Monday, January 20, 2014

Martin Luther King’s Still Unfulfilled Dream Is Still


It has been nearly almost 46 years since Martin Luther King was murdered.   Yet significant aspects of his dream remain unfulfilled.  Some of the unfulfilled aspects tie directly to the decades long program of sabotage implemented by the Republican Party both at the state and federal level.  And if anything, the GOP sabotage effort has accelerated in recent years. Meanwhile, the GOP gives lip service to supposedly wanting more minority participation in the GOP's fictional "big tent."  For one who is a member of a minority demographic to be a supporter of today's GOP is akin to a Jew supporting Hitler's Nazi Party in the 1930's.  Think Progress highlights four initiative that King supported which are subject to consistent GOP sabotage.  Here are excerpts:

While the civil rights leader changed the conversation around race and justice in the U.S., many of his goals never came to fruition.   Here’s a look at four of the things King demanded but never saw completed:
1. A living wage. One of the demands protesters listed for the March on Washington was a minimum wage. “Anything less than $2.00 an hour,” King and his compatriots argued, fails to “give all Americans a decent standard of living.” In 2014 dollars, a $2 an hour wage would work out to about $15.27. But minimum wage is actually much, much lower — less than half of that — today. Forty-two percent of those earning minimum wage are people of color.
2. Desegregation. King hoped to see the end not just of legal segregation in the South, but also of the de facto segregation that existed in Northern businesses, housing, and schools. He even toured Chicago advocating for the end of this kind of segregation, saying civil rights leaders needed to “eradicate a vicious system which seeks to further colonize thousands of Negroes within a slum environment.’’ But today, public schools are more segregated than they were 40 years ago. The unemployment rate for black Americans has remained above 10 percent for most of the last half a century, and black workers earn on average $22,000 less a year than their white counterparts. Black homebuyers are shown significantly fewer homes than their white counterparts when shopping for a house. Ethnic identity is still the key factor in where people reside.
3. Fair voting. King campaigned extensively for legislation like the Voting Rights Act. And he lived to see it passed. But legislators, largely Republicans, have been working to roll back the rights protected under the VRA since its inception. Those efforts have become even more acute recently. More than half the states introduced restrictive voting legislation in 2013 alone, according to a review by the Brennan Center, at a total of 92 separate bills in 33 states. The Supreme Court also struck down a major portion of the Voting Rights Act in 2013, allowing states previously subject to the VRA to put voting laws on the books without federal oversight. Now a group of members of congress — including Rep. John Conyers (D-MI), who incidentally established the first official Martin Luther King Day — is working to undo the damage of that decision.
4. Unfettered unionization. King spoke out specifically about anti-union “Right to Work” laws. “[W]e must guard against being fooled by false slogans, such as ‘right to work,’” he said in 1961. “Its purpose is to destroy labor unions and the freedom of collective bargaining by which unions have improved wages and working conditions of everyone…Wherever these laws have been passed, wages are lower, job opportunities are fewer and there are no civil rights. We do not intend to let them do this to us.” Over 50 years later, right to work laws are still on the books. In fact, Michigan passed its own right to work law in 2012. But King’s assessment was right: No matter their unionized status, workers in “right to work” states today earn $1,500 less a year than their counterparts, and are less likely to receive other benefits like health care and pensions.
When I accuse today's GOP of being a de facto white supremacist party, I catch a lot of flack.   But, actions speak louder that words and a review of GOP actions and positions make it painfully clear that today's GOP is working incessantly to undermine Martin Luther Kings dream.

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