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MLK, LBJ, Clinton, Obama and the Politics of Memory
In the agonizingly absurd civil rights "debate" between the supporters of Democrartic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, I'm with the Lion of Anacostia.
"If there is no struggle, there is no progress," declared Frederick Douglass in 1857, in response to those who suggested that the great abolitionist was pushing too hard for an end to human bondage. "Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet depreciate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters. This struggle may be a moral one; or it may be a physical one; or it may be both moral and physical; but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will."
Douglass understood that the relationship between struggle and power is definitional for those who seek consequential change in the body politic. Both are needed to bend the arc of history toward progress.
As such, it is boneheaded in the extreme to diminish the role of movements in forcing social and political progress. But it is surely just as silly to suggest that who holds power might be of limited or lesser consequence.
If the candidate Hillary Clinton campaigned for in 1964, Republican Barry Goldwater, had been elected, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement would have suffered a setback. Dr. King believed that it was dramatically better for the movement, and for America, that Democrat Lyndon Johnson won that essential presidential election of 44 years ago.
This would appear to be the point that Hillary Clinton was attempting so clumsily -- or so calculatingly -- to make when she said prior to the New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary that, "Dr. King's dream began to be realized when President Lyndon Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It took a president to get it done."
Unfortunately, while Clinton's words may have had some truth in them, her comment came across as precisely the sort of crude and self-serving interpretation of history that Americans expect from the lesser of our leaders. And that it was. By so casually referencing the complex role that civil right agitation played in forging racial progress, she invited the firestorm that has come. Obama is not speaking out of turn, or unreasonably, when he suggests that, "Senator Clinton made an unfortunate remark, an ill-advised remark, about King and Lyndon Johnson... And she, I think, offended some folks who felt that somehow diminished King's role in bringing about the Civil Rights Act."
The pettiness of the politics that are on display as we mark the 79th anniversary of King's birth borders on the grotesque. Surely, there is a measure of comfort to be found in the fact that both leading Democratuc candidats for president want to claim a piece of this country's civil roghts legacy. But there is nothing graceful, nor reassuring, in the way in which the claims have been staked.
Clinton played games with the nation's civil rights narrative in order to position herself as a stronger presidential nominee for the Democrats, and Obama's campaign has effectively slammed her for it. Clinton says she is "personally offended" by the signals coming from the Obama camp with regard to her regard for King and the civil rights movement. Obama glibly stirs the pot by suggesting that he is somehow above the fray while saying of Clinton: "She is free to explain (herself)."
Neither candidate matches the charicature that the campaign of the other invites us to accept. At the same time, neither candidate has cut through the thicket of this distorted debate and reached for the higher ground that might distinguish a contender for the presidency as something more than a politician on the hunt.
Where both Clinton and Obama are misguided is in their shared attempt to score political points rather than to step back from the abyss of an ugly discourse and to seek the clarity that is so frequently absent from our politics.
Neither Clinton nor Obama is using history well or wisely. Neither is telling those of us who recognize the significance of the King-Johnson collaboration - and, for a brief shining moment it was a collaboration - what we need to hear. Neither is answering the fundamental questions: How, as president, would they relate to social and political movements? Would they invite the Martin Kings and the Frederick Douglasses of the twenty-first century to the White House? Would either of these two candidates, as president, sit down with those demanding fundamental change, craft policies with supposed radicals, and coordinate political strategies with influential outsiders - as did both Lyndon Johnson in the 1960s and Abraham Lincoln in the 1860s?
Frederick Douglass knew, as did King, that it mattered who held the presidency. An imperfect Lincoln was better than a perfect Jefferson or Jackson. As Douglass explained in remembering the president who signed the Emancipation Proclamation, "We saw him, measured him, and estimated him; not by stray utterances to injudicious and tedious delegations, who often tried his patience; not by isolated facts torn from their connection; not by any partial and imperfect glimpses, caught at inopportune moments; but by a broad survey, in the light of the stern logic of great events, and in view of that divinity which shapes our ends, rough hew them how we will, we came to the conclusion that the hour and the man of our redemption had somehow met in the person of Abraham Lincoln. It mattered little to us what language he might employ on special occasions; it mattered little to us, when we fully knew him, whether he was swift or slow in his movements; it was enough for us that Abraham Lincoln was at the head of a great movement, and was in living and earnest sympathy with that movement, which, in the nature of things, must go on until slavery should be utterly and forever abolished in the United States."
