The
Hijacking of a Dream:
Reclaiming
Dr. King’s Legacy
As
we approach the Martin Luther King holiday, America needs to perform
a re-assessment of what this memorial holiday means to all of us. On
August 28, 2011, the dedication of the Martin Luther King, Jr.
National Memorial took place on the National Mall in Washington DC.
Having the dedication of this memorial on the 48th anniversary of the
March on Washington, was clearly a symbolic gesture — paying homage
to one of the many defining moments in the great civil rights
leader’s life. However, the corporate contributors of this event,
along with many of the politicians that were in attendance, were and
are symbolic themselves. They are symbols of everything Dr. King was,
and would be opposed to, if he were alive today. These charlatans and
hucksters know very well of this fact, which is exactly why they, the
mainstream media in America, and an ever-shrinking segment of
prejudiced Americans of all colors and races continue to desperately
try to reshape the image of Dr. King. If these people have their way,
Dr. King and his legacy will stand for nothing more than what I
regard as a superficial image. They fervently wish to recreate him
into someone they can feel more comfortable with. This is why most
children, and adults, can only recite one quote in relationship to
Dr. King —“I have a dream that my four little children will one
day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of
their skin, but by the content of their character.”
Rev.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. stood for much more than what mainstream
America has methodically reduced him to. In fact, if he were alive
today, many of the corporate war mongering politicians, including
President Obama, would be vilifying Dr. King as if he were some
crazed angry black man. This is why we will never hear the likes of
Barack Obama quote Dr. King when he referred to the US government as
“the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today”. Dr. King
said those powerful and honest words on April 4, 1967 at Riverside
Church in New York City (exactly a year before he was assassinated).
Over four decades later—the US government is still the greatest
purveyor of violence on earth. You can bet that the following quote
with not be read at the dedication of the King memorial:
“As
I have walked among the desperate, rejected, and angry young men, I
have told them that Molotov cocktails and rifles would not solve
their problems. I have tried to offer them my deepest compassion
while maintaining my conviction that social change comes most
meaningfully through nonviolent action. But they ask — and rightly
so — what about Vietnam? They ask if our own nation wasn’t using
massive doses of violence to solve its problems, to bring about the
changes it wanted. Their questions hit home, and I knew that I could
never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in
the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest
purveyor of violence in the world today — my own government. For
the sake of those boys, for the sake of this government, for the sake
of the hundreds of thousands trembling under our violence, I cannot
be silent.”
After
reading Dr. King’s “Beyond Vietnam — A Time to Break Silence”
speech, anyone still thinking that he would be in approval of what
this current administration is doing in places like Pakistan, Egypt,
Syria, Libya and Afghanistan, need to have their heads examined. Dr.
King was much more than simply a man who was anti-war; he was a man
who stood for peace and social justice. He was truly a man of
principles and convictions, which is why he was unafraid of speaking
truth to so-called power. Remaining silent, as so many gutless
politicians and celebrities do today, was not an option within Dr.
King’s conscience. And because of this, he was routinely targeted
by the US government, by way of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
and devils minions such as FBI founder J. Edgar Hoover.
The
American empire’s military-industrial complex has been a prominent
issue dating back decades. The military industrial complex is a
vastly profitable behemoth that must be fed a steady diet of wars in
order to maintain its existence. Those who threaten the existence of
this killing machine become expendable. Dr. King’s outspokenness
against not only the Vietnam War, but also the military industrial
complex, secured his status as a target. Dr. King’s “crime” was
that he dared to challenge the conscience of a nation entangled
within the web of an imperialist war throughout Southeast Asia. Among
other things he said, “A
nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military
defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual
death.” Which
one of the political frauds, or entertainers, in attendance at the
dedication to Dr. King’s memorial took such a courageous stance in
solidarity with Martin Luther King, Jr.? None, that's how many. Zero,
nada, zip, or zilch, take your pick.
In
2013 the US government has methodically found a way to direct itself
into multiple military campaigns of aggression, including dropping
missiles indiscriminately upon Libya and arbitrarily using drones to
bomb villages in Yemen, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Over a trillion
dollars have been used on these campaigns, including Iraq, since
2001—- all the while people in the US are losing their homes to
foreclosures, school systems are being de-funded, and 40,000
Americans die each year due to a lack health insurance. That's more
people than all who died in auto accidents last year. If Dr. King’s
statement is true then America’s spirit must be on life support —
needing an end to its defense spending as part of a multi-tiered
remedy for rehabilitation.
