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Forty years on, some lessons from the lifeand deathof
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
By Patrick Martin
7 April 2008
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Fridays 40th anniversary of the assassination of Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. was marked by a march in Memphis, Tennessee,
where the civil rights leader was slain, and numerous commemorations
and tributes throughout the country, as well as widespread media
attention.
There was little, however, that conveyed a sense of the real
King, and of his historical significance, achievements and limitations.
The American political establishment sets strict limits on how
much to say about a man once regarded as a dangerous agitator
and hounded unmercifully by the FBI.
Nearly a century ago, V.I. Lenin wrote in State and Revolution:
During the lifetime of great revolutionaries, the oppressing
classes constantly hounded them, received their theories with
the most savage malice, the most furious hatred and the most unscrupulous
campaigns of lies and slander. After their death, attempts are
made to convert them into harmless icons, to canonize them, so
to say, and to hallow their names to a certain extent for
the consolation of the oppressed classes and with
the object of duping the latter, while at the same time robbing
the revolutionary theory of its substance, blunting its
revolutionary edge and vulgarizing it.
King was a reformer, pacifist and Baptist minister, not a revolutionary
socialist. Nonetheless, he was the leader of a mass popular movement
that for more than a decade challenged the barbaric racial oppression
in the American South. Lenins observation aptly characterizes
the process by which the civil rights leader has been transformed
into a public icon, the recipient of insipid tributes from contemporary
big business politiciansHillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John
McCain (who voted against the King national holiday), and even
the wretched George W. Bush.
But King was not only the author of the I Have a Dream
speech memorized by school children throughout the country, or
the author of treatises on Gandhian nonviolence. Forty years on,
the real, historical King remains an exceptional figure, a genuine,
authentic and principled opponent of oppression, a man of great
physical and moral courage. Despite the limitations of his religious
ideology and reformist politics, he challenged the power structure
of his day, not only on racial discrimination, but on war, on
poverty, on the very structure of the society in which he lived.
King became an increasingly passionate opponent of the war
policies being pursued by the administration of Lyndon Johnson,
openly breaking with the Democratic president who had been his
ally in the passage of civil rights legislation. The United States
government, King said, is the greatest purveyor of violence
in the world today, referring not only to the Vietnam War,
but to US backing for oppressive dictatorships in many countries.
In a speech two months before his death, King denounced American
foreign policy as a bitter, colossal contest for supremacy.
Referring again to Vietnam, he said, We are criminals in
that war and have committed more war crimes almost
than any nation in the world.
Contrast that bluntness and moral fervor with the bogus antiwar
speeches of todays Democratic politicians, who invariably
praise the heroism of American soldiers and the nobility of their
efforts, while criticizing the war in Iraq mainly as a diversion
from a greater commitment of the American military to bloody adventures
elsewhereAfghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, etc. Obama, for example,
always couples his criticism of the war with calls for increasing,
not decreasing, the manpower and material resources of the US
war machine.
King had been drawn into opposition to the war in Vietnam by
his growing understanding of the connection between militarism
abroad and the oppressive social structure at home. He saw the
resources promised for the Johnson administrations War
on Poverty drained into the swamp of Vietnam.
In remarks to his staff at the Southern Christian Leadership
Council, King said that the civil rights reforms of the early
1960s were at best surface changes that were limited
mainly to the Negro middle class, adding that demands must
now be raised to abolish poverty. We are saying that something
is wrong ... with capitalism, he concluded. There
must be a better distribution of wealth, and maybe America must
move toward a democratic socialism.
It is impossible to imagine such language coming from Barack
Obama, who in a recent interview with BusinessWeek rejected
confiscatory tax rates on the wealthy, declaring,
My opponents to the right would like to paint me as this
wild-eyed liberal, but I believe in the market. I believe in entrepreneurship.
I believe in capitalism, and I want to do what works. As
for Hillary Clinton, her role in the distribution of wealth was
demonstrated Friday when she released tax returns Friday revealing
that she and her husband raked in $109 million in income since
leaving the White House.
During the last year of his life, from his public antiwar speech
at Riverside Church in New York City to his murder in Memphis,
King was in increasing political crisis. The old-line civil rights
organizations and much of the Democratic Party establishment had
turned their backs on him because of his outspoken criticism of
the Vietnam War.
More militant advocates of physical resistance to police violence
and racial oppression, such as the Black Panthers, SNCC (Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Committee) and Malcolm X, had won growing
support among black youth, particularly in the urban centers outside
the South, which were swept by rioting in the summer of 1967.
Although he deplored the ghetto upheavals as a rejection of
his principle of nonviolence, he recognized their social roots,
declaring, A riot is at bottom the language of the unheard.
King himself had begun to recognize the necessity for a wider
struggle against the economic conditions that confronted not only
blacks, but all working people, and he had taken the decision
to launch a Poor Peoples Campaign to bring tens
of thousands of demonstrators to Washington in the summer of 1968,
despite pleas from the Democrats to wait until after the presidential
election. He was reportedly also considering an independent presidential
campaign focused on the issues of war and social justice.
