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Martin Luther King, Jr. Left Behind a Subversive Legacy Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=33791"><span class="small">teleSUR</span></a>   
Monday, 16 January 2017 13:22

Excerpt: "Martin Luther King, Jr. and his legacy will again be debated as the U.S. honors the Civil Rights leader on Jan. 16, 2017. King had become progressively more radical in the 1960s, which would be what finally led to his assassination."

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (photo: unknown)
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (photo: unknown)


Martin Luther King, Jr. Left Behind a Subversive Legacy

By teleSUR

16 January 17

 

artin Luther King, Jr. and his legacy will again be debated as the U.S. honors the Civil Rights leader on Jan. 16, 2017. King had become progressively more radical in the 1960s, which would be what finally led to his assassination.

King was murdered in Memphis, Tennessee on April 4, 1968. He had traveled there in support of striking African-American sanitation workers who were protesting against unfair wages and working conditions, being paid much less than their white counterparts.

Around the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, which outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, King's speeches took a turn towards the radical left.

"We must mark him now, if we have not done so before, as the most dangerous Negro of the future in this nation from the standpoint of communism, the Negro and national security," FBI Domestic Intelligence Chief William Sullivan wrote in a memo in 1963.

It was the height of the Cold War, the U.S. unrelenting anti-communist surge.

Soon thereafter, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover approved a large-scale surveillance plan against King, in order to prove he was a “communist.”

While it did no such thing, it did result in the mailing of poorly-worded letter in 1964 from the FBI which informed King he had 34 days to kill himself, otherwise tapes of his extramarital affairs would be made public.

This was part of a wider campaign against left-wing and African-American revolutionaries called the Counterintelligence Program, which targeted groups like the Black Panther Party and leaders such as Malcolm X.

King had begun to speak out against the war in Vietnam, which by 1968 was in its 13th year, and had continued his critique of capitalism.

“The evils of capitalism are as real as the evils of militarism and evils of racism," King said in a speech to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in 1967.

That same year, he delivered his "Beyond Vietnam" speech, one of the sturdiest moral arguments against the war.

James Earl Ray was convicted of assassinating King after being apprehended in London two months after the killing. Ray was quickly extradited to Tennessee and charged.

Initially, Ray confessed to the killing on the advice of his attorney and was convicted to a 99-year term, but recanted three days after.

Ray maintained his innocence, and in 1993, a man named Loyd Jowers of Memphis appeared on national television and alleged that the U.S. government, the mafia and himself all conspired to have King assassinated.

King's family had long suspected a wider effort involved in the assassination and brought a case against Jowers in 1999.

Twelve jurors — six white and six Black — reached a unanimous verdict on Dec. 8, 1999, after about an hour of deliberations, that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated as a result of a conspiracy.

This decision came after four weeks of testimony and over 70 witnesses. Jowers was convicted, along with "unnamed co-conspirators."

Although a civil court found Jowers guilty, it wasn't enough to get the retrial for Ray that both he and King's family wanted.

"The moral arc of the universe is long, but it bends toward justice," Coretta Scott King said on Dec. 8, 1999. "I feel that the jury's verdict clearly affirms this principle. With this faith, we can begin the 21st century and the new millennium with a new spirit of hope and healing.”


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Trump Promises 'Insurance for Everybody,' Won't Give Any Specifics Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=21537"><span class="small">Margaret Hartmann, New York Magazine</span></a>   
Monday, 16 January 2017 13:21

Hartmann writes: "Specifically, what will Trumpcare look like? It's unclear."

'I've already provided insurance for everybody in Ogdenville, Brockway, and North Haverbrook!' (photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images)
'I've already provided insurance for everybody in Ogdenville, Brockway, and North Haverbrook!' (photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images)


Trump Promises 'Insurance for Everybody,' Won't Give Any Specifics

By Margaret Hartmann, New York Magazine

16 January 17

 

n Sunday, thousands of people attended rallies across the United States protesting Republican efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act. If they’d only held off by a few hours, they would have realized there’s no reason to fear that millions of people will lose their health coverage, as Donald Trump has almost completed his secret plan to provide “insurance for everybody.”

