Home » For Martin Luther King Day: on supremacies and equality

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For Martin Luther King Day: on supremacies and equality — 29 Comments

  1. ‘Black supremacy’ is something that exists in particular neighborhoods and particular segments within workplaces. It can be injurious to people exposed to it because a critical mass of blacks have no compunction about mistreating others and segments of a metropolis where blacks predominate tend to be shot through with street crime and school disorder unless the authorities are unflinching about deploying police manpower to such areas and encouraging them to do their jobs.
    ==
    A more common issue is ‘black impunity’. A large minority of blacks have bought into the notion that they’re a sort of aristocratic stratum and it’s an outrage that low status deplorables like police officers have authority over them. They are supported in this view by white progtrash, the difference being that black chauvinists fancy their status is inherent and white progtrash are incensed that white deplorables have the audacity to impose social discipline on their pets.
    ==
    Please note the assumptions behind DEI: that ordinary whites are so disgusting next to regime pets that they are properly replaced by them, even if the process is dishonest and so doing is in conflict with the notional mission of the institution in question. Rhetorical gamesmen chuffer on about ‘making up for past discrimination’ with no acknowledgement that the hispanic population of the United States was tiny prior to 1960).
    ==
    Have a look at the racial composition of the University of California student body and then have a look at the median combined board scores of each coarse racial segment and then look at the breakdown of the young adult population by race. This isn’t a private institution swapping out (say) 5% of the white applicants who might otherwise be admitted. This is a public institution suppressing the non-hispanic white presence on the order of 40%.

  2. Barack is very much a “Do as I say”, not a “Do as I do”. He is a symbol of how many glib suckers there are among us.

  3. Did Martin Luther King ever actually mean any of that, or would he have just gone along with the racial spoils system like all the other civil rights figures who survived him?

  4. Did Martin Luther King ever actually mean any of that, or would he have just gone along with the racial spoils system like all the other civil rights figures who survived him?

    I’ve tried to give him the benefit of the doubt, since he seemed more focused than others on concepts like colorblindness. But he apparently favored reparations and affirmative action, so unfortunately it seems likely he would have gone in the same direction as the rest of them.

  5. No doubt MLK was a flawed human being.

    But he knew, correctly, he was risking his life. As he said the day before he was assassinated.
    ____________________________

    I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight that we, as a people, will get to the Promised Land.

    –Martin Luther King, Jr. ,”I’ve Been to the Mountaintop” (April 3, 1968)
    https://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/mlkivebeentothemountaintop.htm

    ____________________________

    Generally people don’t risk their lives for a place at the head of the line for spoils.

    God bless Martin Luther King, Jr.

  6. @huxley:Generally people don’t risk their lives for a place at the head of the line for spoils.

    The others risked their lives too, didn’t lose them, and when things settled down and there was a racial spoils system, made sure they got theirs.

  7. I’m in agreement with huxley. His personal faults aside, I think MLK Jr. believed what he said about equality. We’ve had enough in the past decade or so of people denying there was anything good about the leaders of the American Revolution because they weren’t perfect in the eyes of the twenty-first century or in their own times. Let their achievements stand.

  8. Again, Bayard Rustin was (AFAIK) the only person in King’s circle who objected to the race patronage regime which appeared after 1968. One of King’s important collaborators was Joseph Rauh. Ed Koch tells of crossing paths with Rauh at a social function in 1971 and buttonholing him on the subject of race patronage (which Koch opposed). Koch’s description of Rauh’s response is amusing. “He was positively Churchillian. ‘We will fight you in the streets. We will fight you in the cities…'”. The most malignant court decision, Griggs v. Duke Power was issued that year. The Nixon Administration’s ‘Philadelphia Plan’ was instituted that year. The University of California’s medical school quotas were instituted in 1969. Interesting to rummage through his correspondence to figure out when a permanent race patronage regime (administered by lawyers in defiance of public opinion) was concocted.

  9. I think MLK Jr. believed what he said about equality.
    ==
    I think he believed what he said about blacks being treated in a manner which injured their pride. The trouble is, all but a few of us are humiliated at some point in our lives. You can remove certain repulsive contrivances – and there were many in 1953. People still are told the position has been filled, they cannot have a loan, they failed the examination, and leaving the scene of an accident is a crime. Failure to distinguish between different sorts of injuries gets you the race patronage regime.

  10. There’s a difference between risking your life and believing you were risking your life.
    ==
    The $PLC has a list of about forty people they classify as having been the subject of political murder during the period running from 1955 to 1968. (You can add another half dozen or so from the period running from 1968 to 1981). If you read about individual cases, you can see the list is padded. It was not that common.

  11. MLK was the most prominent civil rights leader of the movement and arguably had the biggest target on his back. He spoke beautifully and eloquently straight down the line of the Declaration of Independence and the Bible in a unifying way.

    He was a rare inspiring figure in a dangerous time. He left America and the world a better place.

    Those who wish to knock him down are welcome to try. He received worse in his time and he is still standing.

  12. To point out facts about MLK (that he favored reparations and affirmative action) is not to “knock him down” or to deny his courage, eloquence, or his many great accomplishments. Among other things, he held true to his belief in non-violent protest. He was a towering, inspirational figure. But nearly 60 years after his murder we can be honest about him, as we are about Lincoln, Washington, and other great figures of American history.

