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1/16/2006
MINE EYES HAVE SEEN THE GLORY
CATEGORY: History

This article originally appears in The American Thinker

He was a not a very tall man, standing barely 5’ 7” , but he was powerfully built. His barrel chest and broad shoulders gave the impression of a man possessed of great strength while his short gait and cat-like movements denoted a man of purpose. Surprisingly graceful, he had large, delicate hands that moved hypnotically when he spoke.

And when he spoke, the thunder rolled.

It is a constant source of amazement to me that even today, more than 3 decades after his assassination, Martin Luther King can be a source of controversy. I attribute it partly to the fact that so many alive today did not see him in the flesh but rather have only glimpsed his image in the grainy, black and white kinescopes and primitive video tapes that survive him. That, and the complicated legacy he left behind allows those so inclined to associate Dr. King with all manner of moral and political sins that like it or not, was part of the totality of his persona.

Regardless of what you think of King as a man or a political icon, as a figure in American history he was and remains a giant, easily as important as most of the founding fathers. In fact, from my own perspective, only George Washington and Thomas Jefferson had a greater impact on our history. If Washington can be called the “Father of our Country” and Jefferson the “Father of American Ideals”, then certainly Martin Luther King should be known as “The Father of the American Conscience.”

He was that and more. In a very real way, Martin Luther King saved the soul of America – saved it from the ruinous, scandalous, shameless practice of segregating human beings simply based on the color of their skin. His fight was not with white America but rather with history itself, a history that trapped Americans of all colors behind bars erected 300 years before he was born when the first black slaves landed on the pristine shores of the New World. America, which held out the prospect to remake the world, from that day forward failed to live up to its promise as a place where mankind could start anew. By allowing the sin of slavery to take root and flourish, our ancestors condemned the rest of us to living under the weight of three centuries and counting of unconscionable injustice, discrimination, and hate.

Quite a burden, that. And in his own way, Dr. King sought to lift that burden by holding a mirror up to the rest of us while asking simple, straightforward questions.

Does “All men are created equal” mean anything or are they just pretty words? Does “Equal justice under the law” have any significance or is it a lie? And most importantly, how can you love your neighbor while denying him the basic human dignity of recognizing his worth as an individual American citizen?

At bottom, King’s message was firmly rooted in Christianity and the bible. But it was the political ramifications of King’s ideas that were seen as a threat. A century after the Civil War, the south was still reeling from the effects of the aftermath of that conflict as the former slaves moved from bondage to the serfdom of second class citizenship. Codified into law, melded into the landscape by tradition and habit, Jim Crow was a millstone around the neck of southerners as “Whites Only” signs served to enforce the degradation and add to the indignities suffered by people of color.

Describing injustice was easy. As a minister, King’s thundering sermons on segregation from his pulpit at the Ebeneezer Baptist Church were filled with dark biblical images which provided a solid, moral justification for his campaign. But it was in the realm of politics that the problem itself would have to be solved. And in that arena, King proved himself one of the canniest and shrewdest political operators of the 20th century.

King was one of the first politicians to recognize the extraordinary power of television. Unlike Eisenhower or even Kennedy, King saw TV as a medium where emotions could be manipulated to serve a political purpose. Where Kennedy saw television as a vehicle to enhance his celebrity, King saw it as a way to shame the vast majority of citizens who were either truly unaware of didn’t care about the plight of their fellow Americans of color in the south. To that end, King’s protests were staged to provoke a response from their primary tormentors – the southern authorities – who King knew would fight tooth and nail to hang on to Jim Crow. He recognized early on that the tactics of non-violence in the face of extreme provocation would place the bulk of the American people on his side. In the end, the moral courage shown by blacks across the South who endured the unspeakable tactics of the authorities proved King right.

