Talk:International Civil Rights Walk of Fame
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Selection process
[edit]It would be interesting to include a section about how the people are selected for this honor. Many of the most important and influential 1950s and '60s civil rights leaders are not yet members (James Bevel, Diane Nash, Dorothy Cotton, Bernard Lafayette, James Lawson, Claudette Colvin and Ella Baker are just a few) while others not as prominent are listed. And if it's international, Mohandas Gandhi might be considered. Randy Kryn 10:32 December 18, 2012
- In lieu of a section about how people are selected for this honor, and as a way to make the page more accurately reflect the make-up of America's Civil Rights Movement, here is a "game playing" suggestion of a way that the committee can expand their honor: Create a 25 member - or 50 member, but these 25 are my suggestions - induction class in 2015 to honor the 50th anniversary of the Selma Voting Rights Movement. To honor that movement and others those could include - least at some point in the coming years - Ella Baker, James Bevel, Amelia Boynton, Septima Clark, Claudette Colvin, Dorothy Cotton, James Farmer, James Forman, Prathia Hall, Fannie Lou Hamer, Myles Horton, Vernon Johns, John Kennedy, Coretta Scott King, Bernard Lafayette, James Lawson, Bernard Lee, James Meredith, Bob Moses, E.D. Nixon, A. Philip Randolph, Bayard Rustin, Roy Wilkins, and Whitney Young. Them and Mohandas K. Gandhi. That would both honor the 50th anniversary of that important transformative movement and make the wikipedia article look very good. Thanks for reading this. Randy Kryn 23:50 20 February, 2014 (UTC), edited 13:16 21 February, 2014 (UTC)
- Your original point was a good one but I've never come across any useful accounts of how the selection process works – most of what I've seen in the media are just barely rewritten press releases. Your new suggestion needs to be made to the people behind the Walk, not here, as I'm sure you must realize. Wasted Time R (talk) 12:02, 21 February 2014 (UTC)
- I've edited it just now to fit this page better. In lieu of an account of the selection process, and of the difficulty in finding such an account, this idea is presented here as a thought-bubble way for the walk of fame committee to improve the page and to make it more accurately reflect the make-up of America's Civil Rights Movement (not to mention the term "International" used in the original idea of the walk of fame). It was originally worded in such a way as to address the committee, but also shows the extent of who has been left out of their selections, which hopefully is applicable to the article, and thus to the talk page. Thanks for pointing that out. Randy Kryn 13:16 21 February, 2014 (UTC)
- A few years later - I see that one of the 26 names I mentioned, Amelia Boynton Robinson, was added in 2016. The many other major missing Civil Rights Movement leaders would be good additions to the walk and to this page. Randy Kryn (talk) 14:24, 4 October 2018 (UTC)
- I've edited it just now to fit this page better. In lieu of an account of the selection process, and of the difficulty in finding such an account, this idea is presented here as a thought-bubble way for the walk of fame committee to improve the page and to make it more accurately reflect the make-up of America's Civil Rights Movement (not to mention the term "International" used in the original idea of the walk of fame). It was originally worded in such a way as to address the committee, but also shows the extent of who has been left out of their selections, which hopefully is applicable to the article, and thus to the talk page. Thanks for pointing that out. Randy Kryn 13:16 21 February, 2014 (UTC)
- Your original point was a good one but I've never come across any useful accounts of how the selection process works – most of what I've seen in the media are just barely rewritten press releases. Your new suggestion needs to be made to the people behind the Walk, not here, as I'm sure you must realize. Wasted Time R (talk) 12:02, 21 February 2014 (UTC)