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Socialist "Saint" - Martin Luther King
The New American ^ | February 11, 2002 | William Norman Grigg

Posted on 01/24/2003 2:12:52 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe

Revered as a virtuous American hero, the real Martin Luther King, Jr. colluded with Communists, plagiarized his doctoral thesis, and led an immoral lifestyle.

Fifty years ago, a black preacher’s speech captured the dream of a nation from which racial turmoil had been abolished. "We, Negro-Americans, sing with all loyal Americans: My country, ‘tis of thee, sweet land of liberty; of thee I sing. Land where my fathers died, land of the Pilgrims’ pride. From every mountain side, let freedom ring!"

"That’s exactly what we mean," continued the preacher as he built to a dramatic climax. "From every mountain side, let freedom ring. Not only from the Green Mountains and the White Mountains of Vermont and New Hampshire; not only from the Catskills of New York; but from the Ozarks in Arkansas, from the Stone Mountain in Georgia, from the Great Smokies of Tennessee and from the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia — let it ring."

Pastor Archibald Carey spoke these words during the 1952 Republican National Convention. Eleven years later, Martin Luther King, Jr. appropriated Carey’s summation as part of his "I Have A Dream" speech on the Washington Mall. King kept the theme and cadences of Carey’s speech, while altering some of the details. This was in keeping with King’s previous practice of plagiarism, particularly his plundering of a doctoral dissertation by a scholar named Jack Boozer.

Spurious Scholarship

As Theodore Pappas documents in his study Plagiarism and the Culture War, King’s dissertation abounds in passages taken without citation from Boozer’s work, including errors in grammar and punctuation. King’s theft of another scholar’s work, comments Pappas, "was an indefensible act that should warrant the revocation of his Ph.D." Liberal author Gary Wills made the same point — albeit in an endnote — in his 1994 book Certain Trumpets.

Boston University’s posthumous revocation of King’s doctoral degree would address a long-standing academic outrage. But it would be much more worthwhile — and far more difficult — to revoke King’s status as a civic demigod. Every year Americans are required to pay homage to King as an exemplar of tolerance, courage, and virtue. He is the only American to be honored with his own holiday — and his chief claim to such saintly status is the plagiarized "I Have a Dream" speech.

In April of 1993, Senator Harris Wofford of Pennsylvania cosponsored a measure entitled the "King Holiday and Service Act," the purpose of which was to "encourage" Americans to devote Martin Luther King Day to acts of "community service." In his speech introducing that legislation, Senator Wofford recalled the words spoken by Christ over the Last Supper: "This do in remembrance of me." In what can only be considered an act of conscious blasphemy, Wofford asked his Senate colleagues: "What should we do in remembrance of Martin?"

According to Wofford, King’s public utterances bear the mark of divinity. "Words — Martin’s words — will always be part of what we celebrate," Wofford reverently declared. Republican Senator Dave Durenberger piously seconded Wofford’s view: "Never before has it been more important for our young people to hear Dr. King’s words." Such pronouncements provide bitter humor to those who understand that Martin Luther King, Jr.’s career was propelled by political opportunism and adorned with pilfered eloquence.

Credentials for Canonization?

Some of King’s defenders insist that he was working within a tradition called "voice merging," in which black preachers would freely share sermons without attribution. While this might explain why King felt free to help himself to the work of Pastor Carey — with whom he maintained a correspondence — it would not justify violating established scholarly guidelines for writing a doctoral dissertation. Besides, if plagiarism can be dismissed as "voice merging," adultery could be dismissed as "spouse merging" — and as it happens, King indulged in that vice as well.

In his 1983 book The FBI and Martin Luther King, Jr. — which was in many ways a favorable treatment of King — investigative author David Garrow describes the findings compiled by the FBI’s investigation of the civil rights leader. That investigation was ordered by Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, who was concerned about King’s habit of consorting with Communists. According to Garrow, the FBI learned that King was also involved in "embezzlement, employing prostitutes, alienating wives’ affections from their husbands, and violation of the Mann Act" (by taking women across state lines for immoral purposes). In 1989, the Reverend Ralph Abernathy, King’s successor as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, published a memoir disclosing that King spent the night before he was killed in a sexual liaison with a female friend.

Hypocritically, while King felt free to steal from other scholars and preachers, he took great care to protect his own work from similar treatment. Pappas points out that "King took, copyrighted, and later defended his legal right to the words and thoughts" of Pastor Carey. In January 1997, the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change, which is headed by King’s son Dexter, struck a marketing deal with Time-Warner. The media conglomerate agreed to produce and market books and other products using King’s writings, thereby netting the King estate an estimated $30-50 million over five years.

As Pappas reports: "At the heart of the deal is aggressive enforcement of the hundreds of copyrights that King placed on ‘his’ writings and on his most famous speeches in particular. Most disturbing … has been the King family’s aggressive profiteering toward those wanting to praise King by quoting the ‘I Have a Dream’ speech. For instance, the King estate sued USA Today demanding a $1,700 licensing fee plus legal costs after the paper quoted the speech in praise of King."

Apostle of Socialism

In 1997, Professor Larry Hofford of St. Mary’s University lamented: "Naming a national holiday after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. has proven to be a mistake." Professor Hofford, a self-described "progressive," complained that King’s image "has been so watered down that the picture of him is that of a ‘mainstream reformer’ who led a movement to end legal segregation. The result is that no person in a position of authority in the United States could possibly experience any discomfort with this image."

