Some More News - SMN: The Whitewashing Of Martin Luther King
Episode Date: January 17, 2022Hi. In today's episode, we discuss the literal only MLK quote that Republicans ever mention, how it's a single sentence, why they love it so much, and what else he said that they'...re avoiding. Support SOME MORE NEWS: http://www.patreon.com/SomeMoreNews We now have a MERCH STORE! Check it out here: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/somemorenews Imperfect Foods is offering you 20% off your first 4 orders when you go to http://IMPERFECTFOODS.COM and use promo code MORENEWS. Get your new wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month, and get the plan shipped to your door for FREE, go to http://MINTMOBILE.com/morenews. Scribd is offering our listeners 2 months of Scribd for only ninety-nine cents. Go to https://try.scribd.com/morenews/ to get your first two months for less than $1 Executive Producer Katy Stoll (@KatyStoll). Written and directed by Will Gordh (@will_gordh). Edited by Gregg Meller. Graphics by F. Clint DeNisco. Producer - Nick Mundy. Researcher - Marco Siler-Gonzales (@mijo_marco). Associate Producer - Quincy Tucker (@LTP313). Follow us on social media! Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenewsSupport the show!: http://patreon.com.com/somemorenewsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Discussion (0)
Happy birthday to you.
Happy birthday to you.
Happy birthday to ya.
Happy birthday to ya.
Hey, here's some news.
We've got some birthdays to celebrate today.
You know how we always start the episodes
with birthday announcements?
You've all seen this.
You all know we do this.
So a very happy birthday to national treasure Betty White,
who turns 100 years young today.
Happy birthday to funny man Jim Carrey.
Smokin', somebody stop me.
Life is like a box of chocolates.
Happy birthday to Kid Rock.
Ba with the ba, da bang, da dang, diggy, diggy, diggy,
said the boogie, said up jump the boogie.
And oh yeah, happy belated birthday
to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,
whose birthday was actually a couple of days ago.
But ever since 1986, on the third Monday of each year,
we rightfully celebrate the life and legacy
of the civil rights leader
who utilized nonviolent protests
to help bring about an end
to explicit legal segregation in America
and pressured this nation to enshrine voting rights
for its black citizens.
Also, pretty good mustache.
Like a seven out of 10 on the mustache scale.
And so of course we celebrate this day with a variety of store sales,
a day off unless you're working at one of those stores or really any service job,
and, of course, the ritual of witnessing conservatives cynically appropriating MLK's message
to promote their right-wing reactionary agenda.
It's called the MLK Dream Score,
which would grade political candidates based on their adherence to Martin Luther King's
I have a dream speech. So Obama would get a low score because although he was cool,
his policies left blacks cold. Biden would get scored zero for excusing physical violence and
protests, creating polarization by branding people as racist and having no interest in a quote,
beautiful symphony of brotherhood. You can say that about everyone from Jesse Jackson to the squad.
Compare that to Trump.
His policies were more helpful to blacks than any modern era president.
Today is the anniversary of the assassination of the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.
I was thinking, like, if he were alive today,
I wonder what he'd think about such dismissive comments
and about a Democrat party that believes it can regain power by living in a constant state of protest or racial hatred and denial.
Every one of us has a right to equal treatment by our government.
That right is guaranteed by our Constitution.
It's the heart of countless laws passed with well-deserved fanfare by our Congress over many decades.
That right is inscribed on a monument on our National Mall to the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.,
who would be shocked and disgusted if he watched Susan Rice on television today.
Well, going forward, she announced this afternoon, quote,
every agency in the U.S. government,
a government that is, by the way, the largest and most lavishly funded organization
in human history,
every one of them will, quote,
place equity at the core of its policy design,
specifically and for the benefit of, quote,
marginalized communities.
Now, Susan Rice's speech was carried live
by many news outlets, but as far as we know,
not a single one of them paused to ask
what exactly she was talking about. Now, in Vermont, they are saying that you know, not a single one of them paused to ask what exactly she was talking
about. Now in Vermont, they are saying that you need to be a person of color or you can't, you
don't, you don't get to get in that line. How do you react to that? Well, you know, this, this whole
identity politics stuff is, is poisonous. You know, if Martin Luther King, Dr. Martin Luther King were here today,
he would be absolutely offended. You know, he wanted people to be judged by the character
and not by the color of their skin. Okay, pause, pause it! Sorry to interrupt this proud American
tradition, but I have to. Quick recap. So apparently Donald Trump is the modern day embodiment
of Dr. King's philosophy.
MLK would have hated protests for racial justice
and would have been shocked and disgusted
and I guess confused by the very notion of equity.
And of course he would have been absolutely offended
by the idea that a vaccine rollout
would prioritize communities that disproportionately suffer
from the negative health consequences of a novel virus.
You know, silly consequences like hospitalization and death.
Yes, I'm sure the man who stated that, quote,
"'Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health
"'is the most shocking and inhuman'
"'would be absolutely offended by the very idea
"'that a state government might prioritize
"'life-saving vaccines for the most vulnerable populations,
particularly the black community,
who it turns out are at much greater risk of catching COVID
due to the fact that they are less likely
to be able to work from home,
more likely to live in multi-generational households,
more likely to rely on public transportation.
And then on top of that,
disproportionately suffer from comorbidities
such as diabetes and heart disease
and have less access to quality healthcare,
which puts them at much greater risk of dying from COVID,
you know, because of that pesky, long,
and enduring legacy of racism in this country.
