MLK & Obama share message of Hope

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On this day in 1963 at our nation's capitol, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech. It was an address that helped reform our nation's thinking towards civil rights.

Speaking at over 2,500 events, arrested upwards of 20 times, and assaulted in least four incidents, MLK would likely do it all one more time were he alive today in the cause of another impeding civil right's issue: lack of adequate health care for our citizenry.

In April of 1963, Dr. King intellectually and emphatically asserted that, "freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed," as he diligently wrote from a rotting prison cell. His now infamous letter from a Birmingham jail called for a restoration of human rights, liberty and justice for all of humanity.

Every day, countless children are born into poverty without proper health care that sooner rather than later diminishes their chance at succeeding in school, obtaining work, leading productive lives, improving their condition and altering a devastating cycle.

And every day, many children are blessed to be born into middle class homes with health coverage and opportunities for advanced education, but find themselves helpless when they too cannot find work or are struck by the unlucky fortune of a serious illness and their insurance suddenly drops them.

Each and every day some 14,000 Americans are losing their health coverage as our economy continues to struggle, and as a result, people are literally dying from either lack of insurance, loopholes in coverage or an inability to maintain regular check-ups and screenings that are so vital to staying healthy.

It's an atrocity that in a country as powerful as the United States, people are falling ill, losing their homes and going bankrupt all because of a corrupt system that only benefits insurance conglomerates and those in their pockets. Why is it that the U.S. life expectancy today still lags behind 30 other nations?

Why does a hard-working factory worker in the Midwest have to choose which finger to amputate because he could not control his diabetes in time?

Why does a teenager in California have to die because her insurance company gave her the run around when she was seeking treatment for her aggressive cancer?

And why are so many forced to travel to Mexico, Canada and England to get cheaper medicine and better treatment for their ailments?

President Obama recently spoke with a diverse body of religious leaders where he stated that health reform was a "core ethical and moral obligation".

If MLK were able to walk and march through our streets today, he too would likely preach for the urgent and dire need for change. Now of course, neither I nor anyone else can unequivocally say what this great man would definitively do, but as a student of his, I can make a calculated assumption.

Listening to the cries of babies, watching innocent children suffering and observing the inhumane corporate lobby of our health industry, our nation's greatest civil right's leader would not hesitate to begin a new nonviolent campaign to end this destructive pattern of injustice and abuse.

Since our most recent recession began, more than four million additional Americans have lost their health insurance, and the numbers are undoubtedly going to rise. Another 3.2 million rely on Medicaid or the SCHIP program to assist them, and yet many on the right would have you believe that health care isn't an urgent issue for ALL.

The amount of blatant lies - from "death panels" to "government takeover" - spewed by those whose financial motives are questionable at best, would make MLK shutter.

Unfortunately, there are some who are busy playing on the fears of people who have lost their jobs, livelihoods and a sense of stability.

President Obama and Congress must not give in to these scare tactics, for health care is a fundamental human rights issue that must be guaranteed to everyone if we are to remain a civil society.

MLK had urged for young high school and college students, young ministers and religious leaders - and their elders - to "courageously and nonviolently sit in at lunch counters and willingly go to jail for conscience' sake".

Perhaps it's that type of movement that needs to take place, that needs to silence the ridiculous mistruths and that needs to once again deliver equality for all.

MLK used to preach that we end poverty through assisting those poorer than ourselves. As human beings, we have to make a moral commitment to others, and that moral commitment today encompasses immediate health reform.

Let's continue Kingian nonviolence and let's continue fulfilling this selfless man's dream: for "we will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream".

By Rev. Al Sharpton
 
And your hero shot him.

James Earl Ray was a Southern boy who idolized Adolph Hitler. He carried his picture with him and was a passionate believer in Nazi ideology. He was an overt Nazi when he was in the Army and wanted to be stationed in Germany because he genuinely believed he could revive the Nazi Party there. He loved Germany and German culture.

Ray was convicted of armed robbery on his first visit to California, but only spent 90 days in the L.A. County jail. Ray spent time in a lot of different jails over the years, falling in with neo-Nazi groups. Ray was a racist who wanted to kill blacks, all of them.

After escaping from a Missouri prison, Ray made his way to Southern California with the dream of becoming a pornographer. Instead, he became a passionate Republican, a virulent racist, who fit right into the Southern California landscape. He was a huge fan of Joseph McCarthy and Barry Goldwater.

In Los Angeles, he tried to rebuild his image and establish himself. He had plastic surgery to get an aquiline nose, took dance lessons, attended bartending school, and even went to a psychiatrist to be hypnotized. James Earl Ray was a regular in Hollywood the six months before he shot Martin Luther King.

James Earl Ray used the alias John Galt, the name of the protagonist in Ayn Rand’s book, “Atlas Shrugged”. The right-wing Ayn Rand Institute is in Irvine, California. Ray made a number of trips to Orange County where he’d meet up with the Free Rhodesia Committee. Ray wanted to go to Rhodesia and fight a white supremacist war with Ian Smith, and he used the Southern California John Birch Society to try and do it.

