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Blogs

Occupy_iowa_city_rally

Paul Street's Blog

Web Address: http://www.zcommunications.org/zspace/paulstreet
Bio:         Paul Street is an independent radical-democratic policy researcher, journalist, historian, and speaker based in Iowa City, Iowa, and Chicago, Illinois.&nbs... (More)

All Street Blogs

Martin Luther King. Jr. and "The Triple Evils That Are Interrelated"*

By Paul Street at Jan 17, 2005


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As the United States experiences its second Martin Luther King. Jr Day to occur with Iraq under American occupation, it's an opportune moment to remember King as a border crosser who refused to restrict his focus to just one city or one nation or to just one or two social and political problems.... King thought that difficulties in Vietnam and the Philippines were inseparably linked to difficulties in Chicago and Washington D.C. and Montgomery, Alabama. And in a remarkable essay titled "A Testament of Hope," was published after his death, he wrote that "the problem of racism, the problem of economic exploitation, and the problem of war are all tied together. These are the triple evils that are interrelated." Some in the civil rights movement used to ask King why he seemed to complicate the civil rights cause by speaking out against the Vietnam War. As King explained in a televised public forum in the summer of 1967 "I was a clergyman before I was a civil rights leader, and when I was ordained, I accepted that as a commission to constantly and forever bring the ethical insights of our Judeo-Christian heritage to bear on the social evils of our day. War is one of the major evils facing mankind. It would be foolhardy to work for integrated schools or integrated lunch counters and not to be concerned about the survival of the world in which to be integrated. I have worked too long and too hard to get rid of segregation in public accommodations to turn back to the point of segregating my moral concern. Justice is indivisible. Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. And wherever I see injustice, I'm going to take a stand against it whether it's in Mississippi or whether its in Vietnam." If you read King's essential writings and speeches in 1967 and 68, you see him repeatedly making strong connections between racism and poverty at home and war and empire abroad. He talked and wrote about the fact that many young black Americans were at the front of the imperial killing lines in Vietnam because their segregated poverty was so high and their educational qualifications and job prospects so low that service in the relatively desegregated military looked like a step up to them. He noted that America's criminal decision to pour tens of millions of dollars into the crucifixion of Southeast Asia was undercutting its ability to deliver on the promissory note of social justice that it had started to write with the all-too-limited and short-lived "War on Poverty." King observed how economic misery drove many poor whites as well as blacks into the clutches of the military. He also talked about how the American government's role as what he called "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today" was undermining his ability to argue effectively for nonviolent resistance to inequality and racism in the United States. In a famous 1967 speech he gave to Clergy and Laity Concerned at the Riverside Church in New York City, King noted the savage absurdity at the heart of America's claim to possess the ability to unify, liberate and democratize other nations. The self-appointed imperial savior Uncle Sam, King felt, was too deeply scarred by authoritarian inequalities and brutal class and race apartheid at home, to deliver on that claim. The war, King observed, was "taking black young men who have been crippled by our society and sending them eight thousand miles away to guarantee liberties in Southeast Asia which they have not found in southwest Georgia and East Harlem. We have been repeatedly faced," King intoned, "with the cruel irony of watching Negro and white boys on TV screens as they kill and die together for a nation that has been unable to seat them in the same schools. We watch them in brutal solidarity burning the huts of a poor village, but we realize they would never live on the same block in Detroit." "I could not be silent," King said, "in the face of such cruel manipulation of the poor." As an African-American doorman from Chicago's West Side asked me in the spring of 2003, as the US government launched it's so- called "Operation Iraqi Freedom": "how you gonna export something you ain't got at home?" Racism, economic exploitation, war: "the triple evils that are interrelated." How true that is today. As of 11:15 pm on December 21st, 2004, the National Priorities Project (NPP) reported, the George No Child Left Untested Bush administrationís illegal, immoral, and imperial war of choice in Iraq had cost more than $151 billion. With that same sum of money, the NPP calculated, the United States could have: enrolled 20,037, 391 US children in Head Start for one year; provided health insurance for one year to 90, 588, 264 children; built 1,362,157 public housing units; and hired 2,621, 749 additional public school teachers for one year. In Illinois, where young black girls and boys in neighborhoods like Englewood (on Chicago's South Side) and North Lawndale (on the city's West Side) attend classes too big to permit individual attention to children, the state's share of the war's cost could have paid for the building of 772 new elementary schools. The city of Chicago's share could have paid for the hiring of 27,284 additional teachers for one year. The military today eats up 29 cents of every federal tax dollar, compared to just 4 cents for education. At the same time, the total costs of the Bush administration's harshly regressive tax cuts reached $297 billion by 2004, equivalent to 2.6 percent of the national Gross Domestic Product. These cuts put government revenues at their lowest level as a share of the economy since 1950 and contribute to the dramatic shift from large projected budget surpluses to deficits "as far as the eye can see," the mainstream Center for Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP) reports. By CBPPs calculations, just 8.9 percent of Bush's "middle-class tax-cuts" actually went to the middle 20 percent of American income earning households. The wealthiest 1 percent were granted nearly a quarter (24 percent) of the great reduction in what the nation's private citizens are asked to pay for the vital business of the public sector. The opulent minority in the top 1 percent has received an average tax reduction of $34,992. Super-opulent millionaire households, equivalent to just 0.2 percent of all U.S. households, have received 19.3 percent of the tax cuts so far, garnering an average tax reduction of $123,592 from a president who refers to the very disproportionately white privileged few as "my base." The average beginning teacher salary in Illinois, by the way, is $34,522, just $470 less than the average tax cut enjoyed for far by the top 1 percent in what was already the industrialized world's most unequal and wealth-top-heavy nation long before Bush came into office. I have just finished a rather large and painstaking report on the persistence of deep racial inequalities and even deeper racist social and institutional policies and practices in and around my home city of Chicago: Still Separate, Unequal: Race, Place, Policy and the State of Black Chicago (to be released in March, 2004). I'd like to tell you that harsh racial inequalities and racially disparate --institutionally racist --- policies and practices are unique to the Chicago area but the truth of course is that the same inequalities, processes, and structures are deeply entrenched across the nation, which seems dedicated at all levels to the notion that race and racism are no longer relevant or fit matters for public discussion and remedy. Meanwhile racial inequalities and racist policies and practices are deepening as America inflicts a murderous, illegal, dangerous, and provocative occupation in the heart of the Arab world, an occupation that feeds on and reinforces racism, poverty, and economic exploitation at home and abroad. I am struck in this painful context by the profound living relevance of King's comments in "A Testament of Hope." In that remarkable, sadly posthumous essay, King criticized America's "inability to arrange an order of priorities that promises solutions that are decent and just" as it fought "an immoral war that costs early thirty billion dollars a year" and as it "perpetuat[ed] racism" and "tolerat[ed] almost forty million poor people." "The largest position of white America," King noted, "is still poisoned by racism, which is as native to our soil as pine trees, sagebrush, and buffalo grass. Many whites hasten to congratulate themselves," King added," in a comment that resonates loudly today, "in what little progress [black Americans] have made. I'm sure," King opined, "that most whites felt that with the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, all race problems were automatically solved. Most white people are so removed from the life of the average Negro," he observed, "there has been little to challenge that assumption.." Unwilling (as he said in 1967) "to segregate my moral concern," King also noted that the implications of true racial integration are more than just nationwide. Our disastrous experiences in Vietnam and the Dominican Republic have been," he rightly observed, "in one sense, a result of racist decision-making. [The policy-making] men of the white West, whether or not they like it," King boldly stated, ìhave grown up in a racist culture, and their thinking is colored by that fact." However many females and people of color the power elite may incorporate into the American imperial apparatus, that formulation remains relevant today, when great, very predominantly white concentrations of wealth and power take massive sums of public money that ought to be serving poor black and Latino children on the West Side of Chicago and the South Bronx and invest that revenue in the bloody takeover of a distant oil-rich Arab land for reasons that have nothing to do with Iraqi freedom or weapons of mass destruction. Paul Street is a writer and researcher in Chicago, Illinois. His book, Empire and Inequality: America and the World Since 9/11 is available from Paradigm Publishers. His newest book, Segregated Schools: Race, Class and Educational Apartheid in Post-Civil Rights America (New York, NY: Routledge-Falmer, 2005) will be available in the summer of 2005. He can be reached at: pstreet99@sbcglobal.net. * This article appeared in Dissident Voice (January 18, 2005) at www.dissidentvoice.org
Person

