Memphis museum plans events to celebrate Martin Luther King Day

A new photography exhibit, a blood drive and food donations are among the planned highlights of the National Civil Rights Museum's celebration of the holiday honoring the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in Tennessee.

Each year, the Memphis-based museum hosts events to remember King, the civil rights leader who was fatally shot here on April 4, 1968. The museum is located on the site of old Lorraine Motel, where King was shot while standing on a balcony.

The holiday celebrating King's life and legacy is Monday. Among the museum's planned events is the launch of "Tarred Healing," a photographic exhibition by Black photographer Cornell Watson. The exhibit examines the intersections of racism, Confederate monuments and "the complex relationship between the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, its students, and the surrounding Black community," the museum said in a news release.

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Musical performances, magic shows, craft activities and other events are also planned.

Meanwhile, those who donate blood will have express entry into the museum on King Day and will receive additional free admission for up to four people on any day in 2023.

Visitors also are encouraged to bring items for the annual Mid-South Food Bank food drive.

Biden classified documents story lights up social media: 'Watch how fast this disappears'

Twitter users pounced on the news revealing that President Biden’s personal attorneys discovered a "small number of documents with classified markings" in a locked closet at the Penn Biden Center on Nov. 2.

According to the attorneys, the documents were found after they planned to vacate the office space, and the National Archives soon took possession of them on Nov. 3. Special counsel to the White House Richard Saubel has since said that the president is cooperating with the Department of Justice over reviewing the matter.

Many people pointed out the similarities between this news and the FBI raid on former President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home last year when FBI seized approximately 300 classified documents. At the time, Biden called out Trump as "totally irresponsible" and questioned how this could happen in the U.S.

"How that could possibly happen? How anyone could be that irresponsible? And I thought what data was in there that would maybe compromise sources and methods?" Biden told 60 Minutes. "And it just — totally irresponsible."

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Conservative Twitter users quickly mocked the irony of the news as well as the contrast between the treatment of Biden and Trump.

"But... but... I was repeatedly assured that keeping classified documents in your private residence was an impeachable offense if not treason. Watch how fast this disappears," Hot Air writer Jazz Shaw tweeted.

"HOLY CRAP, @FBI, DID YOU GUYS SEE THIS?!?!? WHEN'S THE RAID AT BIDEN'S HOUSE?!?" Radio host Dan O’Donnell posted.

X Strategies senior digital strategist Greg Price similarly wrote, "SEND THE FBI. RAID IT IMMEDIATELY. JOE BIDEN STOLE SECRETS FROM OUR GOVERNMENT."

Washington Examiner writer Jerry Dunleavy tweeted, "objectively funny that Biden had some classified docs stashed away and everyone knows it."

"I'm not really impressed unless your classified is on a bootleg homebrew email server in a basement. Everything else is anticlimactic," American Commitment president Phil Kerpen wrote.

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By contrast, liberal Twitter users attacked the mainstream media’s reporting on the news, insisting that Trump’s example was far worse.

Writer Thor Benson tweeted, "Biden's people discovering a small number of classified documents and then immediately turning them in is not the same as Trump intentionally taking a large number of highly classified documents and then lying about it, but I'm guessing we're in for some dumb both sides nonsense."

"This tweet has big October 2016 energy," Rolling Stone digital director Lisa Tozzi wrote.

Podcast host Bob Cesca wrote, "The documents were immediately handed over to NARA and DOJ was informed. But good job suggesting a parallel to Trump's document theft. ‘Discovered and returned’ could've fit your tweet. Delete your account, CBS News. Pathetic."

LA Times columnist Harry Littman commented, "plenty of critical distinctions, but they won't stop McCarthy Jordan and the new Hit Squad from howling to the heavens...."

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Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., chairman of the House Oversight Committee, criticized the news as an example of a "two-tier" system of justice and announced plans by the committee to investigate the records.

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