  13. You’re not going to believe this but I found a great editorial in the WSJ.

    Black America Needs a Moral Rejuvenation
    By Robert Woodson

    https://archive.fo/2026.01.16-003334/https://www.wsj.com/opinion/black-america-needs-a-moral-rejuvenation-1af5df01

    …grievance has become a shield protecting predators within our own communities. Accusations of racism are routinely weaponized to silence accountability, excuse corruption and reward moral cowardice.

    Martin Luther King Jr. warned us against this temptation. In his final book, he wrote, “It is not a sign of weakness, but a sign of high maturity, to rise to the level of self-criticism.” If we truly honor his legacy, we must do what too many leaders refuse to do: confront the enemy within.

  14. @Jimmy:But nearly 60 years after his murder we can be honest about him

    I’m not sure we can. There’s a lot worse in life than hypothetically supporting what black politicians today support.

  15. The others risked their lives too, didn’t lose them, and when things settled down and there was a racial spoils system, made sure they got theirs.
    ==
    I’m trying to think of a period ‘civil rights leader’ of note who after 1971 made his primary living working for a commercial enterprise. The only names which come to mind are Myrlie Williams and Rap Brown. I suppose you could add Vernon Jordan, but I think that man was always in the connections business.

  16. Not interested in trashing King, though there is a boatload of dirt on the man. The thing is, by 1971 his particular skill set had ceased to be salient. Not sure he had much to offer anymore. The hagiography of the man is somewhat de trop.

  17. The country as a whole could use a moral regeneration.
    ==
    As for the black population in particular, they would benefit from a half-dozen sets of policy changes, though not always in an unqualified way. I doubt you could find a black politician interested in any of them.

  18. It’s ironic that 60 years after MLK’s death, judging by race is still widespread, but now whites are discriminated against instead of blacks.

  19. The institutional bias against whites has been a reality in at least portions of the economy since 1971. Given the excuses offered, what’s amusing is that the farther we get from the world prior to 1971, the more prevalent and intense the bias gets. Again, the racial composition of the University of California is a prime example.

  20. neo astutely observes, “Obama is stating the application of the Declaration to all in the US and quoting the document, but cites the doctrine of equality while leaving out the Creator as the one doing the “endowing.” It’s a significant omission, I believe, and no accident:”

    Absolutely an intentional omission and for such as he, a necessary one. By leaving out that our inalienable rights are granted by our Creator, “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” are reduced to State ‘granted’ and revocable privileges. Reduced to privileges because what one majority of citizens agree are rights, a later majority can declare to be null and void.

    The Declaration lays down in that most memorable of terms the moral foundations upon which the US Constitution rests. Not even the amendment process can nullify our right to “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” for the Constitution merely provides formal recognition of preexisting rights. But this ONLY holds true if granted by a Creator. Secular rejection of a Creator removes all claim to inalienable rights with the State replacing the Creator and all is reduced to the rule of men who make the laws and decide what privileges are currently ‘approved’.

  21. Many know this already, but …
    Back around 2012 or so Newt Gingrich (historian) said that in the colonial era the “pursuit of happiness” meant (at least for the American gentry) the pursuit of virtue and wisdom. This mean both personal and public virtue, and when you believed you were achieving those aims, that made you (internally) happy that you were maintaining a solid reputation, etc.

    As many people of that time also studied Greek, the Greeks also had the term “eudemonia”.
    Searching to reconfirm my understanding, I find several related definitions, often relating to some ideas about “happiness”, but I believe the core idea is somewhat broader, as “the Greek term for “well-being” or “human flourishing” “.

  22. @ Mike Plaiss > “Black America Needs a Moral Rejuvenation”

    Excellent article at your link.
    Sadly, there is too much money to be had in NOT doing what Mr. Woodson advises, and his counsel is absolutely correct.

    As it was when others said the same thing years ago, and since then.
    There is no graft in Rejuvenating Morality.

    Well, someone could probably figure out how to profiteer on even that.

  23. Re MLK on believing in full equality versus wanting a racial spoils system, I probably would say a bit of both, with the latter supposed to give way to the former. He could be quite the piece of work in private life and was far more radical than many realize (and often in a bad way) with what I can best describe as an aspiration towards a form of Christian Socialism; though for obvious reasons he was only so open about that. I do think he sincerely believed in it too, as well as the whole “all men are brothers and children of God” thing, for whatever his many flaws and foibles. But he did believe it as crucial to implement things like affirmative action in the meantime to help erode the white supremacy in the US and help push Blacks and others onto a more equal footing, and this was one of the things he and people like Goldwater argued over, even if MLK simultaneously had problems on his other flank with more unabashed black supermarkets or separatists like Huey Newton.

  24. supremacists into supermarkets

    Sorry, Coment correct function wasn’t cooperating. Smart phone not so smart operator.

  25. Barack is very much a “Do as I say”, not a “Do as I do”. He is a symbol of how many glib suckers there are among us.
    ==
    Actually, he is a symbol of the availability of politically-determined incomes for the favored few and a symbol of the escalating shamelessness of our political class.

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