King was similarly clear-eyed about Johnson, a Texas politician who came slowly to the cause of civil rights but was crucial to its advancement. Where the administration of John Kennedy had kept King at arm's length, Johnson reached out to the man who would win the Nobel Peace Prize during the new president's first year in office. King said Johnson helped him understand that "new white elements" in the American South might be motivated by a "love of their land (that) was stronger than the grip of old habits and customs." Johnson, in turn, recognized the necessity of maintaining close ties with King and other civil rights leaders, both because the president valued their insights and because he needed their support.
The president got that support in 1964, when King urged African-American voters to use all of their burgeoning political might to block the candidacy of Goldwater, a conservative Republican who had voted with southern racist Democrats against civil rights legislation. Though Johnson and the civil rights movement had been at odds during the course of the campaign -- especially over the question of whether to seat black delegates from Mississippi at the Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City -- there was no question about where the most prominent leader of the movement stood with regard to the fall race. Three days before he was awarded the Nobel Prize, in October, 1964, King abandoned the traditional neutrality of the civil rights movement in presidential politics and delivered a historic address at Brooklyn's Antioch Baptist Church in which the New York Times reported that he said the "negative" attitudes of the Republican presidential candidate on human, political and constitutional questions had compelled him to call for the crushing defeat of Goldwater
When Goldwater's candidacy was indeed crushed on November 3, 1964, one of Johnson's first post-election calls was to King, who said that "the forces of good will and progress have triumphed."
But the civil rights leader said something else. Rather than place his blind trust in the president to deliver on the promise of justice, King described Johnson's landslide as "a definite mandate from the American public" to take the civil rights movement deeper into the south, to expand its demands on Washington and to generally raise the level of expectations.
Johnson responded by echoing King's sense of urgency.
In the same week of December, 1964, that the world heard King accept the peace prize - with his memorable description of the honor as "profound recognition that non-violence is the answer to the crucial political and moral question of our time--the need for man to overcome oppression and violence without resorting to violence and oppression" - Johnson appeared before civil rights leaders in Washington and declared that, "There are those who say: It has taken us a century to move this far, and it will take another hundred years to finish the job. Well, I am here to say to you tonight that I do not agree. Great social change tends to come rapidly in periods of intense activity and progress before the impulse slows. I believe we are in the midst of such a period of change.
"There are those who predict that the struggle for full equality in America will be marked by violence and hate; that it will tear at the fabric of our society. Well, for myself, I cannot claim to see so clearly into that future. I just do not agree. I know that racial feelings flow from many deep and resistant sources in our history, in the pattern of our lives and in the nature of man. But I believe there are other forces, that are stronger because they are armed with truth, which will bring us toward our goal in peace. There are our commitments to morality and to justice, which are written in our laws and, more importantly, nourished in the hearts of our people. These commitments, carried forward by men of good will in every part of this land, will lead this nation toward the great and necessary fulfillment of American freedom. In this way, our peoples will once again prove equal to the ideals and the values on which our beloved nation rests."
That was a remarkable statement coming from a just-reelected president. It confirmed Johnson's commitment to respond to the demands of the civil rights movement, thus assuring that King's initiatives had not just the prospect but the likelihood of realization.
That is the unique dynamic of the King-Johnson relationship, the dynamic that created the sort of progress Clinton, Obama and others now struggle to define as somehow being more likely to be replicated under one or the other of them.
What we would do well to demand of both these candidates and their campaigns is something more than the cheap positioning of an election season. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama both owe it to America to suggest that they could - and would - recreate the King-Johnson dynamic in order to achieve the progress that is still needed not just along the color line that Frederick Douglass and Martin King struggled to move but along lines of gender, class and sexual orientation.