As an orator, King had no equal in the 20th century. Blessed with a mellifluous voice and a razor sharp pen, King’s speeches not only inspired, they provoked. They got people angry. They made people think. In the end, he moved millions with his words. His “I have a dream speech” delivered in front of the Lincoln memorial before a nationwide audience brilliantly set forth in easy to understand and emotionally appealing language a cultural and political realization of all that America stands for. The speech has been called the greatest political testament in American history in that it calls forth our better angels to give dignity to all – white and black – in a spirit of Christian charity and patriotic devotion. For above all, the speech was quintessentially American in flavor; optimistic, looking toward the future, and a call to action that evoked the spirit of patriots going back to our founding.

Toward the end of his life, King’s message began to get lost in the cacophony of competing voices in the civil rights movement that called for more direct action and confrontational tactics with white authorities. While Jim Crow was legally gone, there was much work left to be done and many believed that the path to justice for all African Americans, both north and south, was to be found in more aggressive voices who sought economic justice for the nation’s largely minority poor. King recognized this and sought without much success to moderate some of the more radical calls for economic revolution. It will always be a source of speculation as to whether or not King could have guided the civil rights movement through this enormously troubled time of riots and violence. Some historians point to his declining influence and even open opposition on the part of some in the civil rights movement as proof that eventually, King would have been marginalized as a political figure.

Given King’s enormous talents as an organizer and politician, one could make a strong argument against that notion. It is rather other aspects of his complex legacy that we would probably see today as problematic. His support for affirmative action has been questioned despite the fact that he clearly saw the necessity for compensatory treatment in order to “level the playing field” for African Americans:

“Whenever this issue [compensatory treatment] is raised, some of our friends recoil in horror. The Negro should be granted equality, they agree, but should ask for nothing more. On the surface, this appears reasonable, but is not realistic. For it is obvious that if a man enters the starting line of a race three hundred years after another man, the second would have to perform some incredible feat in order to catch up.”

“A society that has done something special against the Negro for hundreds of years must now do something special for him, to equip him to compete on a just and equal basis.”

The real question is would Dr. King approve of what “affirmative action” has become. It now has little to do with “compensatory treatment” and much more to do with disguised quotas, exclusionary practices, and reverse discrimination. Somehow, I don’t think the man who said “I have a dream that my four children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character,” would agree with the way that affirmative action programs are administered today.

As for the rest of his legacy, there will always be those who point to failings in King’s personal and political life as proof that he is somehow unworthy of our devotion and respect. King was not a saint. Nor was he perfect. He was after all, human. Even his association with suspected communists could be understood in terms of the struggle he was carrying on. King used the raw materials at hand to fashion a coalition to change society. The fact that some people in that coalition had ties to the Communist Party-USA was irrelevant to King who despised the Communist party’s atheism. Even Hunter Pitt Odell, a close aide of King’s and suspected communist, was kept on despite the urging of both Bobby and John Kennedy to fire him. King was unwilling to jettison a loyal aide simply because it angered the government.

The real legacy of Martin Luther King is not in his speeches or what the civil rights movement eventually became – just another group of special pleaders grasping for favors from government. Instead, it is in his ideas for a just and free society where King still lives in our hearts and minds. King’s otherworldly courage in taking on 300 years of oppression while holding malice towards none and charity for all remains one of the most inspiring achievements in American history. For that, it seems the least we can do to honor his birthday once a year and reflect on what a different country indeed the United States of America would be if Dr. King had never been born.

By: Rick Moran at 8:37 am
15 Responses to “MINE EYES HAVE SEEN THE GLORY”
  1. 1
    Steven M. Warshawsky Said:
    9:22 am 

    Nice article, but I would politely demur to your observations that MLK was the third most important person in American history. I agree that GW was numero uno, head and shoulders above all others, but Abraham Lincoln was the decisive figure when it comes to race relations. And Dwight Eisenhower should be credited with the momentous decision of putting the armed might of the federal government behind the Supreme Court’s Brown decision. Once that threshhold was crossed, segregation was finished. MLK was a great figure. But he didn’t make the truly tough decisions—Lincoln and Eisenhower did.

