MLK’s Legacy

January 15, 2024

     Today marks the celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King’s birthday.  In the years since his assasination, his words have been twisted by cynical opportunists to mean the opposite of what he believed.  His legacy has been flattened such that the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. who exists in the public imagination bears little resemblance to the real man, who decried racism, capitalism and militarism as the three evils at the root of what sickened the American soul.

     Fifty-six years after Dr. King’s murder, the legal framework that the United States was pressured into passing thanks to the work of Dr. King and other civil rights activists from Bayard Rustin to Ella Baker to Fannie Lou Hamer is under attack. The gains of that movement are being dismantled piece by piece by piece by a mob of mediocre white men, aided by their accomplices in the mainstream media who either secretly believe the propaganda that Black people are intellectually inferior or are so focused on chasing a dollar that they will welcome fascism with open arms if it boosts their stock price.

     The people seeking to destroy Dr. King’s legacy are not subtle.  The fate of the first Black President of Harvard University is a case in point.  Christoper Rufo announced his game plan to take down Dr. Claudine Gay on X and the media cluelessly played along, with The New York Times publishing an astonishing number of articles on the firestorm surrounding Dr. Gay, replicating the dispiriting pattern where the qualifications of Black people are always in doubt, (Source:  “The Persecution of Harvard’s Claudine Gay,” by Charles Blow, The New York Times, 1/3/24).  There was no way that Dr. Gay could survive the barrage of racist and misogynistic attacks.  On January 2nd, she resigned from Harvard’s presidency.

       Congressional backbencher Elise Stefanik and Harvard Extension School grad, Christopher Rufo wasted no time in taking a victory lap.(Source:  “‘Victory’:  Claudine Gay’s Resignation From the Harvard Presidency Comes as a Win for Her Critics,” by Madelyn A. Hung and Joyce E. Kim., The Harvard Crimson, 1/3/24).

      Flush with victory, Rufo announced that he plans to stop at nothing less than dismantling DEI in every facet of American life.  Let’s be clear, the opposite of diversity, equity and inclusion is homogeneity, inequality and exclusion.  That is the America that Rufo, Stefanik and their financier Bill Ackman seek to re-establish.

       Their playbook is gallingly transparent:  1) Dismantle all ladders to erasing inequality by attacking diversity measures as “reverse discrimination,” (Source: “DEI backlash has companies quietly changing their programs to avoid wave of lawsuits alleging discrimination,” by Alexandra Olson, Haleluya Hadero, Anne D’Innocenzio and The Associated Press, Fortune.com, 1/15/24); 2) Ban the teaching of accurate American History that details the myriad obstacles to advancement placed in the  paths of Black, Indigenous and other people of color and ban books about the achievements of Black people or anyone from a marginalized group, (Source:  “Blocking Black History is an attempt to counter Black Power,” by Kate Aguilar, The Washington Post,2/1/23); and 3) Erect legal barriers to political participation by BIPOC Americans and their progressive allies, robbing them of a voice in who holds power in this country, (Source:  “Redistricting fights across South put the Voting 

Rights Act in the spotlight once again,” by Fredreka Schouten, CNN.com, 12/21/23).

This hydra-headed legal and political attack on civil rights has been aided by the ever present threat of political violence, as evidenced by the recent swatting attacks on Judges Tanya Chutkan and Arthur Engoron. If we don’t want these fascistic forces to run the table in 2024, we will need to overcome our fear and exhaustion and resist the urge to turn away from conflict and chaos because we want “peace.” Remember the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, “True peace is not merely the absence of tension: it is the presence of justice.” Let’s really honor Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and get to work!

Happy MLK Day?

January 15, 2022

        Today is the 93rd birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., when we will once again endure mainstream America’s mawkish veneration that flattens and distorts what he stood for.  In the American popular imagination, Dr. King is remembered for one eloquent speech in 1963 importuning white America to judge Black people by the “content of [our] character,” and his death at the hands of a racist assassin.

     Americans prefer to forget Dr. King’s scathing condemnation of white moderates “who are more concerned with ‘order’ than justice; who prefer a negative peace, which is the absence of tension to a positive peace, which is the presence of justice,” (Source:  “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” April 16,1963).

     Americans don’t want to engage with Dr. King’s critique of our country’s vast wealth inequality.  His statement 56 years ago that “depressed living standards for Negroes are a structural part of the economy,” could have been written today.  Dr. King’s observation that, “Certain industries are based upon the supply of low-wage, under skilled and immobile non-white labor,” explains today’s opposition to unionization efforts at Amazon and Starbuck’s, (Source:  “MLK’s Forgotten Call for Economic Justice,” originally published 3/14/1966, The Nation).

      We have completely erased Dr. King’s uncompromising condemnation of the Vietnam War and American militarism more broadly detailed in his incisive speech at The Riverside Church in 1967, when he presciently declared that “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,” (Source:  “Beyond Vietnam:  A Time to Break Silence”, delivered by Dr. Martin Luther King at The Riverside Church on April 4, 1967).

     Today, 54 years after Dr. King’s death, we are not only still battling racism, materialism and militarism, but are threatened by a major political party’s dedication to, not only destroying everything that Dr. King fought for in his life, but to burning down our very democracy itself.

     After all, a country where Black, Brown, Asian and Indigenous people have to surmount an increasing number of obstacles to cast a ballot is not a democracy.  A country where states are passing laws allowing state legislatures to overturn the will of the electorate is not a democracy. A country where benighted bigots ban books by and about Black people cannot call itself a democracy.

      In spite of all of this, Congress is still struggling to pass voting rights legislation.  Putative Democrats Manchin and Sinema persist in elevating an arcane procedural rule over the actual Constitutional rights of living, breathing Americans.  They have been unmoved by pleas from civil rights leaders or fiery speeches by Joe Biden.  Manchin and Sinema would rather preen for Beltway pundits than act.  In the battle between white supremacy and multiracial democracy, they appear to have picked a side.  Whether they are “actual racists” is decidedly beside the point.   Manchin and Sinema may surprise us, but all I know is we’d better have a Plan B.

#MLK Day

#Nocelebrationwithoutlegislation