For meaningful progress to be achieved, movements are necessary.
But so, too, are presidents.
It is when a movement has the ear of a willing president that necessity gives way to something more tangible and potentially transformational: the discussion of how to move from an antiquated here to only-dreamed-of there. In a democracy, this can never be a one-sided discussion - as Martin King and Lyndon Johnson, Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln and every other great American combination recognized. The ability of a Hillary Clinton or a Barack Obama to articulate that recognition in the language of this moment might well make one of them the next president of a nation that longs not for another history lesson but for the making of history.
John Nichols is a co-founder of Free Press and the co-author with Robert W. McChesney of TRAGEDY & FARCE: How the American Media Sell Wars, Spin Elections, and Destroy Democracy — The New Press.
© 2008 The Nation

39 Comments so far
Show All"She's free to explain (herself" What, you mean she won't be tasered like the rest of us would be for speaking out or trying to explain something?
By the time people wake up and realize it doesn't matter one iota what we vote or what they say, it'll be too late. There's a bigger and frightening initiative at play here people and this democracy bullshit is just that. This is nothing more than another divide and conquer ploy not unlike NBC trying to shut out Kucinich or any other peace candidate. Understand this, war profits are the growth in our economy now stop this insanity. Go to your nearest store right away; stock your home with staples for you and your family and let these bimbos play to the idiots and extremists-protect yourselves and your family. And watch to see if there are any disaster insurance companies coming to your neighborhood as in Pellston, MI at their airport. Can you afford a $50,000.00 one time premium to join and $15,000.00 annually for disaster insurance? You know, in the event something happens that FEMA won't show up for? Get real, this is all a charade and until we can address it for what it is, they win and we'll die for it.
Nichols always gives Clinton a pass even if it means he has to torture credibility.
Clinton, in essence, suggests that as white president of the ruling elite she is capable of realizing the dreams of the outsiders in that she is charitable--as in the Christmas presents under the tree campaign ad. But only the queen has the ability to manifest such grand accomplishment.
Please get serious! This has been a deliberate smear campaign from day one by the Clintons. They are the most dishonest and vicious politicians this country has ever seen and we have seen plenty. They will stoop to anything to return to power and it is truly an ugly spectacle.
Maiden, why are you giving up? "Protect yourselves and your families"? I got more than a few relatives up in the Carolina hills that do just that. Sure, nobody bothers them...but they don't change anything either.
You may think that you're being smart by fortifying yourself, but think about it. Isn't being so paranoid and scared out of your wits exactly what the people you hate WANT? And you're just going to GIVE that to them?
I'm not saying that I got the answer, but I know that conceding the battle before the fight has even really started is no way to win. Don't be afraid to retreat or strike at the angles where they don't expect you...but don't you DARE surrender. You'll have fought their battle for them.
I'm no fan of Hillary's, but I am having trouble seeing anything wrong in what she said. She said that it took the President signing the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to see the dream of MLK begin to be realized. Who else would sign it other than the Pres? Sounds like a tempest in a teapot to me.
If it is about memory, it took all of us in the movement to get progress while Hillary was for Goldwater.
The first great modern slain Civil Rights leader was Harry Moore, here in Florida, who was much too radical for the NAACP.
http://www.nbbd.com/godo/moore/
http://www.pbs.org/harrymoore/
bligh--it is in the subtle overtones and combination of off-hand remarks. There is a sort of unconscious dismissal of King as being the ineffective black man without the really important white man in power that is responsible for generous gestures.
Obama---King
Clinton----LBJ---the one that really matters and is ultimately responsible.
why else would she make such a ridiculous statement? It is more of the same admonition we get from the ruling elite that people should know their place--i. e. Cindy Sheehan is more effective working on the outside as an activist.
I get a good feelin whenever i See the word ... Cindy
Now if Obama had just reminded the press that Clinton didn't just support but campaigned for Goldwater, we'd be talking about something else entirely by now.
