Martin Luther King Jr. Day helps launch new year of fightback
By Abayomi Azikiwe
Editor, Pan-African News Wire
Jan 11, 2012
The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. would have been 83 years old on Jan. 15.
In honor of this iconic civil rights, anti-war and social justice activist, the
federal government and other public agencies close every year on the Monday
following his birthday. King was martyred in Memphis, Tenn., on April 4,
1968.
This year the King Day holiday will take on profound significance in light
of the political and social developments that have occurred over the last year.
Millions have taken to the streets around the world in the fight against
poverty, increased attacks on working people and the oppressed, and imperialist
wars.
Since January of last year, revolutionary movements have emerged from
Tunisia and Egypt to Bahrain and Yemen. Rebellions and general strikes led to
the resignation of long-time Western-backed puppet President Zine El Abidine
Ben Ali in Tunisia and the forced removal of President Hosni Mubarak in
Egypt.
In Morocco the monarchy was shaken by mass demonstrations that were largely
unprecedented in recent times. Other states throughout the Middle East, Africa
and Europe saw popular movements erupt in opposition to rising food prices, the
imposition of austerity and the intervention of U.S. imperialism along with its
NATO allies.
Workers in European capitalist countries, especially Greece, Spain and
Portugal, suffered tremendously from the ongoing world economic crisis. In
Britain Black and working-class youth rose up in rebellion in response to the
blatant police killing of a Caribbean-British man, who was followed and shot to
death in cold blood in London.
Inside the U. S., a people’s uprising in Wisconsin was a direct
response to intensifying attacks on public sector workers and their right to
collective bargaining. Workers and youth occupied the state capitol in Madison
for weeks and drew the attention of people throughout the world.
Occupation participants in Wisconsin paid direct tribute to their class
brothers and sisters in Egypt. The progressive forces in Egypt, during the same
time period, expressed their solidarity with the people in Wisconsin.
This movement of workers and youth, aimed at defending the right to organize
as well as the right to quality education and a decent wage, spread to other
states around the Midwest and nationally. In Ohio, legislative actions that
were just as draconian as those passed in Wisconsin prompted mass action by
trade unions and their supporters.
In Lansing, Mich., the conservative-dominated legislature wasted no time,
after securing a majority, to enact bills that drastically cut public spending.
These cuts resulted in salary reductions, massive layoffs of public sector
employees and the obliteration of city services.
The passage of Public Act 4 in Michigan superseded the former Public Act 72,
which allowed for the imposition of emergency management of school systems and
municipalities. Public Act 4, now popularly known as the “dictator
law,” provides for the nullification of the authority of elected
officials, the abrogation of labor and vending contracts, and the forced
payment of debt service to the banks, irrespective of the desires of the
electorates or the unions.
Public Act 4 has been implemented in several majority African-American
cities such as Flint and Benton Harbor. In Detroit — the largest
African-American-dominated city in the U.S. — Gov. Rick Snyder recently
appointed a financial review panel. The appointment is an effort to justify
forcing the city to accept a consent agreement that could ultimately lead to
installation of an emergency manager.
Election years — from 1968 to 2012
The year that Dr. King was killed represented a watershed of mass struggle
and urban rebellion. The previous year, 1967, saw more than 160 instances of
civil unrest throughout the U.S. as well as the emergence of a mass youth
movement in opposition to the war in Vietnam.
Although Dr. King was a proponent of nonviolent direct action, he did not
condemn the rebellions that swept the country between 1964 and 1968. The civil
rights leader viewed the unrest within the urban areas as a result of the
failure of the U.S. system to provide adequate living conditions, decent jobs
and incomes to the majority of African Americans.
In a “Face to Face” television interview conducted on July 28,
1967, just one day after President Lyndon Johnson announced the appointment of
a National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorder, Dr. King said, “I am
not calling for a guaranteed annual wage as a substitute for a guaranteed job.
I think that ought to be the first thing, that we guarantee every person
capable of working a job.” (“Testament of Hope, The Essential
Writings and Speeches of Martin Luther King, Jr.,” 2001)
Dr. King pointed out that “this can be done in many, many ways. There
are many things that we need to be done that could be done that’s not
being done now. And this could provide jobs.”