Re: Martin Luther King. Jr. and "The Triple Evils That Are Interrelated"*

By Gammon101, Bwong at Jan 19, 2005 23:16 PM

In general people tend to emphatize with those they can relate to. So white folks who haven't been discriminated against naturally are "clueless" about blacks who have been. But then middle class folks are just as clueless about the down and out poor and the homeless. A non white,upper middle class person probably is clueless about the daily struggle the white working class fellow("white trash") has to go through. A man probably has no clue about the woman condition.. The list goes on. Instead of railing against the "clueless white guy", we should try to eliminate barriers (classism or racism, or genderism, whatever)that keep people apart.Empathy will come naturally once the barriers are gone(or at least partially dismantled) The white guy cannot change his colour, I don't believe in original sin. PS Well, maybe the white guy CAN change his colour, now tht I think of Michael jackson!:)

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Person

Re: Martin Luther King. Jr. and "The Triple Evils That Are Interrelated"*

By Ryan, Resident-dissident at Jan 19, 2005 06:50 AM

I agree in large part with the notion that the average white American is clueless to the persistent racism that's prevalent in our society. To give a recent example, a so-called (self-proclaimed) "conservative" aquaintance of mine made a comment to the effect that racism is no longer an issue in our present-day culuture... This was a couple of weeks ago, and I refrained from commenting in response (mainly due to the fact that the others present seemed to hold equally racist views)... But then, a couple of days ago, I was with that very same person under a more casual setting; he told this really tasteless joke about blacks to the four people in the room. But in this setting - and considering his earlier remarks - I just couldn't resist a comment. I said to him straight-faced after he told his racist joke: "that was good one... so tell us the one about how racism is no longer an issue these days". Then, dead silence swept over the room, and someone quickly changed the subject... Needless to say, racist attitudes are ubiquitous. And Bush's home state - which is also the bordered area where I happen to live - is certainly no exception.