It’s been nearly seven years since Republicans came up with the phrase “repeal and replace,” and while Congress just began the repeal process, they’ve never coalesced around a replacement plan. Trump has said surprisingly little about how he wants to overhaul the law he frequently calls a “disaster.” Ahead of last week’s vote, Senator Bob Corker had to ask the president-elect to “consider tweeting it out very clearly” whether or not he’s in favor of repealing and replacing the law simultaneously.

Now Trump has revealed to the Washington Post that he not only has a plan, but it’s solved conundrums that have long vexed health-care experts. Trump said his health-care strategy offers “lower numbers, much lower deductibles.” And it will be affordable. “There was a philosophy in some circles that if you can’t pay for it, you don’t get it. That’s not going to happen with us,” he said.

But specifically, what will Trumpcare look like? It’s unclear, but those covered under the new law “can expect to have great health care. It will be in a much simplified form. Much less expensive and much better,” Trump explained.

He cautioned, however, that even if you like your plan under the Affordable Care Act, you can’t keep it. “It’ll be another plan. But they’ll be beautifully covered. I don’t want single-payer. What I do want is to be able to take care of people,” he said.

As he mentioned in his press conference last week, Trump thinks lowering drug prices is key to reducing health-care costs nationwide. When asked to explain how he’d persuade drug companies to go along, he said it would be “just like on the airplane,” referring to factually incorrect tweets about canceling a nonexistent “order” for a new Air Force One jet.

Trump did not say how his plan differs from the proposal put forward by House Republicans last year, but he said he’d unveil his strategy alongside House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. He’s just waiting for the confirmation of his Health and Human Services secretary (whose Senate hearing hasn’t been scheduled yet).

While some may be skeptical that Trump actually came up with a comprehensive plan to replace Obamacare, which took 15 months to implement, in a matter of weeks, he assured the Post that it’s “very much formulated down to the final strokes.”

And Republican lawmakers better be ready to get onboard. “I think we will get approval. I won’t tell you how, but we will get approval,” Trump declared. “You see what’s happened in the House in recent weeks,” he added, referring to the backlash against the GOP’s effort to gut the House ethics office earlier this month, which may have been influenced by a Trump tweet.

So to sum up, Trump’s Obamacare replacement is definitely not imaginary, it will allow every American to be “beautifully covered,” and presidential Twitter bullying will be key to its implementation. Trump must be confident that all of this will come to pass. If not, why tie himself to the arduous Obamacare reform effort with a memorable promise like “insurance for everybody”?


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FOCUS: Huge Turnout at Rallies for Health Care Print
Monday, 16 January 2017 11:30

Galindez writes: "As the nation celebrated the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., tens of thousands of Americans served notice on the Republican Party that they will not give up their health care without a fight."

The crowd waits for Sen. Bernie Sanders, senators and members of the Michigan congressional delegation during a rally to stand up to Republicans and to save healthcare at Macomb Community College on Sunday, January 15, 2017 in Warren. (photo: Elaine Cromie/Detroit Free Press)
The crowd waits for Sen. Bernie Sanders, senators and members of the Michigan congressional delegation during a rally to stand up to Republicans and to save healthcare at Macomb Community College on Sunday, January 15, 2017 in Warren. (photo: Elaine Cromie/Detroit Free Press)


Huge Turnout at Rallies for Health Care

By Scott Galindez, Reader Supported News

16 January 17

 

s the nation celebrates the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., tens of thousands of Americans serve notice on the Republican Party that they will not give up their health care without a fight.

From a January 15 press release on BernieSanders.com:

WARREN, Mich. – More than 8,000 people showed up Sunday at an outdoor rally at a community college here on a freezing cold day as part of a massive, nationwide show of grassroots support for health care programs under attack by Republicans in Congress. Sens. Bernie Sanders, Charles E. Schumer, Debbie Stabenow and Gary Peters headlined the event, which included representatives from Michigan’s congressional delegation, union leaders, and people helped by the Affordable Care Act.

The day of action – “Our First Stand: Save Health Care” – was organized by the Democratic Party’s Congressional leadership led by new outreach director Sen. Bernie Sanders. Tens of thousands of people attended more than 70 rallies around the country.

