Well, there's no reason we can't do both, but let's start with a preview of the coverage of one of today's events.
And now moving on to the other inspiration for today's Federal Holiday, Jeff Jacoby turns his thoughts to Black patriotism and Martin Luther King Jr..
IT IS often forgotten that Martin Luther King Jr. was a deeply patriotic American.
In King's day, as in ours, there were influential Black Americans — men like Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, Eldridge Cleaver, and H. Rap Brown — who claimed that the American ideal was always a hypocritical lie. That was the opposite of King's view. Based on everything we know about him, MLK would have recoiled from someone like Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama's pastor in Chicago for 20 years, who preached "God damn America" and gloated after 9/11 that "America's chickens are coming home to roost." Never would MLK have endorsed the Black Lives Matter activists who called the American flag "a symbol of hatred," still less approved of those who trampled on the flag to show their contempt for it.
Far from reviling America, its Founding Fathers, and the symbols of its high ideals, King revered them. The civil rights movement, he always said, was "standing up for the best in the American dream."
It is not MLK's actual birthday today; that was back on January 15. His actual birthday and the Federal holiday coincided last year; that won't happen again until 2029. For more on the jiggery-pokery Uncle Stupid plays with his calendar, see the Uniform Monday Holiday Act. There are (apparently) no current plans to move Christmas or New Year's Day to Mondays.
But I hear you asking: is the University Near Here doing anything MLKish this year? Yes it is, as it turns out! Sort of. See the page for UNH 2025 MLK Day of Service.
The Aulbani J. Beauregard Center for Equity, Justice, and Freedom, and the Office of Community, Equity, and Diversity have partnered to bring you this year’s University of New Hampshire Annual MLK Day of Service, which will be held on Saturday, February 1, 2025, from 10 am – 3:30 pm in the MUB Strafford Room.
The University of New Hampshire’s annual MLK Day of Service brings together students, faculty, and staff to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy through service to our local communities. The theme for the 2025 UNH MLK Day of Service is to support people's basic needs. Proceeds from this years' service will benefit UNH Basic Needs Support, Community Action Partnership (CAP) of Strafford County, Pope Memorial Humane Society, and local public schools.
Nothing honors Dr. King more than supporting the local pet shelter!
But you can also sign up to volunteer for…
Rice Sorting
Sort basmati rice into smaller portions to be donated to the UNH Cat's Cupboard. Please note - depending on the pace of your group, you may finish this task earlier than the time posted. NO prior experience needed.
That runs from 10am to 11:30am on Saturday. Apparently that's all the rice that needs sorting for the year.
It didn't used to be this lame, although it was often more irritating. If you're interested, Pun Salad's obituary of UNH's old-style MLK "celebrations" is here.
Also of note:
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Unprotected from bad news: the rest of the country. Jim Geraghty checks the latest from the major newspaper he doesn't work for: Now the New York Times Tells Us: 'Six Key People' Protected Biden from Bad News. Specifically, Dr. Jill, Crackhead Hunter, and … four other people I'd never heard of.
Here's a tidbit I found interesting from the NYT story, which attempts to excuse Biden's addled performance in his debate against Trump:
Two people involved in planning the president’s schedule believe that in hindsight, he should not have been traveling so much during this period. He was exhausted from not one but two trips to Europe and a fund-raiser in California in the weeks before his debate with Mr. Trump on June 27.
"Not one but two". Gee, wonder why they didn't just say "two"?
But in any case, Jim calls bullshit:
[Biden] went to the 80th anniversary of D-Day in France from June 5 to 9. The second trip was to the G7 Summit in Italy from June 12 to 14. He flew directly to Los Angeles for a fundraiser with George Clooney. He was back at the White House 9:30 p.m. June 16.
Biden did not leave the east coast between June 16 and 27, and had no public events on his schedule from June 19 to 27. Those trips had been eleven days earlier! If you can’t recover from jet lag within eleven days, you cannot handle the duties of the president.
Ah, well. Today, we move on to …
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And send the drainage to California. Jack Butler has advice for the incoming administration: The Swamp Is Yours Now, MAGA. Drain It.
When Donald Trump swears at his second inauguration tomorrow to “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States,” it will be more than a return to the presidency for a man who left office four years ago. It will also be a rebuke to his skeptics. Consider one such skeptic, who early in 2023 called Trump “an obstacle to the achievement” of progress on “the important issues he brought to or revived in the conservative mainstream,” and declared that “the future of conservatism — even (especially) a conservatism influenced by Trump’s presidency — now depends on rejecting Trump.”
Who could have been so blinkered, even at a time when Ron DeSantis and others were considering or had already announced presidential primary challenges to Trump, about the possibility of his political resurgence? That would be me. As Trump returns triumphantly to Washington, he can further vindicate his supporters and defy doubters by ensuring that he, those in his administration, and others around him make good on his promise to drain the swamp by dismantling the Beltway-centered governing apparatus of which he will soon assume control.
I'm pretty sure I made some wrong-headed recommendations back in 2023, but I will leave finding them as an exercise for the reader.