Posted on January 6, 2009

MLK, Jr. Preached Non-Violence and Provoked Violence!

"Dr. King…spoke at the headquarters of the West Side Organization, where a sign on the wall said: ‘Burn, baby, burn, boycott, baby, boycott.’ Roving bands of youths and some adults …broke windows, looted stores, and stoned police cars and small police vans.”

Don Boys, Ph.D.

In 1959, King resigned from the pastorate of Dexter Avenue Baptist and moved to Atlanta to direct the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. In the following year, King became co-pastor with his father of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta.

On June 23, 1963, King led 125,000 people on a Freedom Walk in Detroit, and the March on Washington held August 28 was the largest civil rights demonstration in history with almost 250,000 people in attendance. It was during that march that King made his famous I Have a Dream speech at the Lincoln Memorial. None of the media are willing to reveal that he “borrowed” that theme and words from another black preacher who delivered it at the 1952 Republican Convention. Wonder why?

On a Los Angeles television show, July 21, 1963, four Blacks, including a King representative made their positions clear as to what they wanted from “whitey.” The show was The American Experience and aired on KTTV in Los Angeles and in many other cities. The black participants were Wyatt Walker (representing King), Allen Morrison who was editor of Ebony magazine; Malcolm X, minister of the Nation of Islam; and James Farmer, top honcho of the Congress of Racial Equality.

Malcolm X almost blew all the television tubes at the station when he demanded the white power-structure give Blacks a separate nation far from all whites. In that new nation would be the homes, businesses, utilities, etc., that any nation would require. The other Blacks only demanded complete integration and “compensatory preference” by force if necessary. The startled television audience was told that “mere equality” was not enough but “massive preferential treatment” was required. Black workers were to be paid more than white workers for doing the same job, and Whites were to be fired and Blacks, even less qualified Blacks, would replace them even if employers had to pay for their transportation to the jobs. There were not-so-subtle suggestions that revolution in America would result if these demands were not met.

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MLK, Jr. Preached Non-Violence and Provoked Violence!
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2 Comments on “MLK, Jr. Preached Non-Violence and Provoked Violence!”

  • Martin Luther King, was, from his name down to his last sordid night before he got shot a plagiarist and a con-man. He was useful to the un-mentionables (don’t say I used the ‘J’ word) to deconstruct traditional America and they even got him a US day in his honour! And a day for any of (or all of) the Founding Fathers? Never heard of them.

    Now it’s the Obama messiah ‘community organiser’ who they’ve put up on a pedestal from us to worship while, as usual his handlers do the thinking.

    Posted by straightalk on January 7, 2009 at 3:53 am
  • As you might know, MLK Jr. was a Republican and so was his family for decades. But, just as Jesse Jackson once opposed abortion strongly and viewed it correctly as an adjunct to racism, Jackson, too, caved to the money and power Democrats offered once the 1965 Civil Rights Act passed and Demo-Marxists sought to avenge this imposition by forcing greatly exaggerated racial quotas and destructive policies on the U.S. And it has worked well. I’m afraid it will produce another civil war and I’ve been saying for years that Democrats have already seceded from the Union again.

    Posted by Marshall Goodman on January 7, 2009 at 11:38 am

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