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Occupy_iowa_city_rally

Re: Martin Luther King. Jr. and "The Triple Evils That Are Interrelated"*

By Street, Paul at Jan 18, 2005 20:12 PM

Positions on the war lined up identically with race attitudes. The people (all but 2 of the caucasians) who said racism is over in the US were also with Dubya's occupation; the mostly black people who said that racism is still going strong were against the occupation. I was sustained in my suspicion that one of the biggest problems for the world today is the majority of the white people in the United States. They live, many of them, in worlds of dangerous and extreme moral and intellectual idiocy.

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Occupy_iowa_city_rally

Re: Martin Luther King. Jr. and "The Triple Evils That Are Interrelated"*

By Street, Paul at Jan 18, 2005 20:10 PM

I spoke on Saturday to a biracial audience. Most of the whites were immersed in shocking racial self-congratulation: the very fact of their presence at a King day event proved, they felt, how far they and their supposed black friends have traveled on the road to a glorious color-blind present and the granting of a level playing field since the 1960s. Racism is pretty much over, they said, pointing to the very existence of King Day as proof and also to Powell and Rice's presence in the racist imperial war establishment. Two quirky, left-leaning whites disagreed. The non-affluent African-Americans in the audience were pleased to see someone (me and and the other two weirdo whites) speak honestly about persistent racial disparities and the persistent and deepening role of institutional racism in the generation of those disparities. One upper-middle class African-American women didn't want to hear about disparities and argued for "keeping things positive." ...ctd

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Occupy_iowa_city_rally

Re: Martin Luther King. Jr. and "The Triple Evils That Are Interrelated"*

By Street, Paul at Jan 18, 2005 19:59 PM

The US is the headquarters of Orwellianism and has been for some time. The thought control imperatives and capacities of concentrated power are more advanced here than anywhere else. For background, see Alex Carey, Taking the Risk Out of Democracy and Chomsky and Herman, Manufacturing Consent. I did a piece called "Thought Control" (last year, ZNet) that got a big response. It's Orwellian I suppose for Bush to pose as a friend of civil rights. In past MLK day periods, Bush has invoked King while announcing opposition to affirmative action at the University of Michigan and while appointing racist Charles Pickering to the federal bench. Love is hate. War is peace. I don't know if Bush is any more psycho- or socio-pathic than the average white American I run into....ctd.

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Person

By Child, Wandering at Jan 18, 2005 12:26 PM

Paul, It seems that you are talking about another King: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A16371-2005Jan17.html http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/18/politics/18bush.html?oref=login Time to use your Orwellian Powers?...or it is not necessary since we already live in an Orwellian world?.

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Person

Re: Martin Luther King. Jr. and "The Triple Evils That Are Interrelated"*

By Shannon, James at Jan 18, 2005 02:08 AM

"Only as of late, with all the Enron scandals and related crimes, people are waking up to the fact that the most dangerous psychopath of all is the educated, socially adept psychopath, in fact, Dr. Hare recently said that he would probably be able to find many psychopaths involved in the stockmarket. It is time for American to "wake up" says Dr. Wolman, because we are being threatened by a serious epidemic of psychopathy." http://www.geocities.com/lycium7/psychopathy.html

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Person

Re: Martin Luther King. Jr. and "The Triple Evils That Are Interrelated"*

By Shannon, James at Jan 18, 2005 02:00 AM

The Triple Evils find the fuel for their existance in the Nature of some men who are psychopaths and throughout history have swayed the ignorant masses to follow them. Hitler was one of the most famous. Dubbya will go down in History as another, as he drags the world closer to World War. The US congress is full of psychopaths as is Corporate America, the Media and Our Courts. Heartless self serving monsters who live in luxury off the backs of the common man. All of humanity exists to serve there needs. "When caught in a lie or challenged with the truth, they are seldom perplexed or embarrassed -- they simply change their stories or attempt to rework the facts so that they appear to be consistent with the lie." The search for Weapons of Mass Destruction as ended. There were none. Osama is safe in Suadi Arabia protected by "OIL" he will never be found.

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Person

Re: Martin Luther King. Jr. and "The Triple Evils That Are Interrelated"*

By Shannon, James at Jan 18, 2005 01:30 AM

The truth is often painful. Our country is run by psychopaths. Dubbya is a case study. http://www.cassiopaea.com/cassiopaea/psychopath.htm "CHARISMATIC PSYCHOPATHS are charming, attractive liars. They are usually gifted at some talent or another, and they use it to their advantage in manipulating others. They are usually fast-talkers, and possess an almost demonic ability to persuade others out of everything they own, even their lives. While the psychopath has likes and dislikes and fondness for the pleasures that human company can bring, analysis shows that he is completely egocentric, valuing others only for their enhancement of his own pleasure or status." "Psychopaths cannot be understood in terms of antisocial rearing or development. They are simply morally depraved individuals who represent the "monsters" in our society. They are unstoppable and untreatable predators whose violence is planned, purposeful and emotionless."

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