The civil rights leader traveled to Memphis in March 1968 to
lend his support to the strike being conducted by black sanitation
workers, after two workers were crushed to death by the compacting
mechanism on their vehicles. The strike dragged on for two months,
with the workers staging regular protest demonstrations in the
face of police harassment and racist intimidation.
The first march at which King appeared erupted in a violent
clash between police and local youth, leaving one person dead,
62 injured and 218 in jail. King was preparing for a second demonstration
when he was shot to death April 4, on the balcony outside his
room at the Lorraine Motel.
In all the hours of media coverage and pages of newspaper articles
marking the anniversary, comparatively little attention is paid
to the event itselfKings murder, allegedly by a single
bullet fired from ambush by James Earl Ray.
The murder of Dr. King has key features in common with the
other political assassinations of the 1960s, particularly those
of President John Kennedy and Senator Robert Kennedy. All three
assassinations were supposedly carried out by lone assassins
motivated only by their own inner demons.
None of the assassins was ever actually put on trialLee
Harvey Oswald was himself assassinated by Jack Ruby, while James
Earl Ray and Sirhan Sirhan accepted plea bargains to avoid death
sentenceswith the result that much of the evidence against
them was never tested in court. In each assassination, major questions
remain that suggest that the gunmen may have been either cogs
in a larger conspiracy, or outright patsies set up to take the
fall for killings organized by powerful interests.
If this string of assassinations had been carried out in some
other country, the starting point of an investigation would be
the presumption of a political motive. Take, to cite a recent
example, the murders of liberal journalists in Russia, where there
is widespread suspicion that the Putin government and the security
services are involved.
Why shouldnt a similar presumption guide an investigation
into the assassination, between 1963 and 1968, of the most prominent
figures in liberal politics in the United States? The search for
those organizing the killers would logically begin in the political
circles on the right and in the state apparatus which stood to
benefit from the elimination of their most prominent opponents.
Moreover, what was the modus operandi of the US intelligence
agencies in the 1960s? When faced with political figures overseas
regarded as threatening, or merely inconvenient, the CIAs
Murder Incorporated would have them eliminated. This
was the period of the assassinations of Patrice Lumumba (1961),
Rafael Trujillo (1961), and Ngo Dinh Diem (1963), and countless
attempts to murder Fidel Castro.
The American intelligence apparatus was waging war within the
United States against radical opponents like the Black Panthers,
the targets of countless murder plots by local police departments
and the FBIs COINTELPRO operation. The FBI is widely believed
to have played a major role in staging violent provocations to
discredit civil rights leaders like King, as well as the mass
antiwar protest movement.
King was a particular obsession of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover,
who had branded him the most dangerous Negro in America,
conducting extensive wiretapping and surveillance, and orchestrating
hate mail that included death threats. The same agency was then
placed in charge of the investigation into Kings murder,
and served up Ray as the lone suspect. There is little doubt that
the FBI version of the killing is a whitewash.
Ray, despite his background as a drifter and small-time criminal,
was able to obtain a false passport and flee to Europe after the
murder of King. He was subsequently captured, extradited, pled
guilty and sentenced to 99 years in prison. Ray later attempted
to withdraw his plea bargain and mount a defense, claiming he
had not been the shooter. Andrew Young, the former close aide
to King who became US ambassador to the United Nations, now says
flatly that Ray had nothing to do with Kings death. Kings
family came to the same conclusion.
Forty years after the murder of Dr. King, the limitations of
his reformist outlook are obvious. Despite the abolition of official
segregation in the South, the social conditions of the majority
of black working people have not fundamentally altered. Hunger,
homelessness, poverty and unemployment are all worse among blacks
than among the population as a whole, and worse today than at
any time since Kings death. The number of African Americans
in US prisons, more than 900,000, is nearly six times the number
in jail in 1970.
For the most privileged layer of blacks, the past four decades
have brought significant gains. Some 10 percent of black households
have incomes over $100,000 a year, a fivefold increase, although
that figure hardly represents living in luxury. The number of
black millionaires and multimillionaires, while small, has skyrocketed.
There are 10,000 black elected officials, an eightfold increase,
and Obamaone of the newly minted black millionairescould
well be elected the first African-American president.
This is not the outcome that King would have desired, nor does
it represent the strivings of the millions of working people and
youthwhite as well as blackwho joined in or were inspired
by the civil rights struggles of the 1960s. Those aspirations
will only be carried forward through the emergence, at a far more
politically conscious level, of a new mass movement of working
people to challenge the capitalist system as a whole.
See Also:
Hypocrisy from Bush,
Clinton at funeral of Coretta Scott King
[8 February 2006]
US: Protesters jeer
Bush in Atlanta on Kings birthday
[17 January 2004]
50,000 protest Confederate
flag in South Carolina: political issues in the fight for democratic
rights
[26 January 2000]
Letter
from reader on 30 years since King assassination
[14 April 1998]
Thirty years
since the assassination of Martin Luther King
[4 April 1998]
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