Oh Bligh,
I guess you could give the credit to King John for Habeus Corpus and the magna charter too ...but he was forced under revolt by the the folks he screwed over to force the signing.
As you saw on PBS last night that Johnson never believed the Warren Report that he ordered to find Oswald guilty with no Confederates at large" and other directions with Allen Dulles who had connections to every player in the operation as the commission member to handle the release or un release of all sensitive materials.
Johnson hated Kennedy and and visey versey. The Godfather of the southern mob/cia/cuban connection was Carlos Marcello... who was a big backer of Johnson... We all knew a hit was in the works ...get serious about Johnson, Please.... Johnson and Hoover knew too many pieces of the puzzle to let a real investigation happen and one million Secret documents are sill hidden from our Eyes.
I'll tell ya what.. Lets all ask Hillary.. Beatniks, Cold War Kids and Baby Boomers too.. If she thinks it is time to get to the bottom of the crime and release to the public the freakin records....
But you are right... "Who could sign it other than the Prez".... Gee, Hillary is a genius too!
"That was a remarkable statement coming from a just-reelected president."
Sorry John, but Johnson was only elected President once. And that was in the election of 1964. It was the only time he was the party's nominee.
Obama and Hillary are nothing more than used care salesman, and so are all the Republican canidates (minus Ron Paul).
If any of them actually told us what they're planning to do, approval of government in this country would drop to about 5%.
Candidate's call truce, a chapter is closed. Enter commentator's conclusion, stage left....
There is no modern day movement equivalent to the movement(s) Nichols references in his essay.
The civil rights movement needs serious restructuring, but not from a couple of presidential candidates
deep in the back pockets of commercialism and militarism.
According to Nichols, Obama or Clinton need to transcend the pettiness of their campaigns
if they want to be presidential. Yet, he fails to mention both candidates created a "truce",
which most likely signifies the political capital on this particular venture is spent, rather
than an example of some type of group epiphany. Some have gone so far as to argue
Obama is just as petty as Clinton, indicating he purposefully played up the race card.
Rangel (D-NY) called Obama's decision "...absolutely stupid".
Clinton is labeled Barry Goldwater.
MLK labeled three problems for us to take on: materialism, militarism, and racism.
I have no idea how anyone could honestly think these issues will be addressed by either
of these candidates. Reagan-Democrats, that's what we have here.
.
Too late for the CD round-up but I am sure CD would've considered this one:
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080128/ehrenreich
Does that Johnson quote about the predictions of hatred and violence sound familiar to anyone? Rather like the predictions of implacable hatred between the Sunnis and the Shiites? It looks like people can get along, as long as they are all employed and have the basics of life.
It would be so easy to stir up racial hatred in this country. Turn the death squads loose in a black ghetto and a white suburb and then sit back and let the pundits go on and on about ancient hatreds.
We need to hang together or we will surely hang separately. No matter what forthcoming events happen, remember that black and white workers (including unemployed workers) have much more in common with each other than they do with the ruling class.
For the Dems it looks like it will be either Hillary/Obama or Obama/Edwards
If Dennis doesn't call in the UFO's, he might get a Dept of Peace... I Love the Little GuY..That's a Cleveland Thing... Ask Paul Newman.
Cindy will raise the conscious of the world in fighting for the constitution... what a novel Idea EH?
Well, that reads like a good one to follow.
I'm sorta let down by Obama's failure to distance himself quicker and more forcefully from the PC reaction. Granted, I have not read what HC's entire spiel was. I don't know the context. No one's relating the entire context. Maybe the whole thing actually breaks down just like Vern broke it down. Who knows? Where's the link for all the context? Nowhere.
A bad dream, though, is what Alex predicts above. Doesn't seem that impossible either. If we don't start building something in this country we'll never get close to black again. Just redder and redder. So, without question...gridlock. Kucinich is the only candidate who intends to get radical with industry here; he's right in tune with the amazing grace of what FDR pulled off...or facilitated.
Maybe I should know more about the Clinton campaigns methods. I can imagine you're right Alex, but I don't know that you are. It might have been part to a slew of reasons why DK asked that his votes go to Obama if cumulatively they didn't talley to 15%. At any rate, I'm gonna assume DK had his reasons.