In 1968, Dr. King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference set out
to wage a real “war on poverty” by taking thousands of poor people
to Washington, D.C., to demand jobs and a guaranteed annual income. King had
founded the SCLC in 1957 in the aftermath of the Montgomery Bus Boycott. In
March 1968, he was invited to Memphis to support a sanitation workers strike
that was representative of both the class struggle and the national
question.
The year 1968 was an election year just like 2012. The failure of the
Democratic Party between 1961 and 1968 to effectively resolve the problems of
national oppression, discrimination, economic exploitation, poverty and war
played a large part in its losing the elections in 1968.
Despite the fact that the Democratic and Republican parties have different
constituencies, both organizations are controlled by the ruling class of
bankers and industrialists. Today, even though the Democratic Party has
commanded a majority in both houses of Congress between 2006 and 2010 and has
controlled the White House since 2009, rates of poverty and exploitation are
continuing to rise.
The 2010 election results were a reflection of the lack of motivation on the
part of working-class people and the nationally oppressed to once again support
Democratic candidates without any real improvement in the concrete conditions
under which they live.
The year 2011 saw an acceleration of attacks against workers and the
oppressed. The only real defense against these assaults has emanated from the
unions, the youth and the oppressed communities themselves.
This is why there needs to be a concerted effort outside of the established
ruling class parties to address the crises now facing the majority of people
inside the U.S. The response of the Department of Homeland Security to the
Occupy Wall Street movement across the country — with DHS operating
through local municipal administrations, many of which are led by Democrats
— demonstrates that both of the capitalist-controlled parties do not want
to see a real grass-roots revolutionary struggle emerge that focuses on the
role of the banks and the corporations as the fundamental cause of the economic
crisis.
It was the political repression carried out under a Democratic
administration in 1968 that created the conditions for the assassination of Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. That same year, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover declared
the Black Panther Party as the leading threat to the national security of the
U.S.
After 1967, during the height of the rebellions, the FBI’s
Counter-Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO) sought to crush the Black Liberation
movement and the anti-war struggle. Scores of activists were killed and
imprisoned while the National Guard and conventional military forces were
deployed into the cities to smash the rebellions.
Since 2010, the FBI and other DHS branches have targeted immigrants, the
nationally oppressed, Muslims, anti-war and solidarity activists for
deportation, raids, targeted assassinations and grand jury subpoenas. In the
final days of 2011, President Obama signed into law the National Defense
Authorization Act, which provides further ammunition for the ruling class to
crack down on activists and organizations deemed to be threats to the status
quo.
2012: Another year of momentous struggle
In all likelihood this year will also be one of protracted struggle and
resistance. Signs of this are already developing, with Jan. 16 King Day actions
under the banner of Occupy 4 Jobs – inspired by the Occupy Wall Street
movement – in New York, Baltimore, Washington, D.C., Boston, Philadelphia
and elsewhere.
Detroit is the focus of a growing mass struggle against the imposition of
emergency management. On Jan. 2, more than 2,000 people rallied at Tabernacle
Missionary Baptist Church to say “no” to the appointment of an
emergency manager.
In a statement, the Moratorium NOW! Coalition to Stop Foreclosures,
Evictions and Utility Shut-offs stressed, “The same banks that caused the
economic crisis and destroyed the City of Detroit’s tax base, with their
fraudulent and racist predatory loans resulting in approximately 150,000
foreclosures in the past five years, now get first lien on city tax dollars for
debt service payments.”
Detroit’s 9th Annual MLK Day Rally & March will be held under the
theme of “Escalating the Struggle for Jobs, Peace and Justice.”
Featured speakers will include contributors to the groundbreaking first-person
account “Hands on the Freedom Plow,” which examined the role of
women in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, the vanguard
organization within the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s.
The emphasis at Detroit’s MLK Day rally will drive home the need for a
cadre-developing organization, a working-class orientation, the important role
of women and the oppressed, and the need to build a movement outside the
ruling-class-dominated political parties. n