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Rights and Liberties

The Freedom We Seek

By Eliseo Medina and Gerry Hudson, AlterNet. Posted January 21, 2008.


Forty years later, Dr. King's dream of a more just society is a long way from being realized.
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But we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt ... that there are insufficient funds in the great vaults of opportunity of this nation ... And so let freedom ring ... from every hill and molehill of Mississippi. From every mountainside, let freedom ring.

--Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Aug. 28, 1963


The Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday is a time for those of us within the activist movements he energized to pause to reflect on King's vision of universal freedom and opportunity for all.

His dream is no less than the American dream, a dream that lives on and impels us to constantly ask ourselves the question: Does freedom ring in America today?

The answer, it seems, depends on whom you ask.

Ask Karl Rove or another Bush administration architect, or any of an increasing number of federal judges, and if you're lucky, they may take you aside and show you their blueprint for freedom -- for how to free civic and corporate America from their obligations to our nations' senior citizens, children, the poor and the sick.

Ask Henry Kravis or any one of the new private equity barons that make their fortunes buying up public companies, taking them private and making huge profits at the expense of workers and all American taxpayers. They could tell you of the freedom they have won from the tax obligations that apply to nurses, firefighters and many other American workers; from much of the S.E.C. oversight endured by their public corporate peers; and from the community accountability that would come with a business model more transparent than theirs.

Kravis and Rove and their kin embody the freedom of narrow self-interest and unfettered accumulation. But the list of those heralding this freedom is getting shorter.

Ask Paula Hall if freedom is ringing for her these days, and you'll hear what it's like to live enslaved by $250,000 of medical debt stemming from an on-the-job injury that left her husband unable to work or care for himself.

Ask the many former co-workers of Elirose Pierre-Louis who organized a union with their fellow janitors but were fired just as they thought they'd finally won real change. They'll tell you how Elirose died from a treatable illness and a lack of options.

Ask Wisly Jonatas if he heard freedom ringing when, after working his late-night shift, he walked to an empty seat for the ferry ride home ... and it cost him his job.

Ask Jim Longley if it's freedom he sees when he's sent in to shut off the power of families who work hard but have fallen behind on their soaring energy bills.


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Eliseo Medina has been international executive vice president of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) since 1996. He currently is leading SEIU’s efforts to help workers in 17 states in the Southern and Southwestern United States unite in SEIU. Gerry Hudson is international executive vice president of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU).

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The arc bends toward justice.
Posted by: Sojourner on Jan 21, 2008 12:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whatever happened to the old Vermont(?) motto that we either hang together or we will all be hanged separately?

Justice, like freedom, demands constant work. Dr. King put those back on the American front page. The difficulty of doing that is illustrated by how the powerful forces of reaction never stop getting in the way.

We are saddled with a SCOTUS determined to protect the forces of reaction in the near term. King had a progressive SCOTUS to watch his back, but we today need to innovate the fight for freedom and justice in such a way as to work around it.

So Dr. King's dream has never been harder to realize than today. Moving from tokenism to advances in the general welfare is a worthy struggle, however. Let's get to it.

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It Starts With Community And Ends In Justice
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jan 21, 2008 1:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The 'Free Market' Capitalists (read Crony Capitalists) worldview is one of selfish exploitation, economic darwinism and short-sighted looting of the commons. It is antithetical to social justice, sustainability, community or advancement of the human condition. Until we turn our backs as a nation and a world on such greed, we will never see the world of Martin Luther King's dream.

Community starts with respect and concern for others, a we mentality instead of a me mentality, a commitment to stewardship of the commons and knowledge that division is the first task an enemy uses to defeat an opponent- strength comes from community and is the author of peace and justice.

The dream of Martin Luther King, Jr is only possible when we stop dividing ourselves by the color of our skin, our ethnicity, our socioeconomic level, our faith system and other such nonsense. We should celebrate diversity and be tolerant of our differences and vigilant of those who would trample the basic human rights of anyone. When one person's rights are disrespected we are all diminished and when a downtrodden person is lifted up and empowered we are all increased.

It's real simple, people. One path is marked by greed, repression and intolerance- the other by generosity, respect and freedom. Guess which path our nation and world have been on lately...

