Today's Visionary: An Illustrated Guide to Dr. King's 21st Century Insights
Here it comes again. This holiday weekend we'll see a lot of media coverage of Martin Luther King, Jr. But we'll hear very little about what he really was -- a brave and visionary leader whose vision is as relevant today as ever.
One year ago I listed ten quotes by Dr. King, and mourned the lack of a movement that would advance his kind of vision. Then came the uprising in Madison and the Occupy movement, which began a long-overdue national debate about economic, as well as racial inequality.
Once again, Dr. King's insights offer insight and vision for today's movement activists -- and tomorrow's.
1. "True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it is not haphazard and superficial. It comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring." Where Do We Go From Here? August 1967 speech.

"Bain Capitalism" - a.k.a "vulture capitalism" -- didn't happen out of nowhere. It was made by politicians. It should be un-made by politicians. The system is the problem and it needs to change.
A long list of corporations and banks enriched itself by triggering the events that led to the Great Recession, and many of them took Federal bailout money when it happened. Each of them has a Corporate Social Responsibility policy, designed to show they're good citizens who give back to the community. And each of them has a fleet of lobbyists working to protect their privileged status and tax benefits.
Meanwhile the poverty rate, which had been declining, started to rise again in 2000. That year it stood at 11.3 percent, but by 2009 the Census Bureau reported that it had climbed back to 14.3 percent. At last count, 46 million Americans lived in poverty, more than 15 percent of the population. More than 16 million of them are children, which means that nearly one in four American kids (22 percent) is living in poverty.
Is that OK with you?
The situation has become so grave that The Nation responded by allocating an entire page to poverty, which is managed by Greg KaufmaNn. Sadly, it is now essential reading if we're to understand the real state of our union. As Kaufmann points out, one study suggests that 340,000 children joined the ranks of the impoverished last year.
As the New York Times reported last September, another 2.6 million people slipped below the official poverty line in 2010. The official total of impoverished Americans was the highest it's been in the 52 years that it has been reported. For white Americans, the figure was 9.9 percent. The poverty rate for African Americans surged to 27.4 percent. For Hispanics the figure was 26.6 percent. For African American children the figure was 39 percent.
Is that OK with you?
(photo by Jeff Schrier, Saginaw News)
2. "We must develop a federal program of public works, retraining, and jobs for all -- so that none, white or black, will have cause to feel threatened ... There is nothing except shortsightedness to prevent us from guaranteeing an annual minimum and livable income for every American family." Where Do We Go From Here?

Many economists agree that the unemployment rate will remain tragically high unless there is a concentrated program of government-funded, short-term job creation. Instead, budget cutbacks are forcing layoffs of government employees, especially at the state level. Republicans are refusing to back any extension of unemployment benefits. Among their Presidential candidates, only Mitt Romney appears to support increasing the minimum wage.
President Obama's pre-compromised and therefore overly mild jobs proposal was weakened with ineffective tax breaks for businesses, but it would have provided some jobs. Yet even that proposal was rejected by the Republicans. Of the political groups in Washington, only the House Progressive Caucus is willing to propose an effective job creation bill -- one that would also reduce the nation's deficit. But mainstream media have stigmatized it as "extreme" and no major politician is willing to back it.
What did Dr. King say about jobs?
"The unemployed, poverty-stricken white man must be made to realize that he is in the very same boat with the Negro. Together, they could exert massive pressure on the government to get jobs for all. Together they could form a grand alliance. Together, they could merge all people for the good of all."
Today it seems that the only bills that even get proposed are those that disguise tax breaks for corporations as "stimulus" spending, even though there is widespread agreement they're an ineffective way of creating jobs when there's not enough consumer demand.
With 25 million people out of work or underemployed, demand is hard to come by. Long-term unemployment is a portrait of human loss, of human beings cast out of productive, wage-earning lives and into an existence of hopelessness and deprivation.
How bad is unemployment today? There are a number of ways to illustrate it. Here's one:

Pundits and politicians get excited about short-term blips in unemployment figures. But nobody's addressing this long-term catastrophe..
3. "A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring contrast of poverty and wealth." Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence, April 1967 speech.