Anyway, happy MLK Day,
a holiday that comes with just as much
accurate historical context as Columbus Day and Thanksgiving
because we live in America.
You see, surely, you see.
You know, I kind of feel like MLK
would be more absolutely offended
by the fact that over 50 years after his death,
also known as an assassination,
the same health disparities that existed in the 1960s
continue to exist in the black community to this day.
That day being January 17th, 2022.
A year we once assumed would have flying cars
and robot sports, where's my goddamn cyber ball?
But instead have many of the same tragic inequities
from back when computers were the size of living rooms
and films were tackling the controversy
of interracial marriage.
Right, fuck, Sidney Poitier died too, that sucks.
But hey, at least we solved the interracial marriage stuff. No?, Sidney Poitier died too. That sucks. But hey, at least we solved
the interracial marriage stuff. No? Still struggling with that too, huh? Okay, well, again, America.
But I'm getting sidetracked here. We haven't yet finished our MLK Day tradition. Are there any other
right-wing abominations who want to lie about what Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. stood for?
There are literally colleges that are teaching kids that if they say, I am colorblind,
this is an element of racism. If you say, I don't judge people based on color,
this is a microaggression. I am not kidding. This is something that is said at universities
across the land. That is a direct rejection of Dr. King's dream. So what is the left doing?
They're saying, well, really, Dr. King's dream wasn't the colorblind society. That was just a bunch of sloganeering for the cameras.
What his dream really was, was racial separatism and competing interest groups.
His real dream was the Bernie Sanders socialist agenda that would overcome race with redistributionism.
He's really a class warrior rather than a warrior in favor of racial integration.
This is not why America celebrates Dr. Martin Luther King.
And to pretend otherwise is, I think,
a bit of nasty revisionist history
that has some pretty serious consequences
for the future of the country.
That's right, my fellow US of A-holes.
According to expert on black history, Ben Shapiro,
MLK was explicitly against redistributionism.
He wasn't a class warrior, you see,
and what he really wanted was a colorblind society.
And to claim otherwise puts the entire country at risk.
Thanks for piping up race expert Ben.
Specifically and coincidentally,
MLK apparently wanted the kind of society
and public policy proposals that Ben Shababaduke envisions.
Wow, how lucky for Ben, only wait! Perhaps this Ben Shapipu fellow isn't
right after all. And we'll get to that. But our special angry boy is at least right about one
thing. Broadly speaking, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is not celebrated in this country for his
promotion of wealth redistribution. But perhaps he should be because wealth redistribution is absolutely something that
he advocated for. In fact, there are a whole bunch of things that MLK believed in and fought for
that he is not celebrated for today, but maybe, possibly, definitely should be. And yet,
considering how frequently and consistently and mercilessly conservatives invoked Dr. Martin
Luther King to justify their agenda.
You could be forgiven for believing
that he was a free market loving libertarian,
at least forgiven a little bit, just a bitty or not.
It's up to you.
It's a free country.
If you don't count like healthcare and water and food,
also the color of your skin and household income matters,
like a lot it turns out.
Anyway, the point is that despite the fact
that we treat Martin Luther King Jr. like Santa Claus
or the Easter bunny or the Noid,
a mythical figure who ended racism
with a single sentence about dreams.
The truth is that MLK was a real person
who said a lot of things and also did a lot of things.
And heck, even wrote a bunch of things down.
And if you actually look at the things he said and did and wrote during things, and heck, even wrote a bunch of things down. And if you actually look at the
things he said and did and wrote during his too short life, you will find that he was far more
extreme than the conventional wisdom would have you believe. By any measure, Reverend Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. was a radical leftist. And this is why the right-wing appropriation of MLK is so
reprehensible. Because, you know, it's a lie.
Specifically, it's a lie that they are desperate
to propagate.
After all, the actual principles and policies
that MLK believed in and fought for
are completely at odds with conservative ideology.
This beloved and vindicated historical figure
just so happened to promote ideology
that would set the GOP firmly on the wrong side of history.
It seems damning.
The kind of thing you might have to do
a bunch of weird lies about
if you're the conservative type.
Now, you might have noticed that all these clips
that I've shown you of right-wingers invoking MLK
have centered around a single speech of his,
but even more specifically, a single line from that speech. Because I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where
they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.
I have a dream today.
Boy, conservatives absolutely love this one single line.
They sop it up like a delicious bread,
gnawing and swallowing and shitting out distorted husks
like the Sarlacc pit from Star Wars.
Here is Congressman Jim Jordan tweeting,
we honor the life and work of Dr. King
and his belief that it's the content
of an individual's character that matters most.
Weird thing for a guy who allegedly ignored
slash covered up the sexual abuse of student athletes
during his time as an assistant wrestling coach
at The Ohio State University to say, but sure.
Honestly, Jim, maybe not a great move promoting the idea
that people should be judged by the content
of their character.
Doesn't seem like that version of the world
would work out for you.
What with all the stuff I literally just said.
But anyway, and yet,
conservatives absolutely love invoking the legacy of MLK against current movements for racial
justice. Here is former Congressman Joe Walsh tweeting, in fact, if he were alive today,
Martin Luther King Jr. would lead an all lives matter march on Washington, D.C.
an all lives matter march on Washington, DC would be wonderful.
Yikes and fuck.
Yuck, if you will.
That sure is a dipshit tweet right there.
