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Flint Urged to Help Lead America in Recovering from Racism and Bias

During the 40th Annual Citywide Tribute Dinner in Honor of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Michigan Department of Civil Rights Director Dr. Agustin V. Arbulu called on the legacy of the civil rights icon to encourage Flint to play a leading role in creating a new form of policy and decision making for the state and the country. Dr. Arbulu was the keynote speaker.  His remarks were delivered Thursday, Jan. 17 at the Riverfront Banquet Center in downtown Flint.

“Martin Luther King, Jr. left us a deep and complex legacy of calling on the better angels of the American Promise,” Arbulu said. He acknowledged that Dr. King’s promise, that all men are created equal, has not yet come to fruition.

Arbulu reminded attendees of the Michigan Civil Rights Commission’s groundbreaking report “The Flint Water Crisis: Systemic Racism Through the Lens of Flint,” which outlines the more than a century of racialized laws and socialization that laid the ground work for the crisis.

To prevent another catastrophic situation like the Flint Water Crisis from happening again,

Dr. Agustin V. Arbulu was the keynote speaker.

Arbulu encouraged Flint to help “develop a system of decision making that directly undermines the implicit bias of centuries of white supremacy and systemic racism.”

Arbulu’s clarion call was delivered in a speech titled “A Great Nation is a Compassionate Nation.” Arbulu used the speech to build on Dr. King’s celebrated quote, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice,” in reflecting on the healing of systemic racism both in Flint and the county.

But Arbulu also assured the residents of Flint that MDCR will “stand with you in standing up and speaking out against a broken system.”

“We will be by your side as together we divine new approaches to democracy – approaches which call us to not just simple equality, but to equity and compassion for all people.”

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