Dr.
King knew very well about the US government’s record of going into
countries, whose governments refused to be obsequious to their
addiction to other nation’s resources, and then destabilizing them
by waging war, by assassination of leaders, or both. Dr. King knew
that the US played a role in the removal and murder of people like
Congo’s Patrice Lumumba in 1961. Today in 2013, very little has
changed at all. The US and its gang of European minions (NATO) are
currently bombing Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia into the stone age.
This is, in fact, the kind of immoral act of war that Martin Luther
King, Jr. would be completely opposed to, along with the wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq before that. His life should give us ample
reason to come to this conclusion, and only this conclusion. However,
how many children in America know this, especially children of color?
Dr. King’s image has been reshaped by some amoral adults as well as
by adults who have been purposely mis-educated. When we see
ridiculous t-shirts with the face of Dr. King juxtaposed next to that
of President Obama we should see this as a blatant assault on the
civil rights leader’s work, as well as on his character. These
kinds of comparisons further confuse the masses, and not by accident,
especially those who have purposely been given little to no
historical point of reference in regard to Dr. King and his complete
body of work.
The
night before Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated he was
giving a speech in support of striking sanitation workers in Memphis,
Tennessee. He understood the need for unions and supported their
struggle. He passionately supported the economically disenfranchised
as evidenced with his organizational work around the Poor People’s
Campaign. When we study his work on these issues it should be clearly
evident that this man would be completely opposed to the current
vicious attacks on labor unions and the poor. The fork tongued Barack
Obama campaigned in support of labor unions, saying whatever he
needed to, in order to curry favor from them — as a means of
gobbling up their valuable votes. However now that he won his second
term, he has deliberately distanced himself far away from their
struggle, all the while bending over backwards for their nemesis —
Wall Street and the gangs of mega-corporations that lurk there. Are
we really that foolish to believe that Dr. King would have been in
favor of Barack Obama’s multi-trillion dollar bailout for the same
“banksters” that are largely responsible for the current economic
crisis plaguing the US, and the world?
Dr.
King made it quite obvious which side of history he stood on with his
actions. He made it even clearer that he stood with the masses of
oppressed and poor people riddled throughout the unequal social
fabric sewn throughout America, exactly what my own ministry stands
for. Serving as the first president of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference (SCLC), Dr. King supported SCLC initiated
programs like Operation Breadbasket which was aimed at economically
empowering black communities. In 1967 Dr. King said, ‘‘Many
retail businesses and consumer-goods industries deplete the ghetto by
selling to Negroes without returning to the community any of the
profits through fair hiring practices.’’
Today numerous members of the Congressional Black Caucus, as well as
President Barack Obama, appear to have no problem selling out the
interests of black communities to the benefit of vulture-like
corporations. Whether it is the privatization of public schools,
gentrification, or the growing economic disparity between whites and
blacks; politicians like Barack Obama could care less about their
policies overall negative impact on the very African-Americans who
helped vote him into office. It remains perplexing as to why so many
black people remain in support of Barack Obama — the absence of
historical perspective and critical analysis can have this effect on
people. Obama’s actions regarding Black America, including the
rapidly vanishing US middle class, are antithetical to those of the
late great Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Obama
has become rather skilled at blaming black people for their plight,
whenever he decides to acknowledge their existence at all. He even
had the audacity to do this at the NAACP’s 100th anniversary
meeting when he said, “We’ve
got to say to our children, yes, if you’re African American, the
odds of growing up amid crime and gangs are higher. Yes, if you live
in a poor neighborhood, you will face challenges that somebody in a
wealthy suburb does not have to face. But that’s not a reason to
get bad grades — that’s not a reason to cut class — that’s
not a reason to give up on your education and drop out of school. No
one has written your destiny for you. Your destiny is in your hands —
never forget that! That’s what we have to teach all of our
children. No excuses. No excuses. You get that education; all those
hardships will just make you stronger, better able to compete. Yes we
can.”
Obama
would never have gone into a poor white community and told the
parents of a vastly underfunded school system and marginalized
community that they should, in essence, accept those conditions
without protesting or fighting to hold the government accountable.
However, Obama knows he can slap around the black community in that
manner because far too many African-Americans continue to pledge
blind obedience him in what I see as a most pathetic manner.
