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Amy Goodman
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Wednesday 19 October 2011
John Carlos: “I’m just so happy to see so many people who are standing up to say: ‘We’re not asking for change. We demand change.’ ”

The Arc of The Moral Universe, From Memphis to Wall Street

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The national memorial to Martin Luther King Jr. was dedicated last Sunday. President Barack Obama said of Dr. King, “If he were alive today, I believe he would remind us that the unemployed worker can rightly challenge the excesses of Wall Street without demonizing all who work there.” The dedication occurred amidst the increasingly popular and increasingly global Occupy Wall Street movement. What Obama left unsaid is that King, were he alive, would most likely be protesting Obama administration policies.

Not far from the dedication ceremony, Cornel West, preacher, professor, writer and activist, was being arrested on the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court. He said, before being hauled off to jail: “We want to bear witness today that we know the relation between corporate greed and what goes on too often in the Supreme Court decisions. … We will not allow this day of Martin Luther King Jr.‘s memorial to go without somebody going to jail, because Martin King would be here right with us, willing to throw down out of deep love.”

West was arrested with 18 others, declaring “solidarity with the Occupy movement all around the world, because we love poor people, we love working people, and we want Martin Luther King Jr. to smile from the grave that we haven’t forgot his movement.”

Over the same weekend as the dedication, the U.S. military/CIA’s drone campaign, under Commander in Chief Obama, launched what the independent, nonprofit Bureau of Investigative Journalism, based in London, called the 300th drone strike, the 248th since Obama took office. According to the BIJ, of the at least 2,318 people killed by drone strikes, between 386 and 775 were civilians, including 175 children. Imagine how Obama’s fellow Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Dr. King, would respond to those grim statistics.

Back in 1963, King published a collection of sermons titled “Strength to Love.” His preface began, “In these turbulent days of uncertainty the evils of war and of economic and racial injustice threaten the very survival of the human race.” Three of the 15 sermons were written in Georgia jails, including “Shattered Dreams.” In that one, he wrote, “To cooperate passively with an unjust system makes the oppressed as evil as the oppressor.” King revisited the idea of shattered dreams four years later, eight months before his assassination, in his speech called “Where Do We Go From Here,” saying: “Our dreams will sometimes be shattered and our ethereal hopes blasted. … Let us realize the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice.”

Earlier in that year, 1967, a year to the day before he was killed, King gave his oft-overlooked “Beyond Vietnam” speech at Riverside Church in New York City. King preached, “I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today, my own government.”

With those words, with that speech, King set the tone for his final, fateful year. Despite death threats, and his close advisers urging him not to go to Memphis, King went to march in solidarity with that city’s sanitation workers. On April 4, 1968, he was shot and killed on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel.

Deeply impacted at the time by the assassination, we can follow two young men along King’s arc of moral justice all the way to Occupy Wall Street. One was John Carlos, a U.S. Olympic track star. Carlos won the bronze medal in the 200 meter race at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. Carlos and his teammate Tommie Smith, who won the gold, raised their black-gloved fists in the power salute on the medal stand, instantly gaining global fame. They both stood without shoes, protesting black children in poverty in the United States. Last week, John Carlos spoke at Occupy Wall Street, and he told me after, “I’m just so happy to see so many people who are standing up to say: ‘We’re not asking for change. We demand change.’ ”

The other person is the Rev. Jesse Jackson. He was with King when he was assassinated. Late Monday night, the New York Police Department seemed to be making a move on Occupy Wall Street’s first-aid tent. Jackson was there. Just days past his 70th birthday, Jackson joined arms with the young protesters, defying the police. The police backed off. And the arc of moral justice bent a bit more toward justice.

© 2011 Amy Goodman
Distributed by King Features Syndicate

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ABOUT Amy Goodman

Amy Goodman is the host of "Democracy Now!," a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 900 stations in North America. She is the author of "Breaking the Sound Barrier," recently released in paperback and now a New York Times best-seller.

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14 comments on "The Arc of The Moral Universe, From Memphis to Wall Street"

zhdnod

Rod Morley

October 20, 2011 1:27pm

Don't you think it is a little ironic that the powers that be are using a black man to dissuade people to act like Dr. King?

Annebonnie

October 20, 2011 9:03am

It is not Obama bashing, it is the truth! President Obama has betrayed every single one of us who voted for him. PULEEZ - we do not have to demonize wall street - they have done it to themselves. They are demons and want everything we have including our investments, homes, anything they can get their hands on. This president has betrayed every single one of us who had so much faith in him and voted him in. Agree with Dianne Lee, taking over the Democratic party may be the only answer.

nookyelur1

October 20, 2011 5:51am

Thank you Amy.
One sign I LOVED in the Occupy Wall st. Demonstration, especially as an ISraeli- was "Finally an occupation radical jews can identify with".
There are mass protests in Israel that are strikingly similar to the Wall st. demos against corporations and the greed of the tycoons running the country. Obviously in Israel the most obvious connection has not been made- to the injustices perpetrated towards Palestinians since 1948, and before.
To all readers interested in this topic and living in the NYC area- there will be a "Breaking Silence" event in which former IDF soldiers, such as myself, speak of their experience and advocate for peace in the Middle East now. It is hosted by JStreet, a semi-liberal Jewish lobby. Although JStreet is still too zionist for my taste, I believe this forum can bring awareness and perhaps clue in some of the Jewish and non-Jewish Americans as to the real realities and brutalities of the occupation in Israel/Palestine. see: http://action.jstreet.org/c/8199/p/salsa/event/common/public/?event_KEY=...
Anyway, thank you very much Amy Goodman- you are an inspiration!

