Sarah Ford | January 20, 2015

MLK’s words just as relevant today

By Morris Dees

This Martin Luther King Day is a special one. We’re on the eve of the 50th anniversary of the Selma-to-Montgomery March, perhaps King’s most triumphant moment, and the film Selma has brought him vividly to life.

Dr. King’s speech at the conclusion of the march is remembered for its soaring rhetoric, for King’s declaration that segregation was on its deathbed and for his unshakeable belief that the moral arc of the universe bends toward justice.

But it was King’s deep political analysis that day that may have the most relevance for us today.

King reminded the nation that Jim Crow segregation was the result of a political strategy engineered in the wake of Reconstruction by white Southern aristocrats who feared that poor whites would unite with the newly freed African Americans to form a powerful voting bloc.

The aristocrats “took the world and gave the poor white man Jim Crow,” King said. When low wages left the white man hungry, “he ate Jim Crow … no matter how bad off he was, at least he was a white man, better than a black man.”

The strategy, of course, worked. African Americans were disenfranchised, and Jim Crow stood astride the South for nearly a century.

Today – though the world is far different because of Dr. King’s vision and the courage of the thousands who made the journey to Montgomery – racial divisions are still being exploited. The words are different, but the goal is much the same.

First we had Richard Nixon’s “Southern strategy,” a cynical effort to appeal to white racial resentment.

Then we had Reagan’s mythical welfare queen and George H.W. Bush’s Willie Horton ads. 

Most recently, we’ve had Mitt Romney’s “47 percent” remark, Newt Gingrich calling President Obama the “food stamp president,” and much, much more.

We’ve seen the results: voter suppression, corporate hegemony in Washington, a shrinking social safety net, and mass incarceration. Our schools are increasingly segregated, and the headlines this past week tell us that the majority of our public school students now live in poverty.

>> Continue Reading

Get Resources and Insights Straight To Your Inbox

Explore More Articles

Open Position: Customer Service Coordinator (Remote-Part Time)

November 13, 2024

Position Title:  Customer Service Coordinator (Remote – Part Time) Department:  Charitable Funds Management Solutions  We are a non-profit charitable organization looking for skilled individuals who…

Read Article

National Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness Month

November 5, 2024

President Ronald Reagan designated November as Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness Month in 1983 when there were less than two million people suffering from the disease. Since…

Read Article

National Scholarship Month/National Education Month

November 5, 2024

National Scholarship Month/National Education Month aims to build awareness of scholarships and opportunities in higher education. Established in 1998, it recognizes communities, organizations, and businesses within the…

Read Article

Get Resources and Insights Straight To Your Inbox

Receive our monthly/bi-monthly newsletter filled with information about causes, nonprofit impact, and topics important for corporate social responsibility and employee engagement professionals, including disaster response, workplace giving, matching gifts, employee assistance funds, volunteering, scholarship award program management, grantmaking, and other philanthropic initiatives.

newsletter-mock