  2. 2
    Mike Carlson Said:
    10:20 am 

    You’re both kind of right and wrong. Mr King was a great man, but it one of the greatest people of the last half of the 20th Century. Along w/ Reagan, Thatcher, Pope John Paul… And as far as Mr Jefferson, his rhetorical flourish was nice, but he couldn’t really do the heavy lifting when it came to race relations, and his hypocrisy notches him even lower still. In my mind, MLK is a greater man than Jefferson. Jefferson was just lucky to be in the right place at the right time (and was a good writer).

  3. 3
    Joust The Facts Trackbacked With:
    11:27 am 

    Furtive Glances – MLK Edition

    There’s some good writing out there. Jeff Harrell writes at Wizbang on his transition from liberal Democrat to conservative Republican. It started with the meaning of the word ‘is’ and finished on a bright sunny Tuesday morning in September, 2001.I

  4. 4
    goy Said:
    11:50 am 

    Hmmm… I went to gradeschool in Chicago with both a Steve Warshawsky and a Mike Carlson. Ain’t that strange. Interestingly, it was around the time that MLK was beginning to have his greatest impact.

    Mike, what sort of heavy lifting – in the face of his peers who resisted all efforts to abolish the slave trade – was Jefferson supposed to have performed? This is a long-running debate, I understand, but I’ve seen no evidence that Jefferson was a hypocrite, other than by the standards of our time, as opposed to the standards of his time.

    I can see where some might label, for instance, his denouncing of the slave trade in his original draft of the Declaration as a “rhetorical flourish”, but in those days to make such statements was more than mere rhetoric. And more to the point, it’s clear how unpopular his view was in this regard.

    To those who balk at Jefferson’s retention of the slaves he inherited, I often wonder to which economical model he should/would have turned in the maintenance of his estate (and in his responsibility toward the well-being of those slaves in question) if he had merely freed them all. IIRC, Jefferson would have died bankrupt if not for the generosity of others (a myth?).

  5. 5
    Walter E. Wallis Said:
    12:24 pm 

    King helped sell more men into slavery than Lincoln freed, and he was not so much a leader as someone who saw the way the parade was marching and hurried out in front with his limo. His glorification demeans the many who made segregation uncomfortable, like me and a whole bunch of other wwhite folk who refused to accept a position superior to blacks.

  6. 6
    The Median Sib Trackbacked With:
    3:12 pm 

    I Have A Dream – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

    I believe Dr. King would be dismayed and ashamed of much that is being done and said today in his name.

  7. 7
    Benedict Trackbacked With:
    3:53 pm 

    WWJBD: WHAT WOULD JACK BAUER DO?

    I discovered today that Rick Moran, proprietor of Right Wing Nuthouse and a contributor to The American Thinker has written exactly the article that I have had in mind since I was first turned on to the television show 24…

  8. 8
    Mescalero Said:
    4:27 pm 

    There are many opinions of Martin Luther King, some favorable, others not so favorable. His understanding of foreign affairs was miserably poor, but his greatest call was for America to make good on its promise of “equality for all”. He did so in a way that inspired individuals from a very large spectrum of the American politics, and in my opinion made this country a better place to live.