Imagine using MLK to justify a dismissal
of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Really imagine the doublespeak dystopian brain at work
to try and argue that America's most famous
civil rights leader would definitely be against
a modern civil rights movement like that.
That's like saying Nikola Tesla
wouldn't be into EDM festivals.
Like, yeah, I guess we don't know for sure,
but come the hell on.
And yet old Walshie isn't by far
the highest profile dildo making this argument.
One thing protesters would like to hear
is leaders say Black Lives Matter.
You won't say that. Why?
All my life I've been inspired by the example of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Ah, yes! Former talk radio host and Vice President Mike Pence.
I'm sure Martin Luther King would have hated the phrase Black Lives Matter.
Somebody told a lie one day.
They couched it in language.
They made everything black, ugly, and evil.
Look in your dictionary and see the synonyms of the word black.
There's always something degrading and low and sinister.
Look at the word white.
It's always something pure.
High and sinister. Look at the word white. It's always something pure, high and clean. But I want to get the language right tonight. I want to get the language so right that everybody here will cry out,
yes, I'm black, I'm proud of it, I'm black and beautiful.
Ah, geez, Marty, did you not hear what Joe Walsh and Mike Pence said?
Not very colorblind of you to say that black is beautiful.
Did you ever consider the idea
that all skin colors are beautiful?
God damn, do these conservatives love quoting this one line.
It's like a rite of passage for them.
They think of it like a magic spell they can use
to minimize any and all prominence of racism in America.
It is the, I have a black friend of political sentiment.
Because if America was a racist country, like some people say that it is, Arbery's killers would not have been found guilty
by a nearly all white jury in Georgia. Now, most Americans, people of all races truly believe in
and are inspired by Dr. Martin Luther King's adage that we are all God's children. And as such, we should judge each other
based on the content of our character,
not the color of our skin.
Forget the fact that it took more than two months
for Ahmaud Arbery's killers to be arrested
and it took a fucking video of the incident going viral
to prompt their arrest because, you know,
the prosecutor was allegedly using her position
to discourage arrests in the case.
Great example of how our justice system
is totally not racist.
And yes, I'm calling future vice presidential candidate Tulsi Trump, Tulsi 2024 Gabbard,
a conservative, but only because she is. Come at me, Tulsi heads. But like, not really. All right,
keep your distance, please. I'm a nice man. And you know, it's pretty ironic, don't you think,
that she quoted MLK to make the argument that America is not a racist country
and that most people of all races in America aren't racist.
When King himself stated,
I am sorry to have to say
that the vast majority of white Americans are racist,
either consciously or unconsciously.
But news, dude, you call out.
That was way a long time ago.
So much has changed since then.
First of all, stop yelling.
I can't hear you.
We filmed this episode last week.
Duh.
Second of all,
has it though?
Like,
has it?
Has so much changed since then?
So, you know,
eh.
We'll get back to that question.
But for now, we need to finish talking about the one line
that conservatives actually like.
Except actually, we need to do ads before that.
So we will do the ads, then the speech stuff,
then the stuff about how America is still racist,
in that order.
But let's face it,
I'll probably have a lot of tangents in there as well. It may or may not be a reference to another 80s video game. Maybe Contra? We'll see. The point is, who has paid us to say the name of
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Oh mama, we're back and we're talking about racism.
Shocking, we never do that on this show.
And on this subject, we were talking about
how mostly conservative politicians
absolutely gushed their britches
over misrepresenting a single line
from Martin Luther King Jr.
in order to justify really anything they want.
These dips probably used him to justify the Iraq war
for all we know.
I mean, that's probably hyperbole.
I get carried away some...
Ah, shucks.
Fun fact, that's actually an official under Obama
because fair and balanced TMC, are you ready to rumble?
Okay, getting back to the video and that one line,
which is of course,
a quote from MLK's famous, I have a dream speech,
delivered on August 28th, 1963,
when King was just 34 years old,
as part of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
And here's an interesting bit of trivia.
It turns out that he also said
a bunch of other things during the speech.
Weird, right?
Things that conservatives, but also politicians in general,
don't tend to mention nearly as much.
100 years later,
the Negro lives on a lonely island of poverty
in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity.
America has given the Negro people a bad check,
a check which has come back marked insufficient funds.
So we've come to cash this check,
a check that will give us upon demand
the riches of freedom and the security of justice.
There are those who are asking the devotees of civil rights,
when will you be satisfied?
We can never be satisfied as long as the Negro
is the victim of the unspeakable horrors
of police brutality.
Hmm, I wonder why they don't like to quote those lines.
And for some historical perspective, here's a
picture of birthday girl Betty White from the same year MLK gave that speech. She is older than me
in this picture. Boy, that's, um, actually recent, isn't it? It's like, despite the grainy black and
white footage and our inferior dildo technology back then. Within the scope of American history, this wasn't actually all that long ago.
And yet at this time, less than 60 years ago,
Jim Crow segregation laws were still alive and well,
making it legal in many instances to discriminate
against someone based solely on the color of their skin.
About 40% of the states still had laws
against interracial marriage.
And in much of the country,
black people were in effect denied the right to vote.
So you can understand why during this time,
one of the main demands of civil rights leaders like MLK
would have been a plea to end the era
of explicit legal discrimination in America.
And one of the primary obstacles to achieving this goal
was that many white Americans judged black people
by the color of their skin,
not by the content of their character,
and therefore did not support the end
of legal discrimination against black people.
The notion that individuals should be judged
by the content of their character,
not by the color of their skin,
is something that everyone should agree with.
