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Change, Martin Luther King, Jr., British Petroleum and Precinct Caucuses
Combine these elements for a quick look at how change happens.
National media is reporting there's an argument between Presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama about who deserves the most credit for the passage of the Civil Rights Act, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. or President Johnson. Clinton said in a recent television interview that King's "dream began to be realized when President Lyndon Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964." Black leaders contend that Clinton's remarks diminish King's exemplary leadership.
The simplistic dichotomy of either/or presented by the media is wrong. Complex factors are at play in all major social changes and this was abundantly so in the civil rights movement, one of the most significant events in recent history. Here are a few of the events in the long process of the civil rights movement that culminated in passage of landmark legislation.
President Lydon Baines Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 into law, after it was passed by the House of Representatives and the Senate as representatives of the citizens. After Dr. Martin Luther King's awesomely inspiring "I have a dream" speech.
After images of massive public demonstrations and protests involving black and white people, many of them liberal clergy, were transported into American homes through national television. After countless meetings of civil rights leaders and the community to develop strategies and tactics.
After the murder of a white minister, Rev. James Riebe of All Souls Unitarian Church in Washington, DC, who had traveled to the South to support the movement, got the attention of the national media. The previous killing of many blacks had been invisible to the outside world.
After many demonstrations and altercations in the South that went unnoticed by national media including police in Winona, Mississippi severely beating and jailing Fannie Lou Hamer, a middle-aged sharecropper who volunteered to join the voter registration drive so blacks could vote for the first time. After Rosa Parks, emboldened by community support and tired from years of suffering the abuses of segregation, refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama.
After African American churches had spent years nurturing the souls and hopes of their congregations. One of these churches was the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church where a young minister named Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. had recently succeeded his father, Martin Luther King, Sr. The previous minister, Rev. Vernon Johns, had raised awareness of the inequity of racial segregation and built a strong foundation for change within the community through his insistent powerful advocacy of racial justice.
Change didn't happen because of King and Johnson. It wasn't because of King or Johnson. Change happened because courageous leaders spoke out and organized. More leaders, many of them white ministers and people of faith, answered the call and helped raise public consciousness about the injustice of segregation. And they never gave up.
Then hundreds of thousands of ordinary people became extraordinary by getting involved. Hearts and minds of a critical mass of Americans were transformed from fear of the children of slavery into recognition of our shared humanity and that we are all created equal. Together they created the tipping point that changed America forever.
President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 into law because of public demand.
Public opinion coming from the grassroots up through the political process to the Congress and President is one way major social change happens.
Another way change happens is by buying it. For example, British Petroleum is spending countless millions of dollars to create a public perception that they are an environmentally friendly corporation including a new name, BP that can also stand for "Beyond Petroleum," and a logo that looks like a flower. They are investing in alternative fuel while continuing to sell massive amounts of regular fuel that pollutes the environment. The full facts are unknown about how their activities as a socially responsible company will balance their role in global warming.
There are countless ways for ordinary people to make a difference. Unless you own a multi-million dollar corporation, you're probably better off getting involved at the grassroots.
Here are two timely opportunities for citizen participation in democracy:
Precinct caucuses and primaries are being held across the country. You can impact which representatives will be elected to enact laws that fulfill our nightmares or our dreams by being a part of this process.
Dr. Martin Luther King's legacy and the civil rights movement are being honored Monday, January 21. You can reflect on the sacrifices of visionaries and activists who built our democracy and resolve to honor their contribution by giving of your time, money or both to keep the dream alive.
Everyone can and must play a role in transforming America by personally investing in participatory democracy. Future generations will thank us.
Phyllis Stenerson, Minneapolis, MN, is a long time political activist who creates and publishes communication materials that articulate progressive values. Her latest project is a 2008 calendar/journal with quotations from diverse voices, Believe We Can Transform America. For information and links to background on this article go to www.ProgressiveValues.org.
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6 Comments so far
Show AllThe writer makes a good point that many people worked hard and risked their lives to bring about changes in the civil rights laws in the US. However, if Lyndon Johnson had not pushed as hard as he did with the congress at the time, I doubt that they would have passed when they did. Johnson was utterly wrong on Viet Nam, but he was quite courageous in pressing for civil rights legislation when he did. His prediction that it would be politically costly for the Democrats proved to be all too accurate.
Ms Stenerson
Thank you for saying this - that is how the world actually works. I have never figrued out why people need a figure head to say something can be done, and then swear by that persons actions alone.
It takes a community to get something so vast accomplished.
Regards
Zero
Today is Martin Luther King Jr.s birthday (a national holiday for the country, but to isten to the silence about this great man one would never know it. Once the dominant culture has gotten exactly wrong. Forever frozen in time MLK is "th edreamer" but as Juliann Malveau, current President of Bennett College, once observed, "Dr. King didn't die dreaming, he died doing".
More importantly, the "doing" he did that got him killed (most probably by the same national security establishment that did in the Kennedy brothers) had nothing to do with "the dream" but instead was his increasingly focused and effective opposition to the Vietnam War.
If you want to hear the closest thing this generation of America had to a prophet, go and listen to Dr. King's address at the Riverside church in New York in opposition to both the war in Vietnem and what america was becoming as a result of it exactly one year to the day before he was guned down. Listen to his analysis of not only the Vietnam war but of American society and then think about what this country has become and what it has been doing to the nation of Iraq in the past 5 years. the speech is at:
http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/mlkatimetobreaksilence.htm
Maybe then you will begin to grasp how much America and the world lost when he was gunned down like some animal in Memphis forty years ago.
Photographer wrote: "Johnson was utterly wrong on Viet Nam, but he was quite courageous in pressing for civil rights legislation when he did. His prediction that it would be politically costly for the Democrats proved to be all too accurate."
Of course that was the event that put the South in the pockets of the Republicans, Johnson himself was racist so it was courageous of him or perhaps he had few political options with the Country coming unglued at the seams (White people being killed). I mention this as there are probably a lot of young people posting on this thread that can't remember those turbulent times. Racism is institutionalized in the United States (the U.S. is not alone in this trait)and it has just went "underground" since the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964-it's still alive and well.
I think boycotts should be organized against businesses that stay open on MLK Day. While the gov't shuts down (and thank God at this point), many corporations stay open.
I don't think this is right at all. God forbid some black rabble rouser from the past should get in the way of profit.
Boycott all businesses that stay open on MLK Day!!!
Nice post.I got many ideas. I visit again to this site if there a new improvement...
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