Lemmie tell, I'd hate to see Obama grapplin with his inheritance...and due to lack'o progress (and it will be very, very rough friends)...all those caught up in the election oneness at the outset get upset cause there's no semblance to the New Deal or anything like it. No solidarity. Not many new jobs. No return of McMansions for all. Lord, I hated what happened to Carter. It crushed me, but I guess I should take a lesson from Jimma himself...why can't I? The same thing could happen with DK, but DK's POLICY, due to its inherent nature, has more chance of accomplishing what government IS SUPPOSED TO ACCOMPLISH. Anyway, Kucinich had his reasons for the Iowa votes. I'll support Obama and shut up about the whole thing henceforth.
This is what we should expect from Hilary. She will go back on her words. She has proven herself here at the Michigan Primaries: "Had Clinton not gone back on her word, this whole 'debacle' never would have occurred," Schuttler says. "But instead she decided to remain on the ballot to secure herself a potential default victory. Because of this, supporters of other Democratic candidates were left with no option on the ballot." While an unabashed Obama supporter, Schuttler is a staunch Democrat whose ire over those he feels are culpable prompted him to act.
"Governor Granholm is partially to blame for this fiasco," Schuttler says. "Notice that the day after Hillary said she would remain on Michigan's ballot, Granholm endorsed her. She claims this is because Hillary, by staying on the ballot, is supporting Michigan's causes. But if this is so true, why hasn't Hillary visited Michigan since the primary season began?"
I don't think that Dr. King would have had much good to say about either Obama or Hillary. They'd remind him too much of the Democratic Presidents who's FBI spied on Dr. King, tried to slander him and even tried to manipulate him into suicide.
Same @#%$@, same Dem party, different decade.
We got something awfully close to death squads in black ghettos today. They're called the police departments.
John F Kennedy never kept Martin Luther King Jr at arm's length, John Nichols. Why does it take a "gpod old boy" from the US South, you're wrong as hell. Jack Kennedy extended his concerns for Dr King being incarcerated in 1960 in that election campaign. Nor did he keep either Dr King or other civil rights leaders at arms length. Again Nichols gets it wong. When Dr King made that strong speech back in 1963 in the US capital, JFK let him and others in the civil rights movement know which side he was on and had been, and I remember those days well.
Also Lyndon B Johnson sabotaged civil rights legislation in 1957 Dwight D Eisenhower was pushing which was roughly as strong as that Johnson got passed seven years later simply because LBJ wouldn't get the credit. It's laid out chapter and verse. Just read the the real history of that period and stop trying to rewrite it. Johnson was a damn fraud all the way and a complete mafia bastard who even stole his way into the damn US Senate.
Vern said: "why else would she make such a ridiculous statement?"
I dunno. Was it ridiculous in it's entire context? Where is and what was the entire context?
Johnson cooperating with MLK was a miracle. Can we always count on miracles? What's this radical program of Obama's that Hillary will have to help him with?
They ought to get on the same ticket. The Dems in general made a big mistake by not letting Dennis go for it. I can't see HC or Obama siphoning off more Pub votes or independent votes than DK. It's amazing, you'll be up against Jim Crow in Cyberspace at the end...even after you campaign your butt off...but just for good measure, like Rush, everyone volunteers to have an arm tied behind their back...or to tie everything up in big AfroA/white debate and then play Houdini.
My friends, haven't we now seen just about every opportunity-to- be-stupid the Democratics in office have heretofore been incapable of seeing coming down the pike? How will we keep them all in our heads when 2012 rolls around? Maybe we need a new "frame." The media wonks are nothing but meritocracy; maybe the frame should be anti-meritocratic. Maybe it should just be completely geared to facilitating PARTICIPATORY self-rule, and have a wall of separation from strict father models and/or nurturing models and anything other than peaceful negotiating/compromise in the self-rule process.
I dunno. Will have to finish the article. Douglas was heavy.