(Daimler Maybach sedan, manufacturer's suggested retail price $366,000 -- plus delivery and other charges)
Hello, Occupy!
The gap between the wealthy and the rest of society is greater now than it was when Dr. King spoke those words in April, 1967. The progress we made toward reducing poverty is being eroded as the result of increasingly maldistributed wealth, Wall Street's reckless gambling, and the cost of the Great Recession that followed. Wall Street's doing fine, now that it has been rescued by the American public. But the American public isn't doing so well. We threw a life preserver to the drowning bankers, and now they're sitting on the shore as millions of their rescuers go down for the third time.
Income inequality in this country is worse than it is in Egypt. As economist Edward Wolff explains, wealth inequality has more than doubled in this country since the mid 1970s. The GINI coefficient, which measures economic inequality, has risen nearly 20 percent since it was first measured in this country (coincidentally, the same year Dr. King's speech was given.)
Where are the trends headed?

The increasing disparity in wealth has been greatest for the top 0.5 percent of earners -- the wealthiest of the wealthy -- yet their tax burden has dropped from 70 percent in 1967 to 35 percent today (it was scheduled to "soar" to 39.6 percent until the Obama/McConnell tax deal of December 2010). And hedge fund managers -- including the billionaires -- continue to pay 15 percent instead of the 28 percent commonly paid by teachers, nurses, and police officers. (One hedge fund manager likened the possibility of a change to Hitler's invasion of Poland.)
The Federal minimum wage, however, has dropped from $6.58 in fixed-dollar terms (1996 equivalent) to $5.29 since this speech was given. When Dr. King gave his speech, it was possible to support a family of three on this wage and stay out of poverty, but that's no longer possible.
4. "The profit motive, when it is the sole basis of an economic system, encourages a cutthroat competition and selfish ambition that encourages men to be I-centered rather than thou-centered." Where do we go from here?

The I-centeredness of American business leaders has reached a level Dr. King could not have dreamed of. Two short years after Wall Street ruined the economy and was rescued by the American people, the depth of its self-absorption and self-pity was a miracle of human indulgence. It reflects a self-centeredness so profound that its leaders are in danger of morally imploding, spiritual black holes in an amoral universe.
Case in point: Steven Schwartzman, the hedge fund manager we mentioned earlier, who felt that paying taxes on his billions' at a laborers' rate was the moral equivalent of the invasion of Poland.
Or Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein, who said "We're very important ... we do God's work." (Reverend King might beg to differ.)
Or erstwhile Democrat Daniel S. Loeb comparing himself and his fellow investors to an oppressed minority, victims of tyranny (a "tyranny" that rescued them and asked nothing in return), and even underpaid workers.
Or John Coulson, head of the Mortgage Bankers Association, lecturing underwater homeowners not to walk out on their mortgages -- even as his organization was walking away from a headquarters building they lost nearly forty million dollars on in two short years.
Or the King of the Emo Executives, Jamie Dimon, pouring out his hurt feelings to the New York Times -- "My Achilles heel?" Jay-Z rapped, "Love! I don't get enough of it!" -- even as his bank was on its way to earning record profits in a time of record unemployment (and as it continued to engage in unscrupulous business practices).
Dimon, who has also contributed to the Democratic Party, is stridently resisting regulations that would remove the existential threat his bank (and others like it) pose to the economy. And he won't stop whining.
I'm tired of going after the guy, so this time we'll let Josh Brown tell him what time it is. All these greedy, rapacious, whiny CEOs help to remind us that shame performs a useful social function.
We need better laws and regulations -- and they should be ashamed of themselves.
5. "Lamentably, it is an historical fact that privileged groups seldom give up their privileges voluntarily. Individuals may see the moral light and voluntarily give up their unjust posture; but, as Reinhold Niebuhr has reminded us, groups tend to be more immoral than individuals." Letter From a Birmingham Jail, April 1963 open letter.

