Beyond the Dream: Words of Martin Luther King, Jr.

BREAKING NEWS: Trump Takes Victory Lap Tom Emmer Drops Out Of Speaker Race, Praises Byron Donalds
https://youtu.be/jaAjU_X71Uk
https://www.harrietspeaks.com/blog/2017/4/4/beyond-the-dream-words-of-martin-luther-king-jr
Byron Donalds reps a new wave of Black Republicans
One of two Black Republicans in the House, freshman Rep. Byron Donalds is making a name for himself within the GOP. Representing Florida’s 19th Congressional District, which overwhelmingly voted for Donald Trump, Donalds embodies the values of the modern GOP-er: fiscally conservative, anti-abortion and staunch defender of the right to carry a gun.
He also serves as a lieutenant in today’s culture wars, railing against critical race theory, rebutting the findings of the Jan. 6 committee and standing behind the biggest figure in the Republican Party: Donald Trump. Donalds represents the new wave of Black Republicanism that has emerged with the 45th president. The same year Donalds won his election ― and Trump lost his ― the former president made inroads with Black men, winning 19 percent of their vote, up from 13 percent in 2016. This followed a quiet campaign to woo constituents within the community, pitching messages to ignore the former president’s divisive racial rhetoric and focus on his policies: passage of criminal justice reform, the creation of opportunity zones in underserved or low-income communities and his support for HBCUs. This “Black and Red” wave doesn’t seem to be dissolving anytime soon. A record-breaking number of Black Republicans are running in the 2022 congressional primaries, with many waving the MAGA flag to appeal to voters and court Trump’s endorsement.
https://www.politico.com/newsletters/the-recast/2022/07/15/byron-donalds-new-wave-black-republicans-00046110
The relationship between Black Americans and the Republican Party has drawn considerable attention in recent years. Discussions have ranged from why Black men voted for Donald Trump at higher rates than Black women in the 2020 presidential election to more recent debates about Black pop culture and the appeal of GOP-aligned candidates in both national and local politics.
The partisan balance among Black adults in the United States is little changed over the last several decades, but it shifted substantially in the mid-20th century. In the 1930s, Black adults were just as likely to support the Republican Party as the Democratic Party. The share of Black adults who affiliated with the GOP started to decline in the 1940s, particularly after President Harry S. Truman, a Democrat, issued an executive order to desegregate the U.S. military in 1948. This shift was solidified after the passage of the Civil Rights Act under Democratic President Lyndon Johnson in 1964.
https://www.amherst.edu/library/archives/holdings/mlk/transcript
Today, only about one-in-ten Black adults identify with or lean toward the Republican Party. And in a Pew Research Center survey in October, only 4% of Black registered voters said they would vote for the Republican candidate for the U.S. House seat in their district, while 69% said they would back the Democratic candidate.
When it comes to their views on race, Black Republicans differ from Black Democrats in one key way: They tend to support individualistic approaches to addressing racial inequality, while Black Democrats tend to support institutional approaches. For example, Black Republicans and those who lean to the GOP are more likely than Black Democrats and Democratic leaners (59% vs. 41%) to say that the bigger problem for Black people is racist acts committed by individual people, as opposed to racism in our laws. And they are less likely than Black Democrats to support complete institutional overhauls to the prison system (35% vs. 57%), policing (29% vs. 52%) and the judicial process (35% vs. 50%) to ensure fair treatment of Black people.
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2022/11/07/10-facts-about-black-republicans/
"The Negro and the American Dream," Excerpt from Address at the Annual Freedom Mass Meeting of the North Carolina State Conference of Branches of the NAACP
This afternoon I would like to speak from the subject, “The Negro and the American Dream.” In a real sense America is essentially a dream--a dream yet unfilfilled. It is the dream of a land where men of all races, colors and creeds will live together as brothers. The substance of the dream is expressed in these sublime words: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” This is the dream. It is a profound, eloquent and unequivocal expression of the dignity and worth of all human personality.
But ever since the founding fathers of our nation dreamed this dream, America has manifested a schizophrenic personality. She has been torn between {two} selves--a self in which she has proudly professed democracy and a self in which she has sadly practiced the antithesis of democracy. Slavery and segregation have been strange paradoxes in a nation founded on the principle that all men are created equal.
Now more than ever before America is challenged to bring her noble dream into reality. The shape of the world today does not permit America the luxury of exploiting the Negro and other minority groups. The price that America must pay for the continued opression of the Negro is the price of its own destruction. My recent travel in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and South America have convinced me that America is at its lowest ebb in international prestige; and most of this loss of prestige is due to our failure to grapple with the problem of racial injustice. We must face the painful fact that we are losing out in the struggle to win the minds of the uncommitted peoples of the world. Just this week the most eloquent spokesman of the Communist bloc, Nikita Khruschev, suggested in his speech to the U.N., among other things, that the headquarters of this great organization be moved from the United States. The American press generally was very careful to conceal one of the reasons Mr. Khruschev gave for suggesting this move. His direct words were: “Facts are known . . . of representatives of young African and Asian states being subjected to racial discrimination in the United States.”3 While we are used to Mr. Khruschev’s inteperate and sometimes irresponsible words, we cannot dismiss these as totally false. The hour is late: the clock of destiny is ticking out. We must act now! It is a trite yet urgently true observation that if America is to remain a firstclass nation it cannot have second-class citizens.
