To-day is Martin Luther King Jnr’s birthday, tomorrow will
be the public holiday in his honor. The Reverend King’s radicalism went beyond
the practice of Christianity itself. He was a preacher first and never stopped
being a preacher but he was also a teacher and he taught in many different
classrooms.
King attended Crozer Theological Seminary in Chester,
Pennsylvania from 1948 to 1951. It was
clear to one of his teachers and closest associates there, Rev. J. Pious
Barbour, that King "believed Marx had analyzed the economic side of
capitalism right" and that "the capitalistic system was predicated on
exploitation and prejudice, poverty, and that we wouldn't solve these problems
until we got a new social order." In this period he studied the Communist
Manifesto and Capital.
In a July 1952 love letter to his wife to be Coretta, the
smitten King lay bare his socialist heart. Of capitalism, he said that he
“failed to see its relative merits” and believed that it had “outlived its
usefulness.” He made a striking confession: “I am more socialistic in my
economic theory than capitalistic.” For King, capitalism was “a system that
takes necessities from the masses to give luxuries to the classes.” Alhough he
was “opposed to the metaphysical structure of communism as well as Marxism,” he
learned from reading Karl Marx “that religion can so easily become a tool of
the middle class to keep the proletariat oppressed. Too often the church talked
about a future good ‘over yonder’ totally forgetting the present evil over
here.”
Coretta noted that "within the first month or so of our
meeting," in 1952, King "talked about working within the framework of
democracy to move us toward a kind of socialism," arguing that "a
kind of socialism has to be adopted by our system because the way it is, it's
simply unjust." She commented that "Democracy means equal justice,
equity in every aspect of our society," and that King "knew that the
basic problem in our society had to do with economic justice, or… the contrast
of wealth between the haves and the have-nots.
Believe it or not, he spoke these words to me when I first met him. It
wasn't something that he learned later and developed."
But his vision of socialist economic, like so many others,
was that of “the nationalization of industry” which he would “welcome the day.”
In his Sept. 30, 1962, sermon “Can a Christian Be a
Communist?” at Ebenezer Baptist Church, he makes clear that Christianity cannot
be reconciled with communism but at the same time welcomes Marx’s critique of
profit motives. Communism offers “a necessary corrective for a Christianity
that has been all too passive and a democracy that has been all too inert,”
King suggests. He went on to raise the issue of wealth inequality — “One-tenth
of 1 percent of the population of this nation controls almost 50 percent of the
wealth, and I don’t mind saying that there’s something wrong with that.” In
this sermon, as with his letter to his beloved, King draws a clear distinction
between being a communist, which he associated with the Russian authoritarian
corruption of it and a Christian while upholding a sustained Marxist critique
of capitalism.
At a 1966 planning meeting he understood that the Poor
People’s Campaign took on a more radical critique of capitalism and reaffirmed
his commitment to democratic socialism:
“You can’t talk about
solving the economic problem of the Negro without talking about billions of
dollars. You can’t talk about ending the slums without first saying profit must
be taken out of slums,” he warned his staff in 1966. “You’re really tampering
and getting on dangerous ground because you are messing with folk then. You are
messing with captains of industry. Now this means that we are treading in
difficult water, because it really means that we are saying that something is
wrong with capitalism.…There must be a better distribution of wealth, and maybe
America must move toward a democratic socialism.”
The ambitious Poor Peoples Campaign was designed to mobilize a massive
interracial movement in an uncompromising struggle to eliminate poverty
throughout the United States. King appealed for "the dispossessed of this
country" to "organize a revolution" that would eliminate
poverty:
“I can't see the answer in riots. On the other hand, I can't see the answer in
tender supplications for justice. I see
the answer in an alternative to both of these, and that is militant
non-violence that is massive enough, that is attention-getting enough to
dramatize the problems, that will be as attention-getting as a riot, that will
not destroy life or property in the process.
And this is what we hope to do in Washington through our movement.
We feel that there must be some structural changes now,
there must be a radical reordering of priorities, there must be a de-escalation
and a final stopping of the war in Vietnam and an escalation of the war against
poverty and racism here at home. And I feel that this is only going to be done
when enough people get together and express their determination through that
togetherness and make it clear that we are not going to allow any
military-industrial complex to control this country.”