Unless you are a literal Nazi,
then you should disagree on account of you
being a Nazi and all that. You know, it wouldn't be very consistent if you are a literal Nazi, then you should disagree on account of you being a
Nazi and all that. It wouldn't be very consistent if you agreed, you Nazi. Gotcha. What I'm getting
at is that at the time, it was extremely necessary for MLK to promote this idea, but not only this
idea. And by today's standards, judging someone by the content of their character is a much lower
bar. Because in theory, fucking of course we need to judge people of their character is a much lower bar because in theory,
fucking of course we need to judge people
by their character over the color of their skin.
Everyone decent knows this now.
It's the type of message we've grown up seeing
in 90s sitcoms.
The whole world is messed up right now
and I would like to see that get better,
but in order for that to happen,
white people are gonna have to start making
positive assumptions when they see people of color.
And people of color could make positive assumptions
when they see white people.
Man, things are just messed up.
Wonder what that show is, doesn't matter.
And boy, to be clear, not saying we like nailed it yet
in terms of not judging people by the color of their skin.
We still have a lot of work to do in that department,
but even so, the process of discussing race
needs to evolve and continue past this one line
from one speech that MLK gave.
And so still using this as a benchmark
is like judging a television
based on whether or not it features color.
We're just way past that.
But this is where conservatives seem to stagnate, and often
jujitsu this one line against efforts to achieve better racial equality and pervert its meaning to
further their selfish agenda. They twist a concept that promotes interpersonal respect, community
harmony, and genuine equality into one that ignores the impact of history, dismisses the legacy of
slavery and systemic racism in America,
instead promoting myths about meritocracy
and the ideal of individualism
in order to maintain the accumulated privileges
and advantages afforded by white supremacy,
all in support of enabling the exploitation allowed
by our current system of capitalism.
You know, like making people work on a federal holiday
celebrating a civil rights leader.
Hey, speaking of that,
fun, extremely ironic trivia for you.
It turns out that this holiday was started by this guy.
Thank you, Ron.
You definitely racist president you.
But at the time of his presidency,
Reagan was like the Hulk Hogan of racist dog whistling,
not to be confused with the real Hulk Hogan, of course.
As you probably know, dog whistling is the act of making racist statements or policies while not directly
talking about a race. This is often excused after the fact by claiming colorblindness. See, this
twisting of the statement that we should judge each other by the content of our character and
not by the color of our skin is what's often used to promote this concept
of colorblindness.
Deployed in a political context,
this claim of not seeing race is utilized
to obscure the role of history and systems
on the life outcomes of groups
that have been socially and legally disadvantaged,
and instead place the burden of success
solely on the individual members of those groups.
So what do you as an individual black person do
to change your life?
And I don't think it's helpful.
And in fact, I think it's actually quite hurtful
to spend an enormous amount of time talking about
the legacy of discrimination and racism,
instead of talking about what can you do right now
to fix your problem?
Ah, yeah!
Thanks to black history professor Ben Shapiro.
Glad you keep showing up.
Miss you, love you.
You see, not only is it not helpful
to spend an enormous amount of time
talking about the legacy of discrimination and racism,
but it's actually quite hurtful.
It's all up to the individual apparently.
What are you doing right now to fix your problem?
This systemic racism against you is like forest fires,
you see, only you can prevent it.
This leads to an extremely insidious false dichotomy,
which is the idea that focusing on what to do
to fix your problem and recognizing the systemic issues
that led to the problem are somehow mutually exclusive.
Hey, now, why are you griping on and on and on
about who pushed you into that hole
when you have all the digging out to do?
Seems like maybe the thing a person
who helped push you into the hole might say,
or at least someone who greatly benefited
from you getting shoved in the hole.
Like perhaps if someone made their living
implying that it's okay to push people into holes.
Now, there is nothing wrong per se
with the notion of colorblindness.
Colorblindness would be fine if the concept of race
had never been invented in the first place.
And I do mean invented, because race is not real.
That is to say, it is not a biological reality.
But it was invented.
I'm not being abstract here.
The concept of race was literally
invented. The word itself had only a broad meaning until the 18th century, and it was invented for a
very specific reason, namely to prevent enslaved Africans and European indentured servants from
forming coalitions over their shared economic interests in opposition to the wealthy ruling
class that was exploiting their
labor during the early days of colonization. Not sure who the official inventor of race was,
but I'm guessing he had a name like George or Andrew or Fish or Chips.
Our money is on Reginald.
So certain advantages were given to Europeans and heavy restrictions were enforced for Africans in
order to protect the rich and powerful elite.
And to justify this lie, more lies were told
about the essential and inherent differences
between the races.
This social and legal infrastructure provided privileges
to individuals that belong to the newly created
social category of whiteness and shackled, literally,
individuals assigned to the made up,
constructed classification of blackness,
which you can imagine severely limited the opportunities afforded to them.
And so when King said, I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation
where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character,
he is challenging the idea that the superficial phenotypic trait denotes anything whatsoever
about intrinsic worth.
He is challenging the notion that there is something inherently less valuable about black
lives.
One might even say, and I will, that he is saying black lives matter.
It's also worth noting that he doesn't actually use the phrase colorblind in this
quote, because the
problem isn't noticing that an individual has a different skin color. The problem is assigning
some kind of fundamental value to this trait. Ultimately, in this speech, and with this single
line from this speech, King is describing a vision of racial equality. And so, wouldn't
legitimate equality mean that you would try to make up for the unfair
disadvantages that have been imposed on a community without justification? Wouldn't failing to do so
just fortify that very inequality that has amassed over centuries of unjust treatment?