Tea Party supporters may have populist impulses. But the movement itself was created with an outburst by an investor-turned-television commentator who was cheered on in his rantings by traders on the Chicago Board of Mercantile Exchange. And the movement's been funded by wealthy interests ever since.
After it was bailed out, Wall Street immediately redoubled its lobbying efforts. Banks were able to blunt the most effective and urgently needed financial reforms, like breaking up banks that are "too big to fail." Now they're hard at work eliminating the reforms that were passed, with the help of the Republican Congress they helped get elected. Big-bank CEOs have spent more than $170 million to influence politicians in the last ten years.
The situation has gotten so bad that the International Monetary Fund -- hardly a leftist organization --issued a report showing a strong correlation between bank lobbying and risky bank behavior in the United States.
That's why the Occupy movement is so important, and why it must grow and evolve in 2012.
6. "An unjust law is a code that a numerical or power majority group compels a minority group to obey but does not make binding on itself. This is difference made legal." Letter From a Birmingham Jail

Recent court cases have revealed widespread lawbreaking on the part of United States banks -- a "power majority group" -- as they foreclosed on homes that in some cases they don't even own.
Members of both parties have indicated an eagerness to rescue banks from the consequences of their own disregard for state and local laws, which has led to numerous and egregious violations (like foreclosing on a home that is fully paid for). But the criminality goes further: In many cases, mortgages changed ownership without proper notification to the borrower. The new holder of the note often changed the rules -- about due dates for payment, late penalties and other contractually agreed-upon terms -- without informing the homeowner, then began imposing steep fees and penalties retroactively. (The banks own servicing companies that benefit from these fees.)
Many homeowners are now delinquent because of these wrongfully-imposed fees. Many of the solutions now being proposed would allow them to seize the homes anyway. The administration's HAMP program, ostensibly designed to help homeowners, has too often become an "extend and pretend" program that allows banks to take another year or two's worth of mortgage payments before seizing the home anyway.
That's why the Obama administration's cushy settlement deal -- which would immunize bankers from criminal prosecution, or even investigation -- must be stopped. (You can help by making your voice heard here.)
7. "When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism and militarism are incapable of being conquered." A Testament of Hope (posthumously published essay).

Banking has become divorced from reality. When the financial sector can enrich itself with speculation alone, it no longer needs to fund concrete business activities. That's why statements like "Main Street and Wall Street rise and fall together" are 100 percent incorrect: Those two geographies have never been more distant from one another.
Robo-trading. Flash crashes. Databases where mortgages are traded like gambling chips. Incentives to lie, and to hide the truth. Banks are "automated greed factories." The most human thing about banking in the 21st century is its greed.
Is racism conquered? When infant mortality for African Americans is 2.4 times that of whites? With these disparities in poverty and employment?
Militarism? The Cold War is over and the Defense budget continues to expand. We didn't shift military spending when the world changed -- we added to it. The Homeland Security Complex is enormous, growing -- and looking for targets of surveillance.
And as Tom Engelhardt points out, President Obama's much-touted "defense cuts" are really just a slight reduction in the rate of spending increase. That's like an alcoholic boasting that he's solved his drinking problem by only having three more drinks a day next month, instead of his original plan to have four more.
As for conquering materialism, how many people even want to anymore? Dr. King's "three triplets" still walk the earth.
8. "There is also the violence of (African Americans) having to live in a community and pay higher consumer prices for goods or higher rents for equivalent housing than are charged in white parts of the city." A Testament of Hope

Payday lenders disproportionately exploit minorities and lower-income communities. Big banks (like Jamie Dimon's) make it harder for working minorities to get credit through normal channels. Then they help finance usurious payday lenders who step in and offer credit at outrageous rates designed to trap the borrower in a cycle of debt, so that a "one-time" fee for borrowing against next week's paycheck turns into a revolving loan that costs the borrower 300-400 percent in interest per year.
As a theologian and scholar, Dr. King would recognize a practice that was condemned as sinful in both the Old and New Testaments.
Big banks also back auto loans, which have been shown to charge more to African Americans than whites. HSBC Bank settled when it was found to have been charging minority customers more than others.
When it comes to banks, Dr. King would recognize the United States of the 21st century. And he wouldn't be surprised to learn that the government is still more inclined to rescue banks than force them to change. He would probably be encouraging citizens to take action -- action that would change things. The CFPB is now up and running with a full-time director. We wish Richard Cordray and his staff the best.
9. "Congress appropriates military funds with alacrity and generosity. It appropriates poverty funds with miserliness and grudging reluctance. The government is emotionally committed to the war. It is emotionally hostile to the needs of the poor." Domestic impact of the war in America, November 1967 speech.