Peace

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White Supremacy will not bend toward justice
Posted by: nfamous on Jan 21, 2008 8:00 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author has a fundamental misunderstanding of the root of the problem. White people will never collectively or individually share power with blacks. It is against their nature. White people view existence as a competition. They cannot operate outside of this rankism paradigm. It is how whites evolved over centuries.

History have proven that all the laws in the world cannot change the hearts of white people. Even whites that are hurt by the policies of the ruling class, which are all white, still cling to their blind race loyalty. Why? It's groupthink. Whites believe they have to stick together because their numbers are so low globally. Only one in ten people on this planet is white.

Whites, particularly the men, have an instilled fear of being genetically annihilated by darker skinned men. This is why black people and Africans bear ther brunt of their abuse. Only a white man and white woman can produce a white child and white numbers are falling precipitously worldwide from 600 million.

It makes no sense for one in ten to rule the other nine. That is apartheid, exactly what we witnessed in South Africa. White people have mental deficiencies when it comes to embracing others humanely. Evolutionists have demonstrated that whites evolved in glacial climates. These harsh environments made whites view nature as a threat to their existence while others were living in harmony with it. It also prevent white men and women from bonding properly. It is this relic of evolution that haunts them to this day.

Only whites can resolve their psychological issues. Today they do not even believe they have a problem. Capitalism itself is a problem. It is a system of dog-eat-dog competition that could only have been invented by whites. It is kill or be killed. It is survival of the fittest and death to all others. Continuing down this path will lead to the destruction of humanity and all life on this planet prematurely. Merely separating from whites will not solve the problem of pollution and overconsumption. Somehow, someway, whites must be reeled in or it will spell the demise of each and every one of us.

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Time to do what is right
Posted by: audiodef on Jan 21, 2008 8:58 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Does freedom ring when a deaf man, owing some money to the government, who wants nothing more than to simply pay it off and move on, is discriminated against by employers, can't find work, AND has his social security disability income garnished by the government? Does freedom ring when the federal government starts garnishing the welfare of the disabled and poor?

It's time to do what is right. Not what is legal - but right, for the law and right are often - and usually - at odds.

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Martin Luther King was well ahead of George Lakoff when he knew that it was the idea of freedom that
Posted by: maxpayne on Jan 21, 2008 9:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
was at stake even in the 1960s. Of course, it's even more so at stake today and it's already being FUDGED.

To lose freedom is awful; to lose the idea of freedom would be worse.

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No time for Dreaming
Posted by: Lesha on Jan 21, 2008 11:15 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No Idea or dream of uniting all people of color cannot be realized unless there is a example that people can learn from. The community that Dr king represented (the black community) was and still is dis-uniified and could not have been that example. The ideas of Dr King and the Civil Rights movement did plenty to help jumpstart the belief of uniting all people of color but failed to clean up or unite their own people in reality.

The only dream black people should focus on is uniting with themselves instead trying to fit in with other people who may not share this dream or idea.

The vast majority of the different cultures that make up this countries diverse population do not (in general) believe in this dream the same way Dr King did. Most people (White, Asian, Latino, Indian and Middle Eastern) do not practice integration in the same sense that blacks do. The following is due to the fact that blacks do not care for self but for others and will neglect their own progress in the name of some fantasy of holding hands with white people.

The achievements of the Civil Rights movement led by Dr King helped blacks gain access to the economy but failed to use it as a tool to in power themselves the way other people have done.

Sooner or later we will all have to accept that it isn't meant for all people to live together up under each other. The history of people will not bare evidence that the dream of Dr King is remotely possible not even under religion. If separation will bring peace to the world, then maybe we should explore it.

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» RE: No time for Dreaming Posted by: VZEQICVA
Where's *MY* Ph.D?
Posted by: Dietrich on Jan 21, 2008 1:22 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What about me? I have to suffer the injustice of coming up with my own material to finish my doctorate program. Why can't I just plagiarize it like MLK?

http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/outrage/mlking.asp

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Founding father's view of freedom...
Posted by: onevoter on Jan 21, 2008 9:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Man will never be free until the last king is strangled with the entrails of the last priest."

--Thomas Jefferson

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