And so the idea that the notion of equality would mean to overlook the accumulated advantages
provided to one group
and the degrading disadvantages inflicted on another
and just say, on your marks, get set, go,
without making up for the fact
that one of the groups in the race
has been wrongfully stuck on the starting block
for centuries is,
and I don't wanna sound extreme here, unreasonable.
But essentially, people named Ben, and other names too, I guess,
are telling black people to ignore the systems that disadvantage them
and limit their opportunities and simply pull themselves up by their bootstraps.
This philosophy is used to prevent any disruption to the status quo,
which of course has historically benefited white people.
But hey, don't take my word for it.
At the very same time that America refused to give the Negro any land,
through an act of Congress, our government was giving away millions of acres of land
in the West and the Midwest, which meant that it was willing to undergird its white peasants from
Europe with an economic floor. But not only did they give the land, they built land-grant colleges
with government money to teach them how to farm. Not only that, they provided county agents
to further their expertise in farming. Not only that, they provided low
interest rates in order that they could mechanize their farms. Not only that, today many of these
people are receiving millions of dollars in federal subsidies not to farm, and they are the
very people telling the black man that he ought to lift himself by his own bootstraps.
Okay, Marty, that's all well and good, but what do you want to do about it, huh? They're the very people telling the black man that he ought to lift himself by his own bootstraps.
Okay, Marty, that's all well and good,
but what do you want to do about it, huh?
Some kind of bootstraps pulling machine?
Robots that create more land?
Oh, maybe the robots can also learn to pull up bootstraps
and we cover all of our angles at once.
Now, when we come to Washington,
in this campaign,
we are coming to get our check.
Ah, that makes sense.
Much better plan.
So Martin Luther King won, Ben Shapiro, zero.
Hey, that rhymes.
You know, it's funny.
It kind of sounds like MLK was talking about reparations
in that clip, weird.
And some of the things he was saying kind of sound like the sort of history
that conservatives are currently trying to ban from schools
and in some cases succeeding.
Gee, I wonder what kind of quotes those people are invoking
to accomplish such a ghoulish thing.
We're trying so hard to live up to those immortal words
of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
who implored us to be better than we are,
to judge one another based on the content of our character
and not the color of our skin.
And so let me be clear.
Let me be clear, on day one,
we will not have political agendas in the classroom
and I will ban critical race theory.
Yum, yum, yum.
What a surprise.
That was of course,
the newly inaugurated governor of Virginia, Glenn Youngkin,
who ironically assumed office on MLK's actual birthday just two days ago on January 15th.
Youngkin won the governor's race in part by hyping the manufactured hysteria over critical race theory.
And not to be outdone, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has taken things even further and introduced big eye roll incoming, the Stop Woke Act, allowing parents to sue over the teaching of critical race theory in schools.
And how did he unveil this new bill?
You guessed it.
He also invoked the words of Martin Luther King.
You think about what MLK stood for.
He said he didn't want people judged
on the color of their skin,
but on the content of their character.
You listen to some of these people nowadays,
they don't talk about that.
Boy, I kind of fucking hate that.
The sadistic cynicism of conservatives quoting MLK
to justify a ban on the supposed teaching
of critical race theory in schools
can't be overstated
as a supervillain-level hate-fucking of the American soul. You know, especially considering
that MLK was one of the major influences for CRT in the first place. It is the political equivalent
of beating someone with their own severed arm, a brazen act of racism that every American should
see right through, except, you know, America. And the
appropriation of MLK's words to push the anti-CRT agenda is not isolated to just these two behemoth
stains. Once and future President Donald Trump stated, critical race theory is a Marxist doctrine
that rejects the vision of Martin Luther King Jr. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said,
critical race theory goes against everything Martin Luther King has ever told Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said, critical race theory goes against
everything Martin Luther King has ever told us. Don't judge us by the color of our skin,
and now they're embracing it. That's right, Kevin. That one sentence is everything Martin
Luther King ever told us. It's their mantra. They love it and fuck it. They fuck the words
from every position. This one part of a single speech,
always used for some variation of the idea that we shouldn't go out of our way to give anyone
special treatment. Because that's what MLK wanted, they shout, internally praying that no one
actually remembers the specifics of what the civil rights leader believed in, or the fact that he
explicitly addressed this in the fourth and final book he wrote before he was assassinated, writing,
The white liberal must affirm that absolute justice for the Negro simply means, in the
Aristotelian sense, that the Negro must have his due. There is nothing abstract about this. It is
as concrete as having a good job, a good education, a decent house, and a share of power.
It is, however, important to understand
that giving a man his due
may often mean giving him special treatment.
Ah, geez, what about the content of the character
and all that?
How can you possibly justify giving a specific race
of people special treatment?
Well, he goes on to say,
a society that has done something special
against the Negro for hundreds of years
must now do something special for him
in order to equip him to compete on a just and equal basis.
Do a Cody a favor.
Anytime you see some reactionary ghoul quote MLK
in an effort to prevent the honest teaching of our history
or the notion of equity in public policy
or the idea that we might prioritize vaccine distribution to vulnerable populations, please politely and nonviolently shove this quote in
their faces, print it out and hide it under their pillows after breaking into their homes,
serve them food with it written on the plate after spitting in their food, paint it on their pets and
then take their pets. They don't deserve pets. Also non-toxic paint, of course.
