Iran’s New Friends Make It More Dangerous Than Ever
Russia and China don’t fear the ayatollahs’ nuclear program.
September 14, 2023
A campaigner for civil rights and friend of the Jews, inspired by his faith.
A close confidant of Martin Luther King, Jr., Bayard Rustin was the chief organizer of the march on Washington where King gave his “I have a dream” speech. Because he was a black leftist as well as an open homosexual, he is today often hailed from the perspective of “intersectionality”—a school of thought fixated on hierarchies of victimhood, and one that inevitably turns its adherents against the Jews. Such a tendentious use of Rustin’s legacy does little justice to his own thinking, writes James Kirchick. Instead, Kirchick focuses on Rustin’s “intellectual fearlessness” and “resistance to party dogma,” which led him to become fiercely anti-Communist while remaining a socialist, break with his youthful pacificism, perceptively criticize black radicals, and maintain a staunch commitment to Zionism:
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Login or SubscribeRussia and China don’t fear the ayatollahs’ nuclear program.
A campaigner for civil rights and friend of the Jews, inspired by his faith.
History recent and ancient.
Two poets and their argument over the sacred language.
Seeking Relatives.