“On behalf of the children of this country, on behalf of the working people of this country, on behalf of middle class families who pay for their parents in nursing homes through Medicaid, what we are are saying to Republicans is if you want to improve the Affordable Care Act, let’s do it together. But if you think you’re simply going to throw millions off of health insurance, you’ve got another think coming,” Sanders told the crowd outside Macomb County Community College.

The rallies showcased opposition to plans to throw 30 million Americans off health insurance, privatize Medicare, make massive cuts in Medicaid, threaten nursing home care for seniors and raise already skyrocketing prescription drug prices.

“I say to my Republican colleagues: yeah, you’re going to have to worry about Sen. Stabenow and Peters and all of us in the Senate and our friends in the House. But that’s the least of your worries,” Sanders added. “You’re going to have to worry about millions of people who are standing up, who are fighting back and who demand a day when health care will be a right of all people, not just a privilege.”

In Iowa, there were five rallies throughout the state. The largest was in Des Moines, where a couple of hundred folks braved cold temperatures to participate in a speakout in front of the Neil Smith Federal Building.

Dr. Larry Severidt, MD, the director of Medical Education at Broadlawns Hospital in Des Moines, told the crowd that “repealing without replacing is not acceptable.” He talked about patients who die needlessly because they can’t afford treatment. One example he gave was diabetic patients dying because they can’t afford a bottle of insulin.

State Representative Bruce Hunter told the story of a friend of his dying of kidney failure before Obamacare came into existence. His friend was not placed on the transplant list because he knew he couldn’t afford the anti-rejection medication without health insurance, and at the age of 5o, he would have only had a year on Medicare after the transplant. Hunter said the ACA would have saved his friend’s life.

I am in the shoes of Rep. Hunter’s friend. I have kidney failure. I didn’t have health care before the ACA because the insurance companies saw me as too high a risk. Body type was what they called my pre-existing condition. I was 5’4” and 210 lbs. Short and fat was all the reason they needed to say no to me.

I will likely be on the transplant list before the repeal of Obamacare would go into effect. As a part of the ACA, that one year that Bruce Hunter’s friend had has been increased to three. So let’s say I get a kidney in 3 years, and Obamacare is gone. I will have 3 years on Medicare. I will then be 57 and will lose Medicare and be on my own for insurance. I don’t trust Donald Trump and Paul Ryan to replace my healthcare.

To get involved in the fight for healthcare rights sign up at Our Revolution.



Scott Galindez attended Syracuse University, where he first became politically active. The writings of El Salvador's slain archbishop Oscar Romero and the on-campus South Africa divestment movement converted him from a Reagan supporter to an activist for Peace and Justice. Over the years he has been influenced by the likes of Philip Berrigan, William Thomas, Mitch Snyder, Don White, Lisa Fithian, and Paul Wellstone. Scott met Marc Ash while organizing counterinaugural events after George W. Bush's first stolen election. Scott moved to Des Moines in 2015 to cover the Iowa Caucus.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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FOCUS: John Lewis Is a True American Profile in Courage Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=15946"><span class="small">Bill Moyers, Moyers & Company</span></a>   
Monday, 16 January 2017 11:25

Moyers writes: "Time and again Lewis was on the front line of the fight for civil rights, spat upon, insulted and vilified, while far to the north, Donald Trump was using the fortune handed him by his father to launch a real estate empire without ever getting his fingernails dirty."

Bill Moyers and Rep. John Lewis at the Lincoln Memorial in 2013. (photo: Peter Nelson)
Bill Moyers and Rep. John Lewis at the Lincoln Memorial in 2013. (photo: Peter Nelson)


John Lewis Is a True American Profile in Courage

By Bill Moyers, Moyers & Company

16 January 17

 

Bill Moyers says Donald Trump isn't fit to be the carbuncle on Lewis' posterior.

igh from his gilded throne room in midtown Manhattan — like Zeus from Mt. Olympus — Donald Trump has been hurling tweeted spitballs at Rep. John Lewis of Georgia. He’s a man of “no action,” typed Trump with his tiny (manicured) fingers, of one of America’s true heroes of the modern age — a man so brutally assaulted by state troopers during the l965 march from Selma to Montgomery that he nearly died from a fractured skull.