Nah...we gotta keep nurturing.
Got MLK?
"Nichols always gives Clinton a pass even if it means he has to torture credibility. Clinton, in essence, suggests that as white president of the ruling elite she is capable of realizing the dreams of the outsiders in that she is charitable–as in the Christmas presents under the tree campaign ad. But only the queen has the ability to manifest such grand accomplishment."
Right on Vern!
What is the difference between the ruling elite like Clinton and the rest of the pond scum, and ruling elite corporate press that Nichols represents? Answer: none! How ironic that Nichols like Clinton is a status quo nim rod disguising himself as a progressive for the sake of his corporate handlers. This site use to offer about 20-30% progressive views, now all we get are democratic apologists like Nichols.
Huck,
I think I first discovered a link to CD from a closet-neocon's web site. That's always worried me. But as it begins tugging me back to being "happy" about my lot as a propertyless slave wage, I'll go elsewhere.
JFK tried to get King to call off the March on Washington. His brother was the one who authorized the FBI wiretap as Attorney General. Some friends, but not that LBJ was much better.
by the time they're done slashing each other, Johnny has a chance to pass them by
Edwards/Obama'08
The problem isn't that Hillary is a racist. She clearly isn't. The problem is that she is a shameless opportunist, a dirty fighter who will betray any principle or any friend, embrace any scoundrel, accept money from any crook, tell any lie and obscure any position to get elected. She's at least as polarizing as George W. Bush, and a vote for her is a vote for triangulation, realpolitik, hawkish foreign policy, gridlock, partisan bickering, incessant scandals and the same sort of Machiavellianism that has brought this country so low already.
I must dispute the post by "ad" which states that eisenhower was pushing for legislation in 1957,which was "roughly as strong" as the civil rights bill which passed in 1964.my memory,supported by wikepedia,is that there is no way the tepid act of 1957 could possibly been as strong as the legislation of 1964 which basically authorized the feds to dismantle jim crow-even if if johnson had been obsessed with bringing about the end of legal segregation.rather than jack my damn blood pressure up,i'll refer the readers to the newspapers and magazines of the time.we had apartheid back then.it took a movement from below,led by dr.king and others to put pressure on the political leaders.malcolm x stated that at first the white power structure wanted the black leaders to stop the agitation for civil rights.the leaders reported that "they couldn't stop it,because they hadn't started it." the legitimacy of our democracy became entwined with the civil rights struggle between 1955,and 1965.this could not have happened without dr. king,and it could not have happened at all in 1957,no matter what senator lbj had done.
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 again the dominant culture has gotten it exactly wrong. Forever frozen in time MLK is "the dreamer" 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 gunned 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.
John Nichols does it again. He is probably the best political writer of our time with a keener sense of history than all progressive writers of our time. I think it was Moyers, then a press secretary to Johnson, who relates as to how difficult it was to get Johnson on board relative to civil rights and how when he signed the eventual ground shifting law said that was the hardest thing he'd ever had to do in politics. He didn't want to do it.....but it was politically expedient and a committment he had made for the Black's support. I don't really mind Hillary and Obama trying to earn points by giving one another History lessons, and was amused to learn that Hillary onced campaigned for Goldwater. Yet I do think Nichols is correct for one or the other of today's candidates to step forward and without putting the other down suggest that in the best of all worlds that one or both of them are going to try to create, here is how we step forward into the future where it comes to disinfranchisement.....kill the voter id issue dead, just to name one issue about to be decided against our favor by the supreme court.
There is much to be done in the area of civil rights and voting rights, let's make sure our top candidates know what those things are and start talking about how they are going to do them rathier than arguing about the past concerning who had more sway in past skirmishes. The future is here lets get on with it.
Let's get beyond the Bush/Cheney 8 year debacle and get this country back in the hands of right thinking people so we can stop looking over our sholders and look ahead. cazador@nnex.net
Poet January 15th, 2008 11:23 pm
"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."
I agree whole-heartedly. Thanks for the link. Happy birthday Martin!