Unfortunately, Obama, like many other Democrats, will continue to
disrespect the black community until they completely divorce
themselves from that party and form/support a truly independent party
that actually advocates for their collective interests. In my view as
a Caucasian American, it underscores the urgent need for a viable
third political party in America that speaks for and addresses the
needs of all Americans regardless of race, ethnicity, national
origin, religion, age, gender, economic status and sexual
orientation. On further thought, I could end this week's commentary
right here and still have a pretty good article, but I want to go
deeper so everyone please stay with me on this, okay?
In
regards to people of color, especially poor black people; Dr. King
had a knack for placing their living conditions within the context of
institutional racism and its impact on their communities. In 1968,
just months before his assassination, Dr. King said, “It
is incontestable and deplorable that Negroes have committed crimes;
but they are derivative crimes. They are born of the greater crimes
of the white society.”
The great civil rights leader said those words within a speech he
gave to his staff at a SCLC meeting in Frogmore, South Carolina as he
was preparing them for the Poor People’s Campaign. His commitment
to black people, and poor people in general, was the polar opposite
of a man like Barack Obama who seems to thrive at marginalizing those
demographics while catering to his corporate and military bosses.
In
the same Beyond Vietnam speech, Dr. King gave a prescient warning
when he said, “When
machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are
considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism,
extreme materialism, and militarism are incapable of being
conquered.”
Today in 2013 much of the world is suffering from the impact of
America’s insatiable hunger for global domination. The US’s
runaway military industrial complex continues to take lives away from
innocent civilians in places like Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Syria,
Yemen, Somalia and Libya, to name just a few. The American military
industrial complex creates carnage abroad, all the while preventing
Americans from having things like a single-payer healthcare system.
In 2013 institutional racism remains a disease that destroys the
lives of people of color in America by way of ruthless police
brutality, enforced economic inequality and intentionally unequal
school systems — to name a few. Also in 2013 runaway capitalism is
imposing economic terrorism on countless people and their rapidly
disintegrating communities. Dr. King’s words are surely more
relevant now than ever before.
The
dedication of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial was assured to be
a most superficial event replete with superficial politicians and
luminaries when it was held nearly 18 months ago. The organizers of
this event and their corporate cronies were promoting and selling
everything from expensive hotel rooms, sponsorship opportunities, to
high priced exhibitor space. In essence, they will be “honoring”
Dr. King by not embracing his legacy of social justice, but by
financially capitalizing on his name. There will be no speeches of
ending America’s imperialist wars, like Dr. King did. Anyone with
that message trying to get on stage will be swiftly removed by
security. There will be no speeches about destroying institutional
racism in America. Instead, the lie of America being a post racist
country will be bandied about. Don’t expect any talk about waging a
war on poverty — after all, some of the sponsors of this event are
in fact large multinational corporations (such as Wal-Mart and
numerous others) that benefit from destroying local businesses while
dissuading their workers from unionizing.
However,
what you are sure to see is cameras on disingenuous politicians
crying crocodile tears, as if they give a damn about Dr. King’s
legacy. Many of these political actors will be men and women who
have, at one time or another, voted to finance one or more of
America’s current military campaigns. Unfortunately, some of these
frauds will even be members of the Congressional Black Caucus, but I
will decline to name names for now. Far too many members of the CBC
have become quite comfortable with taking the easy way out and
remaining silent about things that matter. The same goes for
countless black entertainers riddled throughout Hollywood. They have
lost their spine and made the conscious decision to protect their
political interests and/or their potential sponsorship from white
corporations that could not give a damn about social justice or the
well-being of the communities from which many of these black
politicians and entertainers come from.
Dr.
King once said, “Our
lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that
matter.” He
also famously said, “Injustice
anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” Ending
institutional racism in America, eradicating poverty and
homelessness, tearing down the US prison-industrial complex, and
stopping the US’s destructive wars – these are the things that
really matter. They matter so much that life and death hinge upon
each injustice. It is obvious that we cannot expect Democrats or
Republicans to vociferously break their collective silence about the
cauldron of social injustices that have been brewing in America for
quite some time — that job must be ours, starting with the clergy
like myself, since Congress and the President refuse to do any such
thing. We must raise our collective voices and speak out against them
and stand up for justice. As the 2013 King Holiday approaches, this
is the greatest way we can honor the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr.
No comments:
Post a Comment