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It's No Accident: A Dream Deferred -- 34 Years Later: msg#00111politics.marxism.analysis
------ Forwarded Message From: John Lacny <jplst15+@xxxxxxxx> Date: Sat, 30 Mar 2002 20:37:30 -0500 To: "It's No Accident" <lacny@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: [It's No Accident] A Dream Deferred -- 34 Years Later It's No Accident, March 30, 2002 A Dream Deferred -- 34 Years Later by John Lacny April 4 is the anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., in Memphis, Tennessee in 1968. Long the target of wiretaps engineered by FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover and approved by Attorney General Robert Kennedy, and having been the victim of at least one FBI attempt to get him to commit suicide, King was murdered at a time of great social upheaval, when he was speaking with an even more forthrightly radical voice than before. In the spring of 1968 King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) was in the midst of the Poor People's Campaign, an attempt to renew and deepen the promised War on Poverty that -- as King did not fail to point out -- had been betrayed by the Johnson Administration's imperialist adventure in Vietnam. King had laid out his vision in no uncertain terms in what turned out to be his last presidential address to the SCLC, "Where Do We Go From Here?" There he said that it was high time for the movement to "begin to question the capitalistic economy." Further: "We are called upon to help the discouraged beggars in life's marketplace. But one day we must come to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring." In numerous writings, interviews, and speeches, King was calling for ever-more-radical measures such as a guaranteed minimum income. But King was neither a bloodless policy wonk nor a visionary in the impractical sense. He sought to connect his broader hopes for the country to the day-to-day struggles of ordinary people. He knew from experience that the lofty rhetoric of moral suasion was not enough, and that change would come only when people were willing to take action, up to and including defying the law if necessary. King wanted to begin the Poor People's Campaign in Memphis because in the spring of that year it had become a flashpoint for all of the changes he was fighting for. There, 1,300 sanitation workers -- almost all of them black men -- had gone on strike when a garbage truck malfunctioned and crushed two men to death. The deaths were the final insult on top of the day-to-day regimen of poverty and petty indignities that the strikers faced. Their wages were so low that they qualified for public assistance. So despite a Tennessee law prohibiting strikes by public employees -- and without the prior sanction of their international union, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) -- the workers walked out in defiance of the racist city administration. Because the sanitation workers had drawn the lines of struggle so starkly, King made their fight a national priority. In his speeches in Memphis King unwaveringly defended the human dignity of the poor: "So often we overlook the work and the significance of those who are not in professional jobs, of those who are not in the so-called big jobs. But let me say to you tonight that whenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity and it has worth." Here was a manifestation of the movement King had called for in the book version of "Where Do We Go From Here?": a "coalition of an energized section of labor, Negroes, unemployed and welfare recipients" with a view to "the total elimination of poverty, now a practical responsibility." Long critical of those labor unions that failed to put civil rights at the center of their agenda, King was also a critic of what he called "middle-class prejudices toward the labor movement" in the black community. As he knew, it was not just the lawyers, politicians and other professionals but the millions of working-class African-Americans who had been the engine of the civil rights movement. In the charged atmosphere of the late 1960s, King's support for the struggles of the poor and his forthright opposition to the war in Vietnam made him even more of a danger in the eyes of the authorities than he had ever been. Those authorities are morally -- if not literally -- responsible for his death. Therefore pay no heed to those shameless souls who quote King and then claim that all of the injustices of our society are a thing of the past. He called this sort of thing "the tranquilizing drug of gradualism." We owe him and his memory much more than that. - - - - - - - - - - "Tell no lies, claim no easy victories." -- Amilcar Cabral "It's No Accident" is a political column by John Lacny, a student activist at the University of Pittsburgh. If you forward it, please include this notice to let people know how to subscribe. To subscribe to "It's No Accident" send an e-mail to: lacny-subscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to: lacny-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To contact John Lacny directly send an e-mail to: jplst15+@xxxxxxxx You can change the settings of your subscription and read archives of these columns at the website: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/lacny There, under "Bookmarks," you can also find a small but respectable list of links to progressive organizations and sources of information. Use them. ------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~--> Buy Stock for $4. No Minimums. FREE Money 2002. http://us.click.yahoo.com/BgmYkB/VovDAA/ySSFAA/B140lB/TM ---------------------------------------------------------------------~-> "[C]apital comes dripping from head to foot, from every pore, with blood and dirt." --Marx, Capital, Vol. 1, Chapter 31 Community email addresses: Post message: marxist@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subscribe: marxist-subscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Unsubscribe: marxist-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx List owner: jplst15+@xxxxxxxx Shortcut URL to this page: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/marxist Also take our one-question survey at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/marxist/polls Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ |
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