No neither Kennedy did what somebody else on this forum charged them with doing. They were both supporters of Martin Luther King Jr as early as 1960. Let me "thank" the poster who sent that in for the ignorance expressed. It's the reason progressives can't get a damn thing done, and John Nichols with his overrated Midwestern booty is another. He is putting out pure fiction about the Kennedys, and he should know it.
The only way for change to happen is if WE THE PEOPLE make the change happen. Poloticians dont respect change, hell, they fear it. But change takes unification. We're about as unified as the people in the middle east. There is strenghth in numbers. We have been divided and we will be beaten like the death drum when this is over. I think I'll stay with DENNIS and then vote green for every one else. You throw your votes away to anyone you want, its the american way, I'll proudly cast mine for the ONLY CANDIDATE that makes ANY sense to me. GOD (if you belive, I don't) save america. The jackboots are commin. Thanks Texrey
America is a concatenation of disengenuous self-serving lies piled from sea level to the summit of Wolf Creek Pass in the Rockies at 10800 feet. Underneath all those lies is a genocidal slave Empire that drinks human blood and sucks the marrow from the bones of children.
Yes, Hillary it took a President to pass the Civil Rights/Voting Rights Acts. JUst like it took a President to turn the Justice Department loose on the entire Black/Brown population to reverse the Demographics of our prisons and quadruple the prison population - through Selective Enforcement of the Law, Disproportionate Sentencing, and Targeted Incarceration.
On top you get Hillary. Underneath you get genocidal slave monsters and Barak is going to kiss it all better and make it go away, for the white people, so they won't be nervous while they drink the blood of Black and Brown men, women, and children.
Why won't this monster just die.
Pieces of 8.
Mr.Nichols certainly captures the idealism of days gone by and so obviously missing from political discussion today. Also, the strategy he points out has merit in that there has to be a committment and the people are the best people to put forth the issues (they are the issue) and through understanding and equality the president sets a course. Two of the four of our best examples were brutalty murdered for thier efforts. (you can see why some people say take care of your own) There was and still are people that benefit from marginalizing the peoples issues and you can probably include Paul Wellstone in a measure of how scared they get that actual equality might win.
Robert Kennedy regularly spoke to civil rights groups. He visited and inspired the disadvantaged in America. It was he that while speaking to such a group revealed the assisination of Martin Luther King, it was quite a moving speech where he would draw parrallels to his own experience with the assisination of his brother.
since their has been some reminiscing about the civil rights era on this thread,please let me add a memory concerning claudia taylor johnson,the wife of lbj,who died several months ago at a ripe old age.back in 1964,she did a whistle stop tour through the jim crow south in support of that famous civil rights law enacted that year.its difficult to describe how nakedly dangerous such an undertaking was in those days.i attended a state university in the south in which PROFESSORS openly baited black students because they did not want them in their classrooms.you can imagine the kind of reception lady bird got from some of the audiences on her tour.who's to say that she didn't come out to encourage us by her example? if a little old white lady isn't afraid of those racist crackers,why should we be? even if some of them are governors,college presidents,us senators etc.?
On the "Daily Show", tonight, January 15th (a week and a day since HRC drew her King/LBJ comparison), Jon Stewart aired the full clip, and said, in effect:
'Huh? What's the big deal, seems reasonable to render unto The President, what is The President's.'
That Biblical comparison seems apt to me, at the moment, because no matter how willing LBJ was to sacrifice the 'future of the party, for a generation', a dark mist of suspicion, fear and loathing still obscures LBJ's ghost.
It's some sort of Mother of All Battles of the Unconscious. The top of the mountain, The Dream, is hidden in a Black Cloud.
Barr McClellan (the former press secretary's father, attorney and Texas pol) wrote a book called "BLOOD, MONEY, & POWER: How LBJ Killed JFK."
http://www.bookfinder4u.com/IsbnSearch.aspx?isbn=0963784625&mode=direct
What *did* LBJ know about the MLK, JFK, and RFK assasinations?
I haven't read the book, not that I expect that it would Reveal All, but I know I don't fully believe the Official Stories, either.