He worked for the segregationist George Wallace and General Curtis LeMay. The far-right LeMay lived in Newport Beach and ran as Wallace’s vice-presidential candidate in 1968. Ray was very active at the Los Angeles campaign headquarters for Wallace.

Martin Luther King visited Anaheim in February, 1968. Ray left Southern California and tracked King to Memphis where he shot him with a high powered rifle on April 4th. He then tried to escape to Rhodesia but was captured in London. He then confessed to the assassination.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Earl_Ray
 
In the book "A Short History of Reconstruction", renowned historian, Dr. Eric Foner, revealed that the Ku Klux Klan was founded in 1866 by Democrats as a Tennessee social club. The Ku Klux Klan became a military force serving the interests of the Democratic Party, the planter class, and all those who desired the restoration of white supremacy. The Ku Klux Klan spread into other Southern states, launching a ‘reign of terror‘ against Republican leaders, black and white.

After they took control of Congress in 1892, Democrats passed the Repeal Act of 1894 that overturned civil rights legislation passed by the Republicans, including the Civil Rights Acts of 1866 and 1875. It took Republicans nearly six decades to finally achieve passage of civil rights legislation in the 1950’s and 1960’s. It defies logic for Democrats today to claim that the racist Democrats suddenly joined the Republican Party after Republicans finally won the civil rights battle against the racist Democrats. In fact, the racist Democrats declared that they would rather vote for a “yellow dog” than vote for a Republican, because the Republican Party was
known as the party for blacks.
http://www.trustedpartner.com/docs/library/000143/NBRA Civil Rights Newsletter.pdf
 
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The Republicans started the NAACP in 1909 on Abraham Lincoln’s 100th birthday to counter the racist practices of the Democrats. The first black American to head the NAACP was Republican James Weldon Johnson who wrote the lyrics to “Lift Every Voice and Sing”, the inspirational song that is considered to be the Black National Anthem.

Few blacks know that Republicans also started the Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU’s).

http://www.trustedpartner.com/docs/library/000143/NBRA Civil Rights Newsletter.pdf
 
well you go tell that to the 2.5 million people who are without a job and the scores who are losing their jobs daily...see if they agree with ya..

We did. It got Obama elected. People know who to blame for the Bush Depression.
 
The Modern Civil Rights Era - Democrats fought against civil rights in the 1950’s and 1960’s
Democrat Public Safety Commissioner Eugene "Bull" Connor in Birmingham let loose vicious dogs and turned skin-burning fire hoses on black civil rights demonstrators. Democrat Georgia Governor Lester Maddox famously brandished ax handles to prevent blacks from patronizing his restaurant. In 1954, Democrat Arkansas Governor Orville Faubus tried to prevent desegregation of a Little Rock public school. Democrat Alabama Governor George Wallace stood in front of the Alabama schoolhouse in 1963 and thundered, "Segregation, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever."

One survivor from that era, Democrat Senator Robert Byrd, a former "Keagle" in the Ku Klux Klan, is still a Democrat and a prominent leader in the Democrat-controlled Congress where he was honored by his fellow Democrats as the “conscience of the Senate.” Byrd was a fierce opponent of desegregating the military and complained in one letter: “I would rather die a thousand times and see old glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again than see this beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongrels, a throwback to the blackest specimen of the wilds.”

http://www.trustedpartner.com/docs/library/000143/NBRA Civil Rights Newsletter.pdf
 
Republicans championed civil rights in the 1950’s and 1960’s

Republican President Dwight Eisenhower pushed to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1957 and sent troops to Arkansas to desegregate schools. Eisenhower also
appointed Chief Justice Earl Warren to the U.S. Supreme Court which resulted in the famous 1954 “Brown v. Topeka Board of Education” decision that ended school segregation and the “separate but equal” doctrine created by the 1896 “Plessy v. Ferguson” decision.

Much is made of Democrat President Harry Truman's issuing an Executive Order in 1948 to desegregate the military. Not mentioned is the fact that it was Eisenhower who actually took action to effectively end segregation in the military.

In 1958, Eisenhower established a permanent Civil Rights Commission that had been rejected by prior Democrat presidents, including President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Ignored today is the fact that it was Roosevelt who started blacks on the path to dependency on government handouts during the Great Depression with the promise of a “chicken in every pot” by Roosevelt with his “New Deal” that turned out to be a bad deal for blacks. Even though Roosevelt received the vote of many blacks, Roosevelt banned black American newspapers from the military because he was convinced the newspapers were communists.

Little known by many today is the fact that it was Republican Senator Everett Dirksen from Illinois, not Democrat President Lyndon Johnson, who pushed through the 1964 Civil Rights Act. In fact, Dirksen was instrumental to the passage of civil rights legislation in 1957, 1960, 1964, 1965 and 1968. Dirksen wrote the language for the 1965 Voting
Rights Act. Dirksen also crafted the language for the Civil Rights Act of 1968 which prohibited discrimination in housing.
http://www.trustedpartner.com/docs/library/000143/NBRA Civil Rights Newsletter.pdf
 
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