Hofford continued: "What is missing from most of the Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebrations is any discussion of the radical King … [who] put forth a philosophy and theology stressing the need to balance individual will with community will." Hofford recalls that King was a strident opponent of capitalism, a Marxist liberation theologian who preached that "‘the problem of racism, the problem of economic exploitation and the problem of war are all tied together.’" King sought not only an end to legally enforced racial segregation, but also a radical restructuring of American society.

In a September 1967 speech in Atlanta, King condemned capitalism as an inherently unjust economic system and declared that his movement was devoted to "restructuring the whole of American society." In Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community?, a book published in that same year, King endorsed the time-honored socialist demand for a guaranteed minimum annual wage, which would be "pegged to the median income of society" and would "automatically increase as the total social income grows." In this particular example of literary "borrowing," King was merging his voice with that of Karl Marx, who coined the phrase "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need."

King also bared his socialist inclinations in a lengthy interview he granted to Playboy, a strange pulpit for a man of God to employ. In the porn magazine’s January 1965 issue, King moralized that "all of America’s wealth today could not adequately compensate its Negroes for his [sic] centuries of exploitation and humiliation." Anticipating the contemporary movement demanding "reparations" for slavery, he insisted that black Americans be given preferential economic treatment. Of course, this would provoke similar demands from "the disadvantaged of all races" — a prospect King welcomed: "I do not intend that this program of economic aid should apply only to the Negro.... We must develop a federal program of public works, retraining and jobs for all...."

Asked about the role of Communists in his entourage, King quipped: "There are as many Communists in this freedom movement as there are Eskimos in Florida." The real issue, of course, was not the number of Communists involved in King’s movement, but their influence. Martin Luther King’s long-term advisor — and occasional speechwriter — was New York attorney Stanley Levison, whom federal investigators identified as a Communist agent. Levison arranged for King to hire Hunter Pitts O’Dell, a member of the National Committee of the Communist Party, as his executive assistant. In 1962, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy warned King that Communist agents were manipulating King. In 1963, President John F. Kennedy reiterated this warning, offering a personal appeal to King to sever his ties to Levison and O’Dell: "They’re Communists. You’ve got to get rid of them."

In a 1979 hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee, black civil rights activist Julia Brown testified of extensive connections between King and the Communist Party. Like other Americans concerned about race relations, Brown had joined a "civil rights" group — only to learn that it was a Communist front. After she took her concerns to the FBI, Brown was asked to work within the Party as an undercover operative. In her 1979 testimony, Brown recalled: "The [Communist] cells that I was associated with in Cleveland were continually being asked to raise money for Martin Luther King’s activities and to support his movement.... [W]hile I was in the Communist Party … I knew Martin Luther King to be closely connected with the Communist Party."

Regarding the proposal for a King holiday, Brown declared: "If this measure is passed honoring Martin Luther King, we may as well take down the stars and stripes that flies over this building and replace it with a red flag." In light of the Establishment’s success in canonizing King, Brown’s words are sobering indeed.


TOPICS: Editorial
KEYWORDS: martinlutherking; mlk
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To: Tailgunner Joe
King was one of those fortunate people who die at the height of fame.
I believe that if he were alive today, he'd be considered as a faintly ridiculous man who borrowed ideas from others and claimed them as his own and as a man whose conception about American life was wildly fanciful.
21 posted on 01/16/2006 6:05:26 AM PST by quadrant
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To: Tailgunner Joe

Yet we are innundated on a daily basis with this propaganda regarding MLK day. Next year it will be Rosa Parks Day and then on and on and on.....

It gets to the point, where you have to ask yourself, "Self, who is committing most of the crimes in America today? What makes a neighborhood bad? Who commits the crimes in a bad neighborhood? Who makes up the majority of perps that are incarcerated in our prisons?....", and it goes on and on and on....

Has Naming these holidays done anything to boost any of their self confidence? Which it was implemented for.

It is a so called holiday based upon victimism and not optimism.

Another fact regarding MLK. His FBI file has been sealed for 75 years after his death. Why is this? Does he have a few skeletons in his closet?


22 posted on 01/16/2006 6:06:37 AM PST by rambo316 (The democRATS give aid and comfort to the enemy.)
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To: rambo316
Another fact regarding MLK. His FBI file has been sealed for 75 years after his death. Why is this? Does he have a few skeletons in his closet?

At the time of the Congressional debate over naming Martin Luther King's birthday a national holiday, Senator Jesse Helms attempted to have the FBI files opened, only to be turned down by the Federal courts. The files are not scheduled to be opened until 2027. If the nation has not become a socialist tyranny by that time, we should get the same "I told you so" moment we had in the 1990s when the KGB files proved Joseph McCarthy and the post-World War II anti-Communists essentially right in their charges regarding Marxist infiltration into Federal agencies and society in general.

Of course, if America has become a socialist tyranny by that time, King's association with Communists will be proclaimed as progressive and his sexual dalliances will be seen as liberating expressions of his love.

23 posted on 01/16/2006 7:00:48 AM PST by Wallace T.
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To: Wallace T.

You got are exactly correct on that. That is the whole reason for doing this. It's like how black thugs can rape and kill with not having to answer for their crimes the same way a white perpetrator has to answer for it.


24 posted on 01/16/2006 9:23:26 AM PST by rambo316 (The democRATS give aid and comfort to the enemy.)
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To: mrustow

bttt


25 posted on 08/28/2011 5:55:47 PM PDT by kcvl
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