Turning MLK into black Reagan

Everything in life is context, and when it comes to Martin Luther King Jr. (happy birthday, Dr. King!), context is almost always lacking.

Over the past decades, we’ve seen conservatives try to claim his legacy as his own — you know, the same guy they called a communist and an agitator.

“He was against all policies based on race,” says Peter Schramm, a conservative historian. “The basis of his attack on segregation was ‘judge us by the content of our character, not by the color of our skin.’ That’s a profound moral argument.”

Taylor Branch, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of a trilogy on King, says some conservatives are invoking a phantom version of King to avoid dealing with contemporary racial issues.

“They want to claim they understand Dr. King better than Dr. King did,” says Branch, author of “Parting the Waters.”

[…] One of the first leaders to invoke King’s message in support of conservative ideas was Ronald Reagan, according to Stephen Prothero, who spotlights that moment in his book “The American Bible,” which examines the most famous speeches and texts in American history.

MLKRepublicanBillBoard

In June of 1985, Reagan cited King’s “content of our character” line from the “I Have a Dream” speech to argue in a speech opposing affirmative action that King’s vision of a colorblind society would not include racial hiring quotas.

Yep: Black Reagan.

Most historians think King was getting more radical, not conservative, at the end of his life.

King concluded that racism wasn’t the only problem: War and poverty were the others. He came out against the Vietnam War. He called for the nationalization of some industries and a guaranteed annual wage.

His most audacious plan was a forerunner of today’s Occupy Movement. By 1968, King was preparing to lead a “Poor People’s Campaign” to Washington. A coalition of poor blacks, Native Americas, Latinos and whites from Appalachia would occupy Washington and force the government to take money spent on Vietnam and use it instead to combat poverty. The campaign muddled on after King’s assassination, but quickly fell apart without his leadership.

In a documentary entitled “Citizen King,” the leader is shown speaking to a church audience, as he prepared his nonviolent army of poor people for Washington.

“It didn’t cost the nation a penny to open lunch counters. It didn’t cost the nation a penny to give us the right to vote,” he said. “But it will cost the nation billions to feed and house all of its citizens. The country needs a radical redistribution of wealth.”

Yeah, sounds just like Mitt Romney, right?

Deathandtaxesmagazine.com takes a look at “Seven Big Lies Conservatives Want You To Believe About Martin Luther King Jr.

This 2013 article in the Hill is headlined “Conservative blacks irritated with liberal flavor of MLK march anniversary>” And then, they interview both of them: Mia Love and Herbert Cain! (That was a joke, son.)

Mia Love, the Republican mayor of Saratoga Springs, Utah, is black and was born in Brooklyn, N.Y.

She contends that modern-day civil rights activists, in league with the Democratic Party, de-incentivize personal responsibility and economic independence.

“I believe Dr. King would be saddened by the way that some of these leaders are telling Americans that they are victims and their only hope for a better future is a government handout,” she said. “It does nothing but keep black Americans dependent.”

That’s just not true. The man was a radical! He called for a guaranteed annual income, reparations to the descendants of slaves, and an end to war and American empire. He railed against war crimes! Are these people crazy?

It’s a tribute to the prescient power of Dr. King’s legacy that they are trying so hard to distort it.

Pretty crazy day yesterday

Ice storm. Lots of people slipped and fell, and there were many, many chain collisions. It was a good day to stay home!

At least five people across the Northeast were killed Sunday in crashes caused by rain “flash-freezing” on roads.

A crash involving 30 to 50 vehicles on Interstate 76 outside Philadelphia killed one person, and two others died in a crash involving multiple vehicles on nearby Interstate 476, police said. In northeastern Pennsylvania, a man was killed after his car overturned on an icy road and he was thrown from it and hit by a commercial vehicle. In Connecticut, police cited slippery conditions in a crash that killed an 88-year-old woman who struck a utility pole in New Haven.

Pennsylvania Department of Transportation spokesman Eugene Blaum called travel conditions “very hazardous” due to light rain falling onto cold surfaces, creating a sheet of ice.

