obama” is being reiterated as the candidate for the United States presidential election of 2008, people have talked about his Afro-American origin, his dark skin to his resemblance to MLK. Obama’s presidential campaign slogans have stressed this similarity ever more. His fans were eagerly supporting a man who had the MLK’s attitudes and way of thinking, and someone who is from the people.
We don’t know or maybe we would like you to answer our question that if the MLK was not an statue and the president Obama was not walking in his memorial, but in his humble house, what would the president hear from him? Who knows, maybe the statue have spoken some words to Obama! Nevertheless, these daydreaming’s won’t lead us anywhere, but seriously speaking, if the MLK were alive today, was he supposed to be among the Wall Street protests holding a piece of cardboard or working as a counselor or an assistant for the Obama administration?
http://www.barackobama.ir/en/news/89/if-martin-luther-king-has-not-been-killed-and-were-alive,-would-he-take-side-in-favor-of-obama-or-he-was-supporting-the-occupy-protesters



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