    Those who use the memory of Martin Luther King to slander President Bush over the war on terrorism and the current military campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq, need to take a good long look in a mirror and ask themselves some tough questions:
    1). How long has slavery and racism existed under Islam (answer: about 1400 years)?
    2). How do you explain Islamic slavery, racism and genocide in the Sudan province of Darfur and in northern Ethiopia? How do explain the racist policies of Idi Amin?
    3). Do you know anything at all about the Zanj rebellion against the Abbassid Caliphs? This rebellion of black slaves against oppression rivaled that of the Spartacists against the Roman Empire. If at one time there were large black populations in Iraq and Iran, where are the descendants of these people today? Don’t come back and tell me they melted in with the rest of the population. That never happened. Survivors of black slaves in these countries today live at the bottom of the economic and politcal scales and are often referred to by the Arabic equivalent of the n-word.
    4). Why does the announcement of the imposition of Sharia in sub-Sahara African countries always lead to major riots and bloodshed?
    5). Slavery in the United States lasted for approximately 250 years and was ended by a brutal civil war. It took another 100 years to finally end the grip of segregation. Why don’t you go on record demanding the elimination of slavery and racism in the Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Mauritania, Mali and elsewhere? Why is the UN deaf and silent on this issue?
    6). What were the casualty rates among slaves in a) the trans-Atlantic slave trade, and b) Islamic slave caravans across the Sahara Desert (answer: 80% and oftentimes higher for the trans-Sahara slave trade). The casualty rates for the trans-Atlantic slave trade were grim as well, but you never mention the trans-Sahara slave trade even though it is equally relevant.

    To the Harry Bellafontes and the rest of the hypocritical crowd today—do you really think you’re following in Martin Luther King’s footsteps? From where I stand, you’ve strayed way off the path, and your hypocrisy will eventually come back to haunt you big time!

  9. 9
    Mensa Barbie Welcomes You Trackbacked With:
    7:59 pm 

    A March for Humanity

    This 1968 article,”On His Last March”, reminds me that we live in a World where there are no endings and beginnings, only Dreams of what we shape to become something new.

  10. 10
    Jon Said:
    11:29 pm 

    I really appreciated your piece “Mine eyes have seen the glory”, but in the first paragraph after Dr. King’s quote you use the term reverse discrimination. What do you mean, discrimination is discrimination and when the term reverse discrimination is used, it is implied that the only race that is capable of discrimination is the whites. I agree that minorities in the USA have been and still are discriminated against. But, so have women of all races, and so have homosexuals, and so have numerous others and to use the term reverse discrimination and imply that the only discrimination that occurs is whites on blacks is irresponsible and uncalled for and only helps keep the racial divide that exists in this country that we should all love and be thankful for alive.

  11. 11
    DiscerningTexan Said:
    11:31 pm 

    What a great essay about a great great man. Bravo.

  12. 12
    Watcher of Weasels Trackbacked With:
    3:05 am 

    Submitted for Your Approval

    First off…  any spambots reading this should immediately go here, here, here,  and here.  Die spambots, die!  And now…  here are all the links submitted by members of the Watcher’s Council for this week’s vote. Council li…

  13. 13
    dymphna Said:
    11:44 am 

    I don’t put MLK in the pantheon you have lined up. However, Mr. King’s genius lay in his ability to fire the imagination and to make people believe that love is possible and evil is reversible. Even more than that, he did that without being in the corridors of power, as Lincoln was, or emerging from the elite, as did the Founders.

    He belongs with Frederick Douglass, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and others who rose from anonymity through the sheer power of their words. These people changed the tone and direction of the American conversation.

    King was heroic…and only someone who wanted to deflect from his heroism would bring up his foibles.

    The Founding Fathers had foibles enough to outlast any of King’s. We could start with Franklin’s womanizing, neglect of his family, and kowtowing to the British and from there move on to “ain’t gonna serve in no Army” Jefferson. In fact, he ran away from the British. And he seriously wounded Adam’s presidency with deceit and slander. Not nice.

    Our Founders were not saints. Neither was King. But they were admirably human, all of them.

  14. 14
    Watcher of Weasels Trackbacked With:
    2:23 am 

    The Council Has Spoken!

    First off…  any spambots reading this should immediately go here, here, here,  and here.  Die spambots, die!  And now…  the winning entries in the Watcher’s Council vote for this week are Options on Iran II by The Glitteri…

  15. 15
    swissreplica8 Trackbacked With:
    6:56 am 

    hello, it’s good idea

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