Relocations: MLK and the triple evils of our society

Martin Luther King Jr. publicly opposes the Vietnam War at a mass rally at the Ninth Annual Convention of SCLC in Birmingham. Photo via dtc-wsuv.org
January 27, 2023

Focus is on racism, but King also spoke of ills of capitalism and militarism

‘America loves its prophets, but prophets who cannot trouble us any more.’

The Rev. William Barber, founder, The Poor People’s Campaign

By Herbert Rothschild

When Martin Luther King Jr. spoke at the March on Washington in 1963, the most pressing obstacle to racial justice was legally mandated segregation in the South and legally tolerated segregation elsewhere in the country. That is no longer the case. It wasn’t even the case by 1968, when Dr. King was assassinated in Memphis. “I have a dream” is a magnificent speech, but I think it has become ensconced in observances of MLK Day because it is now safe to hear — safe for us and especially safe for our school children.

Herbert Rothschild

By 1968, racial discrimination in education, employment, housing and public accommodations had been outlawed. And Blacks had won access to the ballot, which was a gamechanger throughout the South. But while he foresaw an end to his life, Dr. King foresaw no end to the struggle. He had come to Memphis to promote economic justice for the city’s sanitation workers. And the year before, he had gone to Riverside Church in New York City to decry the enormous violence and crippling cost of the war in Vietnam.

There is still racial discrimination in the U.S., but the sacrifices of Dr. King and so many others were not in vain. The paranoia called “white replacement” hasn’t arisen because so little has changed but rather because so much has changed. Can we say the same about economic injustice and militarism?

Let’s hear some words of Dr. King we don’t hear on the national holiday named for him: “And one day we must ask the question, ‘why are there 40 million poor people in America?’ And when you begin to ask that question, you are raising questions about the economic system.” Today the buying power of the federal minimum wage is 40% less than it was in 1968. And let’s hear some more of his words. “A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.” In fiscal year 1968 U.S. military spending was $84 billion ($731 billion 2022 dollars); in fiscal year 2023 it will be $858 billion.

Do we want to hear those words? Certainly corporate America doesn’t want to hear them. It wants to hear “I have a dream.” By and large corporate America is committed to hiring and promoting women and people of color. That’s because not many years after large companies were being pressured to do so, they discovered that there was an immense untapped pool of labor — often highly skilled labor — available to them just when the proportion of white males in the U.S. work force was declining. Diversity is good for their bottom line.

And that’s good for all of us. Corporate self-interest is a bulwark — hopefully, an effective bulwark — against the complete takeover of the Republican Party by White nationalists and homophobes. But it’s also an obstacle to the structural changes that Dr. King knew were required before racism could be eradicated.

Life in our urban ghettoes can’t be transformed by a resolve to judge people by the content of their character rather than the color of their skin. Growing up in such circumstances shapes character, rarely for the better. And is it cause for self-congratulation that our military doesn’t discriminate against people of color as long as they can be sent abroad to kill people with skins no whiter than theirs? The structures of racism reveal themselves only when we deconstruct our economy and foreign policy.

Interviewed in The Guardian on January 16, the Rev. William Barber said, “It often saddens me when I go to King events, how many people want to have a commemoration, not a re-engagement.” And in January 2021, right after that year’s MLK Day, Michael Tubbs, founder of Mayors for a Guaranteed Income, expressed similar discontent when he spoke with NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly: “I think anyone who studies Dr. King realizes that he saw that racial justice and economic justice were intertwined. And that’s why he spoke so often about the triple evils of our society, which is unfettered capitalism, excessive militarism and racism. And the work that he was doing was really about eradicating our society of those three things so that we live in a community that elevates the basic human dignity of all people.”

In Washington on that day in 1963, King said, “No, no, we are not satisfied, and we will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.” It was not just the “Whites only” signs that stripped Black children of their selfhood and robbed them of the dignity. And it isn’t only Black children whom our culture strips of their selfhood and robs of their dignity. Dr. King called us to comprehensive transformation. Let’s sound that call.

Herbert Rothschild is an unpaid Ashland.news board member. Opinions expressed in columns represent the author’s views and may or may not reflect those of Ashland.news. Email Rothschild at herbertrothschild6839@gmail.com.

Picture of Bert Etling

Bert Etling

Bert Etling is the executive editor of Ashland.news. Email him at betling@ashland.news.

Related Posts...

Relocations: Another aid flotilla is on its way to Gaza

Herbert Rothschild: The worst encounter between an aid flotilla and Israeli forces preventing it from reaching Gaza took place in 2010. Israeli naval commanders from speedboats and helicopters boarded the Mavi Marmara, one of six ships in a mostly Turkish flotilla. Nine aid activists were killed on board and a 10th later died from his wounds. Ten Israeli servicemen were wounded, one seriously.

Read More »

Relocations: Can we discern quality in people’s lives?

Herbert Rothschild: When we’re asked to name those we admire, we usually think of people of high achievement, not people of good character. Actually, we often don’t know what kind of persons they were, and I’m not sure it matters much if we do. There’s a difference between being great and being good. We admire the former; hopefully, we imitate the latter.

Read More »

Our Sponsors

Latest posts

Test

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc lobortis enim non odio vulputate, sit amet dapibus ligula dictum. Proin consectetur fringilla dapibus. Pellentesque et dolor iaculis, ullamcorper turpis faucibus,

Read More >

Ask Strider: Advice for big brothers

Ask Strider: A worried older brother asks our advice columnist’s advice. And a dog’s guardian wants to know if there is any hope getting their hat-hating dog to calm down. As always, Strider tries to give words that help!

Read More >

Our Sponsors

Ashland.news Classifieds Ashland Talent Phoenix Medford Oregon
Ashland Climate Collaborative Sreets for Everyone Ashland Oregon
Pronto Printing Ashland Medford Southern Oregon

Explore More...

This week's theme: bicycle shops, services and routes. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's Crossword: OSF's Secret Season #03
This week's theme: four hidden tribes who had to leave our area, in recognition of Indigenous Peoples' Day. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's crossword: Enjoy the Ride #03
This week's theme shakes things up for International Shakeout Day, Oct. 16th. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's crossword: First Settlers #02
After a successful production of  “The Vagina Monologues” and raising more than $2,000 for Planned Parenthood of Southwestern Oregon, Ashland actor and director Lia Dugal intends for “The Climate Monologues” to premiere in Oregon in late 2025 or early 2026 at the Bellview Grange in Ashland.

Don't Miss Our Top Stories

Get our newsletter delivered to your inbox three times a week.
It’s FREE and you can cancel anytime.

ashland.news logo

Subscribe to the newsletter and get local news sent directly to your inbox.

(It’s free)