Today's politics would look all too familiar to Dr. King. In the matter of poverty, as in so many things, the Washington consensus of "centrist" Democrats and Republicans fails to reflect the opinions of the American people.
He would be pleased to learn that the American people are dedicated to eliminating poverty -- and to protecting Social Security, defending Medicare and asking the wealthy to pay their fair share.
He would be disappointed, however, to find that there aren't more national leaders speaking up for the public's values in Washington.
10. "Ultimately a genuine leader is not a searcher for consensus but a molder of consensus." Domestic impact of the war.

Dr. King was discussing a critic who told him that taking a controversial position on Vietnam might diminish his authority as a civil rights leader and weaken his political influence in Washington. Here's the full quote:
And I had to answer by looking that person into the eye, and say 'I'm sorry sir but you don't know me. I'm not a consensus leader.' I do not determine what is right and wrong by looking at the budget of my organization or by taking a Gallup poll of the majority opinion. Ultimately a genuine leader is not a searcher for consensus but a molder of consensus.
We're speculating now, but we can't help imagining that Dr. King might have challenged today's leaders to try harder at molding consensus before seeking to achieve it. That was his idea of genuine leadership.
Lately the President of the United States has been taking a tougher rhetorical stance on behalf of the American majority. We hope that his words will be followed by a year of aggressive action. But we won't be waiting to find out. We'll be acting for ourselves and encouraging others to do the same.
See you at the demonstrations.