But after saying this I would like to make it clear that the primary reason for bringing an end to racial discrimination in America must not be the Communist challange. Nor must it be merely to appeal to Asian and African peoples. The primary reason for uprooting racial discrimination from our society is that it is morally wrong. It is a cancerous disease that prevents us from realizing the sublime principles of our Judeo-Christian tradition. It relegates persons to the status of things.
Therefore, those persons who are working courageously to break down the barriers of segregation and discrimination are the real saviors of democracy.
So many forces in our nation have served to scar the dream of our democracy. The Klu Klux Klan, the White Citizens Council and other extremists groups have scarred the dream by their fanatical acts and bitter words. But our federal government has also scarred the dream through its apathy and hypocricy, its betrayal of the cause of justice. And even many white people of good-will have scarred the dream through silence and fear. In the midst of this conspiracy of silence and apathy the Negro must act. It may well be that the Negro is God’s instrument to save the soul of America.
***
What can the Negro do to contimue to remind America of the necessity of realizing its dream?:
1. We must continue courageously to challenge the system of segregation. We must not rest until segregation is removed from every area of our nation’s life. Segregation, whether at a lunch counter, in a public park. In a school room, or in the Christian church, is a cancer in the body politic which must be removed before our moral and democratic health can be realized.
We must also make it palpably clear that we can never settle for token integration. If token integration is a good faith start, it may have some merit: but too often it is nothing but a bad faith evasive scheme. Ultimately, token integration is no more than token democracy.
2. We must make full and constructive use of the freedom we already possess.
We must not use our oppression as an excuse for mediocrity. History has proven that inner determination can often break through the outer shackles of circumstance.
3. We must make a determined effort to gain the ballot. One of the most significant steps that the Negro can take at this hour is that short walk to the voting booth. I propose that the creative movement that has electrified our nation as a result of the courageous student sit-ins, wade-ins, and kneel-ins will now add the deminsion of stand-ins at places of voter registration. Even in counties of the deep South where resistance is great, Negroes must organize themselves by the hundreds and thousands to stand nonviolently and peacefully for hours in the corridors and on the sidewalks of places of registration.4 Such a movement may be the only thing that will dramatize the continued injustices the Negroes face in the area of voter registration, and the only thing that will arouse the conscience of our nation on this pressing issue.
External resistance is not the only present barrier to Negro voting. Apathy among Negroes themselves is also a factor. Even where the polls are open to all Negroes have shown themselves too slow to exercise their voting privileges.
4. We must be willing to suffer and sacrifice to achieve our freedom. Our freedom will never be handed out on a silver platter. Freedom is not free. It is always purchased with the high price of sacrifice and suffering.
5. We must be sure that our struggle is conducted on the highest level of dignity and discipline. Our method must be nonviolent to the core. We must not flirt with retaliatory violence or drink the poisonous wine of hate. Our aim must not be to defeat the white man or pay him back for past injustices heaped upon us.
I feel that this way of nonviolence is vital because it is the only way to reestablish the broken community. It is a powerful way to take direct action against injustice without waiting for other agencies to act.
This approach to the problem of oppression is not without successful precedent. We have the magnificent example of Gandhi who challenged the might of the British Empire and won independence for his people by using only the weapons of truth, noninjury, courage and soul force. Today we have the example of thousands of Negro students in the South who have courageously challenged the principalities of segregation. These young students have taken the deep groans and the passionate yearnings of the Negro people and filtered them in their own souls and fashioned them in a creative protest which is an epic known all over the nation. For the last few months they have moved in a uniquely meaningful orbit imparting light and heat to distant satellites. Through their nonviolent direct action they have been able to open hundreds of formerly segregated lunch counters in almost eighty cities. It is no overstatement to characterize these events as historic. Never before in the United States has so large a body of students spread a struggle over so great an area in pursuit of a goal of human dignity and freedom. I am convinced that future historians will have to record this student movement as one of the greatest epics of our heritage.
1. In a 22 August telegram, King had accepted North Carolina NAACP president Kelly Alexander’s invitation to address the organization.
2. Don Seaver, “King Tells Negroes to Start Voter Registration Protests,” Charlotte Observer, 26 September 1960.
3. Khrushchev addressed the United Nations General Assembly on 23 September. A complete transcript of his speech appeared in the New York Times the following day.
4. An article in the Charlotte Observer reported that King encouraged mass “stand-ins” at voter registration places throughout the South (Seaver, “King Tells Negroes to Start Voter Registration Protests,” Charlotte Observer 26 September 1960).
Source: CSKC, INP, Coretta Scott King Collection, In Private Hands, Sermon file, folder 23, Negro and the American Dream
https://kinginstitute.stanford.edu/king-papers/documents/negro-and-american-dream-excerpt-address-annual-freedom-mass-meeting-north

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