Bombard them with this quote until they are forced to, at minimum, admit that what they really feel is this.
And yes, Martin Luther King Jr. was a mixed bag when it came to this stuff.
Because the idea that King didn't want special treatment or for America to teach the systemic
racism in this country or wanted to encourage bootstraps pulling or any of these other things
we hear from the GOP,
it is objectively a lie.
And I think we've pretty much proven that here.
And boy, that sure makes you wonder,
what else are they lying about?
What are some of the other things MLK stood for
that perhaps the GOP loves to downplay?
We should probably explore that in due time,
like in the time it takes to watch these neat ads.
Oh boy, ads.
MLK loved ads, you guys.
He said so.
You'll see.
We'll show you the quotes after the ads.
Hello, watchers and or listeners.
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Not me, I prefer to blend my books
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Hey, look at Mr. Back from ads.
That's me.
And that's it for ads.
I lied about the MLK quotes that support ads.
Ha ha ha.
So anyway, we were talking about the fact
that despite what conservatives like to pretend,
it turns out that
MLK said a lot of stuff and things besides that single quote about content of character. And in
fact, those other things he said might not be all that popular with the GOP today, or also the entire
country when MLK was alive. Because despite the reverence we now hold for Martin Luther King Jr.,
it turns out that in his time, he was an extremely controversial figure.
In fact, at the time of his death, aka assassination, MLK had a 75% disapproval rating.
That is higher than this fascist smudge at any time during his presidency.
And you know, this guy's incompetence led to the unnecessary deaths of hundreds of thousands of people, and he nearly ended democracy in America.
Whoops!
led to the unnecessary deaths of hundreds of thousands of people, and he nearly ended democracy in America. Whoops! Trump once got on Air Force One with shit paper, shit glued to his shitty shoe,
and yet still was more popular than King was. And when it comes right down to it, many conservatives
disapprove of his most lauded accomplishments to this day. Through his efforts, MLK was largely
responsible for pushing through one of the most significant pieces of legislation in American history, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which ended
segregation in public places and banned employment discrimination on the basis of race, color,
religion, sex, or national origin.
It also banned private businesses that serve the public from discrimination.
And it's that provision that libertarians like Senator Rand Paul can't quite
bring themselves to accept. If there was a private business, say in Louisville, say somewhere in your
home state that wanted to not serve black patrons or wanted to not serve gay patrons or somebody
else on the basis of their, on the basis of a characteristic that they decided they didn't like
as a private business owner.
Would you think that they had a legal right to do so, to put up a Blacks Not Served Here
sign?
Well, the interesting thing is, is, you know, you look back to the 1950s and 1960s at the
problems we faced, there were incredible problems.
You know, the problems had to do with mostly with voting.
They had to do with schools. They had to do with public
housing. And so
this is what the civil rights largely
addressed and all things that I largely
agree with. But what about private
businesses? I mean, I don't want to
be badgering you on this, but I do
want an answer. Do you think that a private business
has a right to say we don't serve black people?
I'm not in
favor of any discrimination of any form.
I would never belong to any club that excluded anybody for race.
We still do have private clubs in America that can discriminate based on race.
But I think what's important about this debate is not getting into any specific gotcha on this,
but asking the question, what about freedom of speech?
Should we limit speech from people we find abhorrent? Should we limit racist from speaking?
I don't want to be associated with those people, but I also don't want to limit their speech in
any way in the sense that we tolerate boorish and uncivilized behavior because that's one of
the things freedom requires.
A nice sidestep rand.
Sure seems like you're cool
with letting businesses discriminate based on race,
but hey, that's what freedom requires folks.
The ability for the sole gas station
or motel on the highway to say,
sorry, we don't serve your kind here.
Or the only cantina in town to say,
we don't serve their kind here. Pretty darn telling
that we can frame that as being about freedom. Freedom for whom exactly, Rand? But at least Rand
Paul has some credibility on voting rights, something the vast majority of the party he
belongs to can't even say. Because one of the other victories that MLK played a significant role in achieving was the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
a law that aimed to overcome legal barriers
at the state and local levels
that prevented African-Americans
from exercising their right to vote
as guaranteed under the 15th Amendment to the US,
a law that coincidentally has been gutted
by conservative justices on the Supreme Court twice.
First in 2013, the Supreme Court overturned
the preclearance provision in the Civil Rights Act,
which required certain jurisdictions
with a history of racial discrimination in voting
to get approval from the DOJ when enacting new voting laws.
In her dissent, Ruth Bader Ginsburg said that,
throwing out preclearance when it has worked and is continuing to work to stop discriminatory changes Ruth Bader Ginsburg said that, Great point, RBG.
Still wish you'd retired when you had the chance.
That would have been neat.
But for his part,
conservative justice Antonin Scalia,
of Antonin Scalia retire bitch fame,
referred to the law as a racial entitlement.
That's right. He referred to a law designed
to protect the right of black people to vote,
a right which had up to that point
been aggressively fought against
through tactics like poll taxes, literacy tests,
quizzes about how many fucking jelly beans are in a jar,
and you know, domestic terror and mass murder.
He referred to that protection as a racial entitlement.
And since this provision was gutted,
around two dozen states have passed restrictive voting laws,
including 10 laws that would have needed that federal approval.
And in the 2021 legislative sessions,
lawmakers have introduced at least 440 restrictive bills in 49 states.