Time and again Lewis was on the front line of the fight for civil rights, spat upon, insulted and vilified, while far to the north, Donald Trump was using the fortune handed him by his father to launch a real estate empire without ever getting his fingernails dirty.

Now, for daring to say that Trump cannot be “a legitimate president” because of Russia’s help in electing him, John Lewis is #1 on Trump’s hit list. Yes, Donald Trump — whose political career took off with a campaign of lies about Barack Obama’s birthplace with the intent of denying the president his legitimacy.

John Lewis needn’t be worried about what Donald Trump thinks of him; he’s faced down bullies and bigots before, tough guys with billy clubs and water hoses in the streets instead of a wannabe tinpot of no class glowering from his penthouse lair and showering loutish insults at his betters below; Trump isn’t fit to be a carbuncle on John Lewis’s posterior. Take a look at a real hero in this profile we produced of Lewis on the 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington. Arm-in-arm with Martin Luther King and other giants of the time, John Lewis walked right into the history books.


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5 Images That Refute Trump's Attack on Hero John Lewis Print
Monday, 16 January 2017 09:17

Cole writes: "John Lewis kept being beaten and arrested. He did not back down. He won, and Jim Crow in the law is gone and is itself illegal."

Civil rights activist and Representative John Lewis of Georgia. (photo: Charles Dharapak/AP)
Civil rights activist and Representative John Lewis of Georgia. (photo: Charles Dharapak/AP)


5 Images That Refute Trump's Attack on Hero John Lewis

By Juan Cole, Informed Comment

16 January 17

 

t began when Rep. John Lewis (D-GA) announced that he would not attend the inaugural of Donald J. Trump because he did not consider him a legitimate president.

Lewis, sometimes called “the conscience of Congress,” emerged to prominence as a very young man in 1963-66 as Chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)– of which he had been one of the founders. He organized the large numbers of students active in the Civil Rights movement. The 1963 March on Washington was to some extent his idea.


Since 1986, Lewis has represented the Fifth Congressional District in Georgia, comprising much of Atlanta, including its downtown, and western and southern suburbs.

Trump, of course, could not control himself and tweeted at Lewis,

People are complaining that Trump is attacking Lewis, a close associate of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., on the eve of the latter’s official day. But what difference would that make to Trump? He says racist things every day of the year.

I’ve spoken at Georgia State University in downtown Atlanta, and I think it is very nice. Of course all big cities have some problems, but Trump has mixed up the 5th District with some other inner city. His incorrect assumption that because Lewis is African-American, he represents a slum is incredibly offensive.


Actually, some 33% of Lewis’s district is white and 5% is Asian, so that non-African-Americans are nearly 4 in 10.

The median family income in Atlanta is $48,000 a year. It is lower than the recent US national average of $54,000 a year, but not that much lower. It is higher than plenty of great American cities, including St. Louis and Des Moines.

Atlanta’s income levels have steadily shot up during the past few decades. It has one of the biggest Black middle classes in the country. African-Americans are hurt by income equality, however. Trump is not going to make incomes more equal in the US.


Some 90% of residents of this district have a high school education or higher, and 40% have a bachelor’s degree or higher.

As for crime, Atlanta is not one of the 25 cities where the murder rate has increased slightly in the past few years. It should be noted that the murder rate in the US has fallen dramatically since the early 1990s, and the slight increase is some cities is relatively small. Statistics look big when you start from a low base.

This is what the chart for the murder rate since 1990 looks like in Atlanta:


Far from falling apart, Atlanta has seen housing starts increase by double digits in the past year.

The average sold home price in Atlanta has rebounded from the Great Recession into which Trump’s Wall Street buddies had plunged the country, and is very healthy, as demonstrated by this graph from 2011 through September 2016:


My fifth image riposting to Trump is not a graph. It is a photo of John Lewis on an infamous bridge in 1965.


John Lewis kept being beaten and arrested. He did not back down. He won, and Jim Crow in the law is gone and is itself illegal.

John Lewis declared Jim Crow illegitimate, and after a while it wasn’t there any more. John Lewis has declared the Trump presidency illegitimate.


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