Becuase Everything Else Sucks

40 Years Later, (The Late) Martin Luther King Still Silenced

By Manila Ryce
Published Monday, April 7th, 2008, 4:39 am
Filed under: US Politics

Jeff Cohen, an associate professor of journalism at Ithaca, wrote a wonderful piece on the real MLK. Read the full commentary here.

Last night NBC Nightly anchor Brian Williams enthused over new color footage of King that adorned its coverage of the 40th anniversary of the assassination. The report focused on the last phase of King’s life. But the same old blinders were in place.

NBC showed young working class whites in Chicago taunting King. But there was no mention of how elite media had taunted King in his last year. In 1967 and ‘68, mainstream media saw Rev. King a bit like they now see Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

Back then they denounced King’s critical comments; today they simply silence them.

While noting in passing that King spoke out against the Vietnam War, mainstream reports today rarely acknowledge that he went way beyond Vietnam to decry U.S. militarism in general: “I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos,” said King in 1967 speeches on foreign policy, “without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today — my own government.”

In response to these speeches, Newsweek said King was “over his head” and wanted a “race-conscious minority” to dictate U.S. foreign policy. Life magazine described the Nobel Peace Prize winner as a communist pawn who advocated “abject surrender in Vietnam.” The Washington Post couldn’t have been more patronizing: “King has diminished his usefulness to his cause, to his country, and to his people.”

When King’s moral voice moved beyond racial discrimination to international issues, the New York Times attacked his efforts to link the civil rights and antiwar movements.

King’s sermons on Vietnam could get as angry as those of Barack Obama’s ex-pastor: “God didn’t call America to engage in a senseless, unjust war… We’ve committed more war crimes almost than any nation in the world.”

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One Response to “40 Years Later, (The Late) Martin Luther King Still Silenced”

  1. I had no idea Jeff had moved up here and started a center for independent media at Ithaca College. I’m gonna have to holler at him. This was a great article, and had some nice links to MLK speeches from the year before he was assassinated.

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