King explicitly linked the problem of capitalism with the
problem of racism. “When machines and computers, profit motives and property
rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism,
materialism and militarism are incapable of being conquered,” he argued in a
speech at Riverside Church in 1967.
King recognized class identity as much as racial ones:
In the final analysis, the weakness of Black Power is its
failure to see that the Black man needs the white man, and the white man needs
the Black man. However much we may try to romanticize the slogan, there is no
separate Black path to power and fulfillment that does not intersect white
paths, and there is no separate white path to power and fulfillment, short of
social disaster, that does not share that power with Black aspirations for
freedom and human dignity. We are bound together in a single garment of destiny.”
He explained racism
actually retarded the organization of poor whites to challenge their own
poverty:
“There are, in fact, more poor white Americans than there
are Negro. Their need for a war on poverty is no less desperate than the
Negro's. In the South, they have been deluded by race prejudice and largely
remained aloof from common action. Ironically, with this posture, they were
fighting not only the Negro, but themselves.”
He reiterated this:
“The dispossessed of this country — the poor, the white and
Negro — live in a cruelly unjust society. they must organize a revolution
against that injustice, not against the lives of the persons who are their
fellow citizens, but against the structures through which society is refusing
to take means which have been called for, and which are at hand, to lift the
load of poverty.”
King wrote from the Selma, Alabama jail in 1965 “If we are
to achieve a real equality the U.S. will have to adopt a modified form of
socialism.” King knew that political democracy is hollow without economic
democracy. Referring to the Greensboro Lunch Counter sit-ins, he asked, “What
good is having the right to sit at a lunch counter if you can’t afford to buy a
hamburger?”
King spent time on picket lines. Upon his return from accepting
the Noble Peace Prize in 1964, King joined striking black women at the Scripto
pen factory and helped negotiate a settlement. He consistently worked with
unions. His presence in Memphis, the location of his murder, was to speak in
solidarity with the city’s striking sanitation workers whose subhuman work
conditions had led to two deaths.
The activist and Marxist scholar C.L.R. James
concluded—after intensive discussions with King—that King was "a man whose
ideas were as advanced as any of us on the Left” Describing the civil rights
movement, King asserted that "we are engaged in a social revolution,"
explaining: "It is a movement to bring about certain basic structural
changes in the architecture of American society. That is certainly revolutionary."
The World Socialist Movement makes no claim that Martin
Luther King would be a member or agree with all its principles but we do say
that if you share MLK’s dream for a better world then join us and make it a
reality. King’s dream won't come true unless we end the nightmare.
“You can’t have
capitalism without racism. And if you find a person without racism and you
happen to get that person into a conversation and they have a philosophy that
makes you sure they don’t have this racism in their outlook, usually they’re
socialists.” - Malcolm X
“We do not fight
racism with racism. We fight racism with solidarity. We do not fight capitalism
with black capitalism; we fight capitalism with socialism…The very nature of
the capitalist system is to exploit and enslave people, all people. So, we have
to progress to a level of socialism to solve these problems.” - Bobby Seale
1 comment:
Worth quoting is George Jackson who put it in one of his prison letters in Soledad Brother:
"Consider the people's store, after full automation, the implementation of the theory of economic advantage. You dig, no waste makers, nor harnesses on production. There is no intermediary, no money. The store, it stocks everything that the body or home could possibly use. Why won't the people hoard, how is an operation like that possible, how could the storing place keep its stores if its stock (merchandise) is free?
Men hoard against want, need, don't they? Aren't they taught that tomorrow holds terror, pile up a surplus against this terror, be greedy and possessive if you want to succeed n this insecure world? Nuts hidden away for tomorrow's Winter.
Change the environment, educate the man, he'll change. The people's store will work as long as people know that it will be there, and have in abundance the things they need and want (really want); when they are positive that the common effort has and will always produce an abundance, they won't bother to take home more than they need.
Water is free, do people drink more than they need?"
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