Home

Follow Countercurrents on Twitter 

Why Subscribe ?

Popularise CC

Join News Letter

Editor's Picks

Press Releases

Action Alert

Feed Burner

Read CC In Your
Own Language

Bradley Manning

India Burning

Mumbai Terror

Financial Crisis

Iraq

AfPak War

Peak Oil

Globalisation

Localism

Alternative Energy

Climate Change

US Imperialism

US Elections

Palestine

Latin America

Communalism

Gender/Feminism

Dalit

Humanrights

Economy

India-pakistan

Kashmir

Environment

Book Review

Gujarat Pogrom

Kandhamal Violence

WSF

Arts/Culture

India Elections

Archives

Links

Submission Policy

About CC

Disclaimer

Fair Use Notice

Contact Us

Search Our Archive

Subscribe To Our
News Letter



Our Site

Web

Name: E-mail:

 

Printer Friendly Version

Unveiling The Monument But NOT King's
Condemnation Of U.S. Wars for Wall Street

By Jay Janson

17 October, 2011
Countercurrents.org

Regarding the Official Unveiling Ceremony of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington DC

How shall peace activists, aware of the forty-three year corporate media blackout of Martin Luther King's condemnation of U.S. Wars, react to the usual post-assassination praise of King as a great civil rights leader that unscrupulously avoids all mention of his having shortly before being shot, called his government "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today?"

How do the vibrant with emotion eulogies of King's daughter, sister, son, and two men who held the dying King in their arms (and went on to successful political careers), sound to the demonstrators of Occupy Wall St., when all mention of King's condemnation of U.S. wars and the "unjust predatory investments they meant to maintain" is calculatedly omitted.

"Silence is betrayal!" cried out King at Riverside Church in 1967. At the unveiling of his monument in 2011, even King's own family and friends were silent about the continuing U.S, wars in six small countries and CIA covert activity in dozens of others, that their King would have described as going back in history all around the world, as wars created for Wall Streets "unfair overseas predatory investments."

Hello Occupy Wall St.protestors! You are not silent. You are not betraying your country and conscience.

"The hottest place in hell is "not for you brave folks, but as Rev. Dr. King continued quoting Dante, "reserved for those who remain neutral in times of great moral conflict."

In Washington DC at the King monument ceremony, speeches of corporate monument-funding CEOs put the final obscurantist touch. Wealthy white elite emoting over how affected they were by King's words about the equality of men, pretending to be deaf to King having denouncing the immoral business materialism and violence along with its twin, racism.

Doesn't if seem like America has been listening to betrayal since King was himself 'silenced.?' Betrayal in the form of unctuous praise for all King's words except those words that surely cost him his life.

For over four decades the New York Times, Washington Post, the television and radio networks have overflown admiration, tribute and singing Rev. Dr. King's praise, but, those of us old enough, remember that after King's Beyond Vietnam - a Time to Break Silence sermon and up until his murder, this same investor-owned mainstream media, with the New York Times leading, vilified King as a traitor, unpatriotic, allowing himself to be a tool of Hanoi

Would it be any different if King was still alive now, still calling his government the greatest purveyor of violence in the world, still condemning U.S wars and cover criminal action in favor of immoral imperial capitalist investments the world over, still crying out that everyone must protest, that silence is betrayal, that the hottest place in Hell awaits those who indifferently sit on the fence or on their hands?

But King is not here. He was shot in the head one year to the day of opening his mouth against Wall Street's homicidal wars and immoral and untold suffering causing investments. The U.S. wars in France's three Indochinese colonies continued on for another ten years after he made shocking headlines around the world, "KING CALLS US GREATEST PURVEYOR OF VIOLENCE IN THE WORLD"

Most Americans have been made to know absolutely nothing about those 'traitorous and unpatriotic' sermons of the last year of his life. And to this day, this writer knows of no church, synagog, mosque, temple or congregation that has endorsed, agrees with, or is willing to identify with King's brave, bold and blistering statements of fact and history.

Perhaps as a result of the awful riots and further loss of life after King's murder causing white establishment nervousness, some extra bit of attention was give to black grievances, for a while, and King's image was honored and eventually 'pushed upstairs' and off the seething streets so to speak. All Americans are to honor Martin Luther King Jr. as a national hero during a three day yearly holiday.

King had bravely exposed the domination of society by powerful investors mercilessly speculating on the resources of the entire planet, using war as a tool to maintain investments. During the last two years, the outcry against investor control of society through privately owned central banks has been heard in the streets of every nation in Europe except Germany. Autumn in New York has seen the birth and international spreading of the Occupy Wall Street movement. The world is waking up to what King woke up to and was murdered before he could wake up too many others.

In this Age of Instant Communication a relatively small number of King followers will awaken millions to what King taught. The tens of thousands of sensitive people long accustomed to protesting in spite of not expecting it to stop the wars, will join in making the well known image of King a catalyst for people everywhere to realize their capability to make wars unacceptable.

http://kingcondemneduswars.blogspot.com/

The creators of The King Condemned U.S. Wars Awareness Campaign, endorsed by Veterans For Peace, and many national and international clergy related peace organizations like Fellowship of Reconciliation, Pax Christi, Pastors For Peace and renown musicians Pete Seeger and Wynton Marsalis, can understand a reticence on the part of many in America, for King's words sound confrontational in a country, where those politicians, who participated in lethal military action against Vietnamese rice farmers in their very own beloved country, are still praised as having been heroic and 'serving America' - certainly not shaming America, as King described in detail, in church, in his last months.

In the same way, today, in an infinitely more militarized United States, the ongoing dispatching of thousands of Afghani, Iraqi, Somali, Pakistani, Yemeni, and Libyans in their own beloved countries as designated enemies of America is hailed as serving to protect Americans in America.

Investor-owned war-promoting media's job is keep King’s outcry condemning U. S. wars buried along with his body. Thus at the official unveiling of the King Monument, King is praised for his civil rights leadership, Praising him for teaching us how to end wars is as yet quite unheard of.

Prohibiting King's words inconvenient to our private investors, ruling society by scam and sword, will backfire in the long run. Words of wisdom have a life of their own, and King's will soon be shouted out from the streets in cities on all five continents. And King's statue will soon be regarded as the whole man, not with an important part chopped away.

Jay Janson, 80, is an archival research peoples historian activist, musician and writer, who has lived and worked on all the continents and whose articles on media have been published in China, Italy, England, India and the US, and now resides in New York City. Howard Zinn lent his name to various projects of his. GlobalResearch, InformationClearingHouse, CounterCurrents, DissidentVoice, OpEdNews, HistoryNewsNetwork, are among those who have published his articles.

 

 



 


Comments are not moderated. Please be responsible and civil in your postings and stay within the topic discussed in the article too. If you find inappropriate comments, just Flag (Report) them and they will move into moderation que.