"There comes a time when silence is betrayal." - MLK Jr.
“Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” ~ Martin Luther King Jr.
Dr. King family’s civil trial verdict: US government assassinated Martin
"Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people." ~ Eleanor Roosevelt
Your article was relevant last year as it is this year also. It is a reminder that many if not all of the issues that Dr. King wanted to address are still with us---some greater in scope than he could have imagined--and a call to keep carrying forward his vision for equity and social justice in our land.
"We will find fulfillment not in the goods that we have, but in the good we can do for each other."
Robert F. Kennedy
"I say to you, this morning, that if you have never found something so dear and precious to you that you will die for it, then you aren’t fit to live. You may be 38 years old, as I happen to be, and one day, some great opportunity stands before you and calls upon you to stand for some great principle, some great issue, some great cause. And you refuse to do it because you are afraid.
You refuse to do it because you want to live longer. You’re afraid that you will lose your job, or you are afraid that you will be criticized or that you will lose your popularity, or you’re afraid that somebody will stab or shoot or bomb your house. So you refuse to take a stand.
Well, you may go on and live until you are ninety, but you are just as dead at 38 as you would be at ninety.
And the cessation of breathing in your life is but the belated announcement of an earlier death of the spirit.
You died when you refused to stand up for right.
You died when you refused to stand up for truth.
You died when you refused to stand up for justice."
"We will find fulfillment not in the goods that we have, but in the good we can do for each other."
Robert F. Kennedy
Like many modern professional politicians Mitt Romney supports nothing but his own pocket book and is willing to say anything to get elected, when caught out of his continual changes of stance, he simply smiles and starts telling the next lie, without any hint of shame.
Republican! If true, why do you celebrate him? They also said President Lincoln was a Republican.
The republican party has been co-opted. These republicans are nothing like those republicans. These republicans are fascists.
"Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob"
-= Franklin Delano Roosevelt =-
Your President has been appointing, and supporting Judges, and department heads, who also support a marriage between corporations, and the state. Not to mention supporting laws to support that union.
Take a look at your food industry for example. Go to any Third world country, and the grocery stores have all the items you have in your stores, plus a much wider assortment of goods to choose from. In the U.S. you lock out the small producers who then have to sell their produce on the road side, or accept lowball prices to sell to the big stores.
Even the additives in the foods are often dangerous, and banned in other countries. If diet sodas with the artificial sweetner Aspertame get over 26' C they can turn into a dangerous nerve agent. Don't believe me? Google "dangers of Aspertame".
If true, we need even more like him.
"Parachutes are allowed in checked or carry-on baggage, but may not be worn in flight."
---Southwest Airlines
the Republican Party's founding, it was a liberal party. The Democratic Party was the conservative, states' rights party. After the turn of the century, the Republicans grew more conservative, causing Teddy Roosevelt to split and form the Progressive Party. Under Woodrow Wilson, the Democrats adopted some of the Progressive Party's ideas while the Republicans moved further to the right.
There's a reason why it was called 'the solid south'. The dems through the 50s across 'Dixie' were absolute racists at every turn, blocking every option for progress locally and, when they could, in the US Congress. In the 50s, and through the passage of the Civil Rights Act (as just one marker), it was the Republicans who made it happen. The bloody screams for racism came from the southern dems, and with their long-term death grip on committee chairmanships they basically controlled and eliminated most attempts to move forward. After a coalition of not-southern dems and republicans began to overwhelm the neaderthals, it was Nixon who sealed the fate of the Republican party by the cynical 'southern strategy'. It worked for the time and got him elected based on the old guard hate of change -- especially for any perceived benefit to 'them' -- but it gave us Cheney and Rumsfeld and Rove and Ashcroft and a base for the current power of Murdoch and Koch.
The history you present is true, as far as it goes, but it hardly represents the real undercurrents of hate and fear that the republican structure has mined for the past 50 years.
Morality is the basis of truth and truth is the basis of all morality.
Gandhi
was merely intended to address ssslyfox's concerns regarding King's and Lincoln's political affiliations.
Speaking of which, whoever said King was a Republican was incorrect.
Although King never publicly supported a political party or candidate for president, in a letter to a civil rights supporter in October 1956 he said that he was undecided as to whether he would vote for the Adlai Stevenson or Dwight Eisenhower, but that "In the past I always voted the Democratic ticket."
In his autobiography, King says that in 1960 he privately voted for Democratic candidate John F. Kennedy: "I felt that Kennedy would make the best president. I never came out with an endorsement. My father did, but I never made one." King adds that he likely would have made an exception to his non-endorsement policy in 1964, saying "Had President Kennedy lived, I would probably have endorsed him in 1964."
. . . to bring your historical point a bit more up to date. Since the roles of the major parties have essentially been co-opted on all sides, and reversed, and laundered, and lied about from top to bottom, it tends to leave the arguments about republicans/Lincoln et al a bit muddled. The simple truths of the 50s and 60s, and particularly the Nixonian sellout, seem to me a necessary foundation for today's needs.
The real price of Nixon hasn't come from him, particularly. He employed Richard Vigurie (still involved in hawking hate for political gain) in the first large-scale attempt to use computer tools to shape and drive campaign strategy, and to tailor dog whistle schemes to carefully chosen markets. It wasn't greatly successful at the time, but it clearly led the way to Rove and Atwater and Rasmussen and eventually to the manipulations of Murdoch. So it's important to always lay the attribution properly.
