Site icon The Punching Bag Post

Black Lives Matter Portrays MLK as 'Radical'

<p>The notorious Black Lives Matter &lpar;BLM&rpar; movement is taking advantage of MLK Day to push its radical agenda&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Martin Luther King Jr&period; is known for his nonviolent marches and push to pursue equality through peace&period; Black Lives Matter&comma; which claims to have a similar goal&comma; is known for mob violence and skirmishes with the police&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>About similar riots that broke out in 1967&comma; King said&colon; &ldquo&semi;Returning violence for violence multiplies violence&comma; adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars&period;&rdquo&semi; And yet BLM claims that MLK Day will allow us to &ldquo&semi;engage about the real radical King they don&rsquo&semi;t want you to know about&excl;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Charlene Carruthers&comma; director of BLM&rsquo&semi;s Chicago branch&comma; argues that we do Martin Luther King Jr&period; a &ldquo&semi;disservice when we try to tell a flat story of turning the other check&period; It was never simply that&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>King&rsquo&semi;s niece Alveda urges people to &ldquo&semi;discuss racism from a peace with justice perspective&comma;&rdquo&semi; but today&rsquo&semi;s young activists are connecting MLK&rsquo&semi;s image to the oft-violent BLM movement&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&ldquo&semi;There is a Martin Luther King that is important to the resistance movement that we don&rsquo&semi;t hear about&comma;&rdquo&semi; insists Abdul Aliy-Muhammad of the Black &amp&semi; Brown Workers Collective in Philadelphia&period; &ldquo&semi;We always hear about love and forgiveness&hellip&semi; There was also a King who was radical&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Carruthers insists that &ldquo&semi;agitation&rdquo&semi; was at the center of King&rsquo&semi;s work&period; That agitation manifests differently today than it did during King&rsquo&semi;s time&comma; she says&period; &ldquo&semi;However&comma; I think King&rsquo&semi;s work and the work we do are part of the larger tradition of black radical resistance&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>While I do not agree with Carruthers&comma; it makes sense for the BLM movement to identify with King&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The famous civil rights activist &ndash&semi; only 26 years old when he found himself in a leadership role &ndash&semi; also pushed for a living wage and spoke out against discrimination in the police force&comma; both issues that are still relevant today&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Remembering Martin Luther King Jr&period; as a community organizer naturally places him alongside Black Lives Matter and other contemporary movements&period; On top of that&comma; Chicago in particular faces a level of racism not seen in many years&period; The Windy City has even been labeled &ldquo&semi;America&rsquo&semi;s most segregated city&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Gun violence in Chicago is soaring&comma; with over 770 people shot and killed in 2016&period; Nearly 50&percnt; of the young black men living in Chicago are unemployed or not in school&period; The state of Illinois has the largest black unemployment rate in the country&period; The income inequality gap in Chicago is startling&comma; and reports suggest that black residents&rsquo&semi; income has decreased by 4&percnt; while white residents&rsquo&semi; income has gone up by 44&percnt;&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>BLM Chicago reminds us that &&num;8220&semi;the World Bank and many other entities have released studies that confirm that there is a correlation between income inequality and violence&&num;8230&semi; Chicago&rsquo&semi;s violence should not be a surprise to anyone who has been paying attention&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Martin Luther King Jr&period; pushed for fair housing in Chicago&rsquo&semi;s North Lawndale neighborhood in 1966&period; Fifty years later&comma; that same area remains one of the city&rsquo&semi;s most under-resourced and impoverished neighborhoods&period; North Lawndale is plagued by gang wars and known as the epicenter of Chicago&rsquo&semi;s heroin epidemic&period; The neighborhood is over 90&percnt; black&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&ldquo&semi;We must implement the radical measures King died fighting for right now by demanding fully funded schools&comma; healthcare&comma; jobs&comma; access to housing&comma; free drug-treatment programs&comma; and food&comma;&rdquo&semi; insists BLM Chicago&comma; adding&nbsp&semi;that Martin Luther&nbsp&semi;King Jr&period;&&num;8217&semi;s legacy has been skewed over time&period; &ldquo&semi;This gross misrepresentation of King is all about the sanitized &lsquo&semi;dream&rsquo&semi; devoid of reality&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>BLM Chicago finds itself fighting for the same &ldquo&semi;basic civil and human rights&rdquo&semi; today that King fought 50 years ago&period; &ldquo&semi;As Martin Luther King Jr&period; instructed us&comma; we must question the very foundation of this society&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&ldquo&semi;He was really focused on poor black people&comma;&rdquo&semi; says Patrisse Cullors&comma; co-founder of BLM&period; &ldquo&semi;Let&rsquo&semi;s remember the King who was invested in changing the country that he loved so much&comma; who called out elected officials who continued to endanger black people&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

Exit mobile version