...singular acts by ordinary, everyday people ... MM
Posted: December 1st, 2005, 12:44 pm
Reuters:
http://today.reuters.com/news/default.aspx
Editor's Choice: 24 Hours in Pictures
http://photos.reuters.com/Pictures/slid ... 05&src=cms
Reuters does their 24 Hours in Pictures where they touch upon issues around the globe ... the photo montages are always so touching. Today.. this one touched me the most:

In my email box this morning ... was Michael Moore's most recent letter; and the two just seem to go together.
50 Years Ago Today... From Michael Moore
December 1, 2005
Friends,
I just thought we should all pause for a moment today to remember the simple act of courage, defiance and dignity committed by Rosa Parks when she refused to move to the back of the bus because the law said she had the wrong skin color. The greatest moments in history, the ones that have truly mattered and have taken us to a better place, are made up of scores of these singular acts by ordinary, everyday people who could no longer tolerate the crap and the nonsense of those in charge.
Today, whether it is a student who holds a sit-in to get the army recruiters off his campus, or the mother of a dead soldier who refuses to leave the front gate of the president's ranch, we continue to be saved by brave people who risk ridicule and rejection but end up turning huge tides of public opinion in the direction of righteousness. We owe them enormous debts of gratitude. It is not easy to stand up for what is right, especially when everyone else is afraid to leave the comfortable path of conformity.
Rosa Parks may have been alone on that bus at the moment of her arrest but she wasn't alone for long. The old order was shaken, the world was upended and, as a people, we were given a chance for a bit of redemption.
Perhaps the best way to celebrate this most important day in American history is to ask yourself what it is that you can do today to make a difference. What risk can you take to move the ball forward? What is that one thing you've been wanting to say to your co-workers or classmates that you've been afraid to say -- but in your heart of hearts you know needs to be said? Why wait another day to say it or do it?
There is probably no better way to honor Rosa Parks -- and yourself -- than for you to put a stop to an injustice you see, not allowing it to continue for one more second. Do something. Then send me an email (contributions@michaelmoore.com) and tell all of us what you did (I'll post as many as I can).
Fifty years later, the bus we're on could use a few more people simply saying, "No. I'm sorry. I've had enough. I'm not going to take it anymore."
Yours,
Michael Moore
www.michaelmoore.com
http://today.reuters.com/news/default.aspx
Editor's Choice: 24 Hours in Pictures
http://photos.reuters.com/Pictures/slid ... 05&src=cms
Reuters does their 24 Hours in Pictures where they touch upon issues around the globe ... the photo montages are always so touching. Today.. this one touched me the most:

I don't know why it's touched me so, I knew nothing of the situation before this photo montage ... none the less, this woman is the one who moves me most. Something in her face ...An elderly woman participates in a candlelight vigil in Sydney December 1, 2005 on the eve of the scheduled execution of Australian man Tuong Van Nguyen in Singapore. The Australian government dropped diplomacy on Thursday and called Singapore's plan to hang a young Australian drug smuggler "barbaric". Australia has repeatedly sought clemency for Van Nguyen, 25, who was convicted of smuggling 400 grams (0.9 lb) of heroin from Cambodia through Singapore's Changi airport in 2002.
01 Dec 2005 REUTERS/David Gray
In my email box this morning ... was Michael Moore's most recent letter; and the two just seem to go together.
50 Years Ago Today... From Michael Moore
December 1, 2005
Friends,
I just thought we should all pause for a moment today to remember the simple act of courage, defiance and dignity committed by Rosa Parks when she refused to move to the back of the bus because the law said she had the wrong skin color. The greatest moments in history, the ones that have truly mattered and have taken us to a better place, are made up of scores of these singular acts by ordinary, everyday people who could no longer tolerate the crap and the nonsense of those in charge.
Today, whether it is a student who holds a sit-in to get the army recruiters off his campus, or the mother of a dead soldier who refuses to leave the front gate of the president's ranch, we continue to be saved by brave people who risk ridicule and rejection but end up turning huge tides of public opinion in the direction of righteousness. We owe them enormous debts of gratitude. It is not easy to stand up for what is right, especially when everyone else is afraid to leave the comfortable path of conformity.
Rosa Parks may have been alone on that bus at the moment of her arrest but she wasn't alone for long. The old order was shaken, the world was upended and, as a people, we were given a chance for a bit of redemption.
Perhaps the best way to celebrate this most important day in American history is to ask yourself what it is that you can do today to make a difference. What risk can you take to move the ball forward? What is that one thing you've been wanting to say to your co-workers or classmates that you've been afraid to say -- but in your heart of hearts you know needs to be said? Why wait another day to say it or do it?
There is probably no better way to honor Rosa Parks -- and yourself -- than for you to put a stop to an injustice you see, not allowing it to continue for one more second. Do something. Then send me an email (contributions@michaelmoore.com) and tell all of us what you did (I'll post as many as I can).
Fifty years later, the bus we're on could use a few more people simply saying, "No. I'm sorry. I've had enough. I'm not going to take it anymore."
Yours,
Michael Moore
www.michaelmoore.com