“This is the worst type of winter precipitation to combat, because it can freeze instantly and it doesn’t need to be the whole pavement for vehicles crossing it to have problems,” Blaum said.

Gitmo sgt: Three ‘suicides’ were tortured to death

To say that this report isn’t going to go over well with waterboarding fans is obviously an understatement. This soldier’s allegations are dead serious – and did not break through to the “mainstream” media until this morning, when the scrappy New York Daily News published a substantial article on the sergeant and what he says he… Continue reading “Gitmo sgt: Three ‘suicides’ were tortured to death”

Pope Francis vs. Bill Maher, pope of snark

Pope Francis in the PH

Poor Pope Francis, cast into eternal darkness by comedian Bill Maher, host of Real Time and unofficial head of the Church of the Latter Day Snarks:

“I was starting to really like this pope,” Maher said during his monologue on Friday. “He’s dead to me now. Oh yeah, f*ck the Pope. Look, George Bush said it: you’re either with us or against us. Apparently the Pope is not with us.”

Maher was disappointed that the Pope said religion should be off-limits for insults at the same time that he condemned the attack against the French newspaper Charlie Hebdo that left 12 staff members killed.

I say, f*ck Bill Maher. He prides himself on being politically incorrect but his knee-jerk rejection of ideas that clash with his point of view is just the opposite — politically predictable. His snarky act has gotten old.

I don’t agree with Pope Francis on this one — no institution should be “off-limits for insults” — but most of his other social criticisms are on target. Bottom line, he always takes the side of the poor against the obscenely wealthy, the oppressed against the oppressors. Which is more than you can say for Maher and his fellow limousine liberals, who have more in common with hardcore Republicans than with progressives.

Credit where it’s due: Swamp Rabbit just reminded me that Maher’s golden moment as a social critic came soon after 9/11, when he told Middle America that people who crash airplanes into skyscrapers are anything but cowards — that we were the cowards for “lobbing cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away.” “Now that was politically incorrect,” the rabbit said.

Correction: When Francis became pope, I thought he’d turn out to be another corrupt figurehead who wore funny hats. I was wrong, except for the hats.

New MLK recording discovered

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmDc1DBscks

This is really cool news for Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday:

Pacifica Radio has revealed that its archival department – the Pacifica Radio Archives – discovered a previously unknown recording of a speech by Martin Luther King Jr. The recording was discovered last December and has been verified as the only known recording of that 62-minute speech, made in London on December 7, 1964.

The entire speech will be revealed in a broadcast of Democracy Now! at 8:00 EST on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, January 19, 2015. Throughout the same day, it will also be broadcast by Pacifica stations and Pacifica
affiliates.

The speech was delivered in London on December 7, 1964. Martin Luther King Jr. had been invited to speak on South Africa by an inter-faith Group called Christian Action. When he received the Nobel Peace Prize, he
combined his trip to Norway, to accept the honor, with a stop in London. At City Temple Hall in London, he addressed an overflowing audience with passion and humor. When speaking about South Africa, he read a prepared
written statement that called for sanctions to end apartheid. This recording is thought to be the only known record of a comprehensive public statement by King on apartheid in South Africa.

He also added the topics of the history of slavery, Supreme Court rulings, Greek philosophy, nonviolent resistance, misunderstandings about the doctrine of loving ones’ enemies, the legislative process of desegregation in America, registration of black voters, and ending bigotry throughout the planet. He spoke without written notes, as is verified by a 1:38 minute audio/video film clip that exists of the event.

Baby cakes

showercake

We had a Beatles theme for Saturday’s baby shower and I had a problem: Namely, the cake. How was I ever going to get a Yellow Submarine cake? The local custom bakery wanted $200!

So I got a regular cake and I hacked it. I added some additional icing (the dark blue), I stuck a Yellow Submarine Christmas ornament into a wave, and added some under-the-sea themed decorations I found in the supermarket. I think it came out pretty well, and a good time was had by all.