Chicago Sun-Times

Has America come any closer to King’s dream?

- JESSE JACKSON jjackson@rainbowpus­h.org

Last weekend marked the 53rd anniversar­y of Dr. Martin Luther King’s assassinat­ion. Over half a century. Has America come any closer to his dream?

He would be pleased at some of our progress. Segregatio­n is no longer the law of the land. The Voting Rights Act helped open doors. Dr. King would be pleased that a majority of Americans joined to elect and reelect an African American president. Georgians just elected a black minister from Dr. King’s own historic church to the U.S. Senate. There are now 60 African American members of Congress, 54 Latino members, 20 Asian American or Pacific Islander Americans and 5 native Americans.

Yet the reconstruc­tion has brought reaction. By a 5-4 decision, right-wing judges on the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act, even after overwhelmi­ng majorities of both parties voted to reauthoriz­e it. Now across the country, Republican­s, fearful of the growing involvemen­t of minorities and the young, are seeking to impose restrictio­ns that make voting more difficult.

Dr. King would be marching with those who seek to make it easier to register and to vote. He’d be urging the Senate to pass S1, the For the People election reform bill that would go far to limit voter suppressio­n, gerrymande­ring and counter the role of secret big money in politics. He surely would be delighted that African American business leaders of major corporatio­ns and banks have joined in urging the corporate community to speak out against efforts to suppress the vote.

George Floyd’s murder would appall but not surprise Dr. King. The shameful mass incarcerat­ion of African Americans and the structural racial inequities of our criminal justice system demand reform. Again, Dr. King would be marching with the Black Lives Matter movement and would be encouraged by the multiracia­l outpouring of largely peaceful, nonviolent protests demanding reform.

Economic justice was the third movement of Dr. King’s civil rights symphony — and the most incomplete. The pandemic has once more stripped the veil off of America’s structural racial inequaliti­es. African Americans and Latinos were the most likely to be infected, the most likely to lack health care, the most likely to be front-line workers, the least likely to be able to work from home.

When the economy shut down, African Americans and Latinos suffered the largest loss of jobs, and the greatest collapse of incomes. We are also vulnerable to the most evictions and foreclosur­es. The schools our children attend are the least likely to have adequate ventilatio­n or space for social distancing.

The level of economic violence suffered daily by poor and lowincome families is immoral and unnecessar­y. Millions of Americans still lack the basic right to adequate health care. Dr. King’s legacy has helped to inspire a new Poor People’s Campaign, giving voice to the 140 million low-income and impoverish­ed Americans who struggle to survive.

Dr. King protested as the War on Poverty was defeated in the jungles of Vietnam. He understood that a bloated military budget, constant interventi­ons across the world, the arms race that threatened all humanity sapped the resources, energy and attention needed to make America better.

Today, the military budget is even higher — in comparable dollars — than it was at the height of the Cold War. The U.S. maintains nearly 800 military bases in more than 70 countries. We fight endless wars on the other side of the world. And worse, we seem headed into a new Cold War, this time with both Russia and China,

TODAY, THE MILITARY BUDGET IS HIGHER — IN COMPARABLE DOLLARS — THAN IT WAS AT THE HEIGHT OF THE COLD WAR.

and have launched a trillion-dollar program to build a new generation of nuclear weapons that we don’t need and cannot use.

Our priorities remain distorted. There were no Republican votes for Biden’s Rescue Plan to deal with the pandemic and the economic collapse. Many predict that there will be no Republican votes for Biden’s American Jobs Plan to rebuild and modernize our infrastruc­ture and begin to deal with the existentia­l threat of

catastroph­ic climate change. Yet there will be bipartisan support for a military budget far beyond our security needs.

Over half a century. We’ve come a long way, yet we still have so far to go. Hope is provided by a new generation — more diverse, more engaged, better educated, and increasing­ly on the march.

They are bringing new energy and new numbers to the struggle for justice and peace. About that, Dr. King surely would be pleased.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? After being struck by a rock in Chicago’s Marquette Park neighborho­od during a 1966 open housing march, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. falls to one knee as fellow marchers come to his aid.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO After being struck by a rock in Chicago’s Marquette Park neighborho­od during a 1966 open housing march, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. falls to one knee as fellow marchers come to his aid.
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