So it seems that while many conservatives like to quote the one line of MLK,
they don't actually agree with what he actually advocated for. Because again, America. America
loves propping these people up without actually respecting their message. We make them bumper
stickers and tattoos like they're Bugs Bunny or Jesus, both of whom died for us and came back.
And I say America specifically, because let's
certainly not let liberals off the hook. You might have noticed that MLK's quote about how special
treatment may be required to make up for the injustices of the past started out with a critique
of the white liberal. Yes, it turns out that MLK had a lot to say about the white liberal and the
white moderate. There is a lot that Dr. King asked of a lot of people.
And I think on this day meant to celebrate him,
the question we need to ponder is,
what exactly is Martin Luther King Jr.'s legacy?
What should it be?
And are we truly living up to it?
And who better to answer that question
than a guy who looks like me?
Because the conventional narrative tends to go
from his I have a dream speech
and the
legislative accomplishments of the Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act followed straight
to his assassination.
But MLK actually had a lot to say in the intervening years that we don't actually talk that much
about.
For starters, what did he think about the progress that had been made towards achieving
his dream?
I must confess that that dream that I had that day has at many points turned into a
nightmare.
Now, I'm not one to lose hope.
I keep on hoping.
I still have faith in the future.
But I've had to analyze many things over the last few years, and I would say over the
last few months.
I've gone through a lot of soul-searching and agonizing moments and I've come to see that we have many more difficult
days ahead and some of the old optimism was a little superficial and now it must be tempered
with a solid realism and I think the realistic fact is that we still have a long, long way to go.
A long, long way to go in a galaxy far, far away.
That's three Star Wars references for you sick freaks.
But geez, folks, I don't think it's daring to say
that this quote still applies today,
just like 50 some odd years later.
You might've noticed that I started this video noting
that today we rightfully celebrate the life
and legacy of the civil rights leader
who utilized nonviolent protests to help bring about
an end to explicit legal segregation in America.
Wow, I was so young back then.
So full of hope, less beard.
Now, I use the words explicit legal segregation
for a reason, because unfortunately, even though explicit legal segregation is no longer allowed,
schools and neighborhoods are more segregated today than they were in the 1960s.
The racial wealth gap between white people and black people
is the same today as it was when MLK was assassinated.
Seems like we continue to have a long way to go to get to that dream he was talking about.
And maybe the reason that these inequalities persist
is because we didn't really listen
to what MLK actually had to say.
It is a crime for people to live in this rich nation
and receive starvation wage.
America's opportunity to help bridge the gulf between the haves and the have-nots.
And the question is whether America will do it.
There's nothing new about poverty.
What is new is that we now have the techniques
and the resources to get rid of poverty.
The real question is whether we have the will.
Now we are dealing with issues that cannot be solved without the nation spending billions of dollars and undergoing a radical redistribution of economic power.
Oh, hey, there's that word redistributionism. Man, it seems like there are very few politicians
today that promote a vision as radical as the one MLK advocated for in the 1960s,
perhaps because he was rightfully challenging the very foundation of this country,
something that neither Republicans or Democrats like to challenge. In fact, in his quest for absolute justice as early as 1951, when MLK was in his early
20s, he wrote a note to himself that took on America's sacred system of capitalism
itself.
I am convinced that capitalism has seen its best days in America, and not only in America,
but in the entire world.
It is a well-known fact that no social institution
can survive when it has outlived its usefulness.
This capitalism has done.
It has failed to meet the needs of the masses.
Hey, weird that politicians don't quote that part of him.
Seems like maybe they want us to forget about all that stuff
or how aspects of King's thinking
may have been why FBI Domestic Intelligence Chief
William Sullivan once wrote an urgent memo declaring King the most dangerous Negro in the
U.S., stating,
Gee whizzers, this whole American government jazz
wasn't too keen on this Kingfellow.
This may have been why MLK was relentlessly wiretapped
and surveilled by the FBI until his death,
aka assassination.
This may have been why the FBI wrote a letter to MLK,
blackmailing him and urging him to commit suicide,
writing, there is only one thing left for you to do.
You know what it is. You have just 34 days. You are done. There is but one way out for you.
You better take it before your filthy, abnormal, fraudulent self is bared to the nation.
Ah, but that's the old FBI. They smoked cigarettes and murdered aliens and junk.
They wouldn't heavily surveil a civil rights movement today, right?
Do we have an article about how they totally did that
to the Black Lives Matter movement?
I bet we do.
Yeah, we do.
There's the article about that.
But it wasn't just King's critique of capitalism
that made him the most dangerous Negro in the US,
according to the federal government.
Because MLK also stated in 1967 that,
"'The evils of capitalism are as real as the evils
of militarism and racism. And so the thing that really put MLK in the hot seat was his courageous
and wildly unpopular stance against the Vietnam War, and against war and militarism in general,
or I guess he loved it, according to the Pentagon. And this stance on Vietnam is one that, I and
other cool people would argue, has been proven correct upon even the lightest historical examination.
Like, I think even Operation Dumbo Drop comes down on it.
But also, who cares if it does?
When a nation becomes obsessed with the guns of war, it loses its social perspective and programs of social uplift suffer.
This is just a fact of history,
so that we do face many more difficulties as a result of the war.
It's much more difficult to really arouse a conscience during a time of war.
There is something about a war like this that makes people insensitive.
It dulls the conscience.
It strengthens the forces of reaction.