Susan Creekmuir...

October 19, 2011 5:15pm

Amen!

John Hay

October 19, 2011 3:12pm

The “Occupy” Movement needs a Protest Song

The "Occupy Wall Street" movement needs a world wide protest song. It's name should reflect at least one important goal of the protestors. A title could be "It's Time for Regulation­". "We're gonna heal our nation - it's time - oh yes it's time - time for regulation­! - I'm no song writer as you can see, but a protest theme is important and music makes a powerful ally in delivering a constant and repetitive message.There must be someone who can produce the goods and keep public awareness alive with a great protest song?

http://www.tellingthoughts.com

runriver

October 19, 2011 3:00pm

That's what Dr. King was all about! He would have protested President Obama. It seems as if the far right wing has gone full circle, trying to complete it's destined goal of hegemony of the minds of the American masses. That is why I think of President Obama as the corporate president. These are reasons why Dr. King has been placed within the history books, and sanitized for the consumption of those who don't remember his past struggles for the poor and minority class. I wish for the public and all Americans to stop taking the things he's said for granted. The public needs to re-acquaint themselves to the history of the sixties. Much of the the Vietnam and Civil Rights era are the same struggles we have today.

I remember the fists raised in the Mexico City Olympics. It was a truly a remarkable time. The slaughter of Mexican students in the student protests occurred recently before and fresh in the minds of of the Mexicans. Human rights in America as well as Mexico was suffering. Avery Brundage, the head of the Olympic Committee threatened to take away Carlos and Smith's medals after the incident. It was a period when nobody understood the significance of those actions. This press made no real effort to explain the truth of the matter. It is no different today when the mainstream press does the same for the ever expanding protests against Wall St. We see the problem and the world can see through the facade.

Dr Susan Reibel...

October 19, 2011 2:53pm

This is the first time, Amy Goodman, that I've had a chance to see your face. You're a wonderful writer!I agree with Leslie Franklin that Dr King would not have favoured Obama bashing. Since I'm an international writer who's lived in Sydney for 45 years following my marriage to a West Australian (we met at Harvard), and since I also--still--work in schools with high school kids with special needs, I'm racing right now. I've three grandsons and many family duties, which always come first.More power to you! Has either of us ever heard that the pen is mightier than the sword?! All the best--Susan Reibel Moore

Satya Newday

October 20, 2011 8:31am

I say this to all my cousins, brothers and sisters with love and ask you to accept the tone as it reflects the horror of the subject:

I believe to equate protesting Obama's continuation and expansion of policies and programs that continue to "predictably kill civilians" while simultaneously increasing the moral distance from the kill, which also predictably decreases a soldier’s a sense of conscience at the outrage of needless death and family destruction to Obama bashing is simply a mean political statement, worthy of condemnation.

This doesn't mean I don't love you, I just remind you that to policalize this portion of the discusion is immoral. Moral people do not support a policy that knowlingly has and will again kill beautiful family members in support of a war called forth because our beautiful family members were killed and our lives disruppted. What?

Dannah

October 19, 2011 1:14pm

Totally agree with Dianne Lee. Being critical is one thing; not engaging is another. Didn't Dr. King fight for the right to vote, by the way? Which implies that not only perfect people will be part of a perfect government, but that each person would have the opportunity to run for office and/or vote in the existing system. Here is an interesting thought-experiment: what would Dr.King do if he was President? President of all of USA, red states included, Blue Dogs included, with the Congress we know, with the rules we have (super-majorities in the Senate, filibusters, etc.)? There is a difference between being the outsider moral voice - thus setting ideal standards, which is important - and being in office and trying to do the best in politics = the art of the possible. I am just worried that the whole movement, instead of identifying and supporting good Dems, will just lapse into a fruitless and totally self-defeating (and smug!) 'all politics sucks' meme! This is why I think Amy Goodman should run for office - I would work on her campaign! Right now, though, I am focused on Elizabeth Warren.

Leslie Franklin

October 19, 2011 12:18pm

I disagree that Dr. King would be participating in Obama bashing but would instead be working with him to bring about the kind of changes this country needs. He was more about working for positive change than encouraging the kind of divide and conquer tactics being employed today by those with private agendas and personal vendettas contrary to the interests of a strong America.

Leslie Franklin

October 19, 2011 12:17pm

I disagree that Dr. King would be participating in Obama bashing but would instead be working with him to bring about the kind of changes this country needs. He was more about working for positive change than encouraging the kind of divide and conquer tactics being employed today by those with private agendas and personal vendettas contrary to the interests of a strong America.

Dianne Lee

October 19, 2011 11:54am

There are only two ways to change society. One involves ballots and the other bullets. Unless we are going to go the second route, which would just piss everyone off , we need to use the power we have right now to take over the Democratic party. The Tea Party already has taken over the Republicans, and the other parties don't have enough power themselves to be worth taking over. The Democrats are already leaning our direction. If we don't use that opportunity, we are just a bunch of people sitting in the park.

oldibtgdy

October 19, 2011 1:09pm

um, the post is about dr. king; nonviolent protests all. "ballots or bullets"? sorry, aren't you supposed to be watching Fox News?