Morality is the basis of truth and truth is the basis of all morality.
Gandhi
and his deathbed recantation, which, it turns out, was just more spin.
I SAW that Martin Luther King attended a communist training class! Which beats hearing that George Washington never told a lie. Or anything else I heard. Seeing is believing
What you HEARD and many of the comments following demonstrate something about the historical grasp in these parts.
King lived in Alabama and Georgia. Neither allowed nor required voter registration by party when
King was alive.
Now, all those billboards by the White Citizen's Council...they were correct! As, of course are any blog posts tying the views of a man dead 40 + years to tiday's events.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/01...
“Why would anyone with a functioning brain believe this guy?”
Some guy with an eating disorder
. . . and, you know, correct...
(First disclaimer: I am not about to try to trash MLK, or to denigrate him in any way. I marched behind him, worked for the cause, followed his cortege to his grave. I know which side I'm on.)
That picture of MLK at the 'communist training class' are, in fact, accurate. There was an organization near Monteagle, TN, that *was* involved in civil rights and 'liberal' issues in the 50s, the Highlander Folk School. Operated by *gasp* communists. Proudly. And pretty bravely, considering the location and the times. It began in the early 30s (you may recall there was a Depression at the time) and was originally more focused on labor issues in the Appalachia, and helping teach self-sufficiency and survival in a hostile environment, which was appropriate given the mining history of the region. They were tolerated for years because they consistently worked for the miners' benefit. That began to shift as they turned to include the civil rights movement in general, because that meant they had 'the other' sitting in the same room with everybody else.
King was hardly a communist, but he and many others in the gathering of the civil rights 'movement', and many who became involved, went to various programs and presentations at HFS. The material included information and training on civil disobedience, non-violence and other dangerous things. Eventually the state shut them down, which possibly avoided murder and arson and other local traditions becoming a bit too visible.
(Second disclaimer: I was there. At a school a few miles away, hearing the talk and the hate, in the late 50s, and frankly not understanding it at the time. I wish I'd been more aware and even understood, but they weren't much interested in a curious displaced young teen with no discernible reason to be involved.)
Morality is the basis of truth and truth is the basis of all morality.
Gandhi
Dont watch TV but .... just saw an online streaming ad for "Sears's Massive MLK Day" sale ... ? (... is that a common thing?)
I'm Boycotting NewsCorp! Heres what not to buy: http://www.cjr.org/resources/index.php?c=news...
. . . one massive reason to cheer the final bankruptcy of Sears, and hopefully K-Mart, for the perfidy of greed the whole operation has become. I will miss Sears as a major part of the past, and wish for a future of better things.
Morality is the basis of truth and truth is the basis of all morality.
Gandhi
Curious about the source of the foreclosure pic with the note about the two bodies. I don't think I'd have left a note, nor does it look like my handwriting...
"Parachutes are allowed in checked or carry-on baggage, but may not be worn in flight."
---Southwest Airlines
I watch 60 Minutes, but the show after waiting for “The Good Wife” really got me OMG( those are my initials). “Boss under cover”.
This is no Mitt time as Grandpa had 3 wives and was living in Mexico because American States had said you can only have one wife. Mitt’s father was born from 1 of those wives in Mexico. They did come back because of the Mexican revolution.
This show boss who care about his people who works for them was amazing and I will watch this show as it really shows people not plastic politician
I will vote again for Obama with "Majectic Dissapointment" as he gave up to quick every time.
In the early 60s when I was 14 I had the good fortune to attend a Seminar On Great Books at The Quaker House in Atlanta led by the Reverend Sam Williams, who had been one of Dr. King's teachers at The Atlanta Universities.
The text we studied was Martin Buber's "I and Thou" in which Buber describes two kinds of relationships, the I-Thou and the I-It.
In simplest terms, in an I-Thou relationship I respect The Other as much as I respect myself, and in this sense The Other is no longer Other, as The Other is intrinsically the same as myself.
In an I-It relationshp I see The Other as an Object, as distinctly Other than myself, intrinsically less than myself, an Object to be manipulated, etc.
It was only years after Dr. King's assassination, while reading his writings and listening to recordings of his speeches, that I heard the strains of Buber's "I and Thou" in his thought and realized that of course he too had studied Buber with Reverend Williams and that study had informed his understanding of human relationships.
I consider myself quite fortunate to have heard the same message; it made a profound impact on me.
When will government of the people, by the politicians, for the corporations perish from this Earth?
Not soon enough!
I will have to read both soon. You and me seems much better than Us and them.
:)
"Parachutes are allowed in checked or carry-on baggage, but may not be worn in flight."
---Southwest Airlines
It Galls me when some corporation runs a charity run or some such mealy-mouthed attempt to appear partially human. A bank that forecloses on folks who they have conned doing a run against ms or something. If they really wanted to help then stop murdering folks with your policies.
When they try to appear kindly with commercials with kids and flowers and old folks all smiling and happy..oil companies for example or that awful GE one where the workers making airplanes get to see one take off....yeah a bomber to kill brown people faaaar away, or an MRI to diagnose cancer patients who they helped to make cancerous with their toxins and noxious products. Please spare me.
These ads are made by men in suits sitting around a table trying to think up ways to appear caring, and hang the cost we can write it off.
Stick it up your wazoo GE and BP..or any pharmaceutical toilet.
"Jamie Dimon, "My Achilles heel?... Money! I don't get enough of it!'"
that worked with King. A.Philip Randolph---Bayard Rustin---James Forman.
Ed-words
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