And it brings into being bitterness and hatred and violence.
And MLK's stance against the war is not the only example where he was ahead of his time.
King advocated for a federal jobs guarantee and a guaranteed income, reparations, and,
this is important, a massive government effort to entirely eliminate poverty.
In fact, the effort he was engaged in
when he was assassinated was marching
with striking sanitation workers
in support of a diverse coalition of people
fighting for better working conditions
as a part of the Poor People's Campaign
for Economic and Racial Justice.
He even had an extremely relevant view of the filibuster.
I think the tragedy is that we have a Congress with a Senate that has a minority of misguided senators
who will use the filibuster to keep the majority of people from even voting.
And this is literally the same dynamic that is currently at play with the legislative battle over the John Lewis Voting Rights Act.
Now, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has vowed
to take up filibuster changes by MLK Day
if the voting rights bill is blocked.
So I guess, let me know in the comments
if that effort has been successful.
I have a pretty good guess on whether or not it has been.
Also, like and subscribe,
and also I probably won't read the comment.
My point is that the political stances that MLK took in the 1960s are more progressive
than the vast majority of democratic leaders today.
And even then, MLK understood that the biggest stumbling block to achieving absolute equality
was the very people that proclaimed to align with his vision.
I think the biggest problem now is that we got our gains over the last 12 years at bargain rates, so to speak.
It didn't cost the nation anything. In fact, it helped the economic side of the nation to
integrate lunch counters and public accommodations. It didn't cost the nation anything to get the
right to vote established. And now we are confronting issues that cannot be solved without costing the nation billions of dollars.
Many of the people who supported us in Selma, in Birmingham, were really outraged about the extremist behavior toward Negroes.
But they were not at that moment, and they are not now, committed to genuine equality for Negroes.
And I think we are in a new era, a new phase of the struggle, where we have moved from a struggle for decency,
which characterized our struggle for 10 or 12 years, to a struggle for genuine equality.
And this is where we are getting the resistance because there was never any
intention to go this far. People were reacting to Bull Connor and to Jim Clark rather than
acting in good faith for the realization of genuine equality.
And so while President Joe Biden may claim that he is committed to racial equality,
he has still refused to cancel student debt, which would significantly narrow the racial wealth gap,
something he could do today,
this day with a stroke of a pen,
or not depending on who your favorite blogger is.
In fact, after the largest sustained protest movement
in American history,
the Black Lives Matter movement in the summer of 2020,
very little lasting concrete action from our government
has taken place to achieve genuine racial equality.
This dynamic is probably why MLK wrote his famous letter from a Birmingham jail in 1963, which reads,
I must confess that over the past few years, I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate.
I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom
is not the white citizen's counselor or the Ku Klux Klan-er,
but the white moderate, who is more devoted to order than to justice.
Who prefers a negative peace, which is the absence of tension, to a positive peace, which is the presence of justice.
Who constantly says, I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action.
Who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable
for another man's freedom.
Who lives by a mythical concept of time
and who constantly advises the Negro
to wait for a more convenient season.
He's talking about you, Joe.
Both of you, Joes.
And probably a bunch of other people too.
Definitely, probably, absolutely.
And so while the right wing appropriation of MLK
is more obviously and blatantly disgusting,
neither political party is doing a particularly good job
of living up to King's legacy.
And it remains such a tragedy to this day
that he was taken from the world
by some asshole with a gun,
though not necessarily the one
that we've been led to believe.
And at least according to the jury
in a civil trial in Coretta King,
a conspiracy that involved the mafia,
local, state, and federal government agencies.
So we never got the chance to see what MLK would think about Ronald Reagan's presidency
or mass incarceration or Black Lives Matter
or Colin Kaepernick or Donald Trump or the Matrix.
Maybe he would have loved the Matrix.
We don't know, but we could have.
If MLK were alive today,
he would have been 93 years old,
seven years younger than Betty White.
And it is a damn shame we haven't had his wisdom
to rely on all of these years.
We don't know what he would have said or thought
about events over the last 50 plus years,
but we do know what he did say while he was still here.
And so the first step towards honoring
Martin Luther King's
legacy is to stop whitewashing it. But for now, I will leave you with this, a portion of the final
speech MLK gave before he was assassinated. Well, I don't know what will happen now.
We've got some difficult days ahead. But it really doesn't matter with me now,
because I've been to the mountaintop.
I don't mind.
Like anybody, I would like to live
a long life.
Longevity has its place.
But I'm not concerned about that now.
I just want to do God's will and he's allowed me to go up to the mountain and I've looked over and I've
seen the promised land I may not get there with you, but I want you to know tonight that we as a people will get to the promised land.
So rest in power, Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
As they say, thank you for being a friend.
Travel down the road and back again.
Your heart is true.
You're a pal and a confidant.
No, I'm not finished.
And if you threw a party,
invited everyone you knew,
you would see the biggest gift would be from me.
And the card attached would say,
thank you for being a friend.
Thanks MLK.
Also happy birthday to Betty White,
who is definitely still alive.
It's like the song. Like, close enough.
Like, just, just enough like it.
Wow, the episode's over.
Like and subscribe and do all that kind of stuff.
Sorry there were no wacky characters in this episode,
unless you think MLK is a wacky character.
You probably don't.
So we've got a Patreon.com system more news.
We've got a merch store where you can get the wacky characters on them.
And also we've got a podcast called even more news where all the podcasts are.
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if you don't like my face.