Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Obama and MLK: The Clear Contrast
Bill Quigley
19 Jan 2011
🖨️ Print Article

by Marsha Coleman-Adebayo, Ph.D and Kevin Berends

Dr. Martin Luther King was a whistle-blower for justice. In contrast, Barack Obama has been more aggressive in punishing whistle-blowers than his predecessors. “Is it likely that the administration that recently announced psychologists, psychiatrists and sociologists will be deployed throughout the federal bureaucracy to ferret out potential whistleblowers would treat Dr. King any differently than it has treated Julian Assange?”

 

Obama and MLK: The Clear Contrast

by Marsha Coleman-Adebayo, Ph.D and Kevin Berends

“Dr. King was rooted in the deep traditions and followed the heroic trajectory of a whistleblower.”

Early on one could imagine the new president's embarrassment at receiving the Nobel Peace prize with so little to show in tangible accomplishment beyond his having spoken against the authorization of attacking Iraq and his later rhetorical flourishes while campaigning for the presidency. His pledge of withdrawing U.S. forces from Iraq was thus consistent with his early position and could be seen as reason to consider Barack Obama a peace candidate. His other rhetorical accomplishment—advocating fighting the good fight in Afghanistan and effectively countering the appearance of being soft on terror—was canonized in his acceptance speech for the Nobel. In it, the argument for a just war, a reasoned approach to armed conflict served as a euphemism for the slaughter of innocents. Even granting that this unpalatable certainty may not have been known at the time of Mr. Obama's acceptance speech there is no hiding now from the grim tallies in both Iraq and Afghanistan after nearly a decade of the good war. During WWI 75% of the casualties were military personnel but the trend toward civilian casualties has steadily increased so that now the numbers are inverse. The vast majority of casualties are civilians with women and children bearing the brunt of modern warfare.

As the nation honors another Nobel Peace laureate—Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and celebrates his birthday—it would be prudent and wise for us to compare and contrast the fruits these two trees will be known by.

“Obama’s argument for a just war served as a euphemism for the slaughter of innocents.

To start we would do well to remember that Dr. King had a dream and a nightmare. We are all familiar with the dream, its aspirations, the lofty biblical phrasings. But the nightmare, as King expressed it in his 'Beyond Vietnam” speech, bears the signature earmarks all whistleblowers come to know. Isolation, discrimination and retaliation were tactics well known to Dr. King, having spend many nights alone in jail, having faced the onslaught of dogs and clubs and having received the harshest in retaliation on a fateful balcony in Memphis.

Beyond his spiritual and moral guidance Dr. King was rooted in the deep traditions and followed the heroic trajectory of a whistleblower, sounding his clarion not from under a bucket but from the rooftops. He linked the killing of brown people abroad in Vietnam to the persecution of black people at home. Still he found his own beloved community reluctant to follow his call for peace born of justice.

Without laying blame as to their origins let's denote some of Mr. Obama's fruits by inference of what Dr. King's response likely would have been to them. What do we think Martin Luther King would have thought of drone strikes killing innocents? What may we reasonably assume his response to extra-judicial, executive branch ordered executions of American citizens abroad? Is it likely that Dr. King would have looked the other way over verified instances of U.S. government-sanctioned torture?

“What do we think Martin Luther King would have thought of drone strikes killing innocents?”

Conversely, what could we expect of the Obama administration in reaction to a challenge to its policies from a hypothetical Dr. Martin Luther King? Is it likely that the administration that recently announced psychologists, psychiatrists and sociologists will be deployed throughout the federal bureaucracy to ferret out potential whistleblowers would treat Dr. King any differently than it has treated Julian Assange? Is it even plausible that the administration that has taken a conscientious whistleblower who allegedly leaked classified evidence of American atrocities in Iraq and subjected him to likely personality-destroying solitary confinement for seven months would have treated a Southern Christian Leadership Conference founder any less tyrannically? Can any of those memorializing Dr. King today seriously believe that Martin would have said of the blatant criminality of the preceding government that it was time to move forward without bringing the guilty to justice? Or what would Dr. King say about a government that delays justice for decades for Black farmers and then refuses to fire a single discriminator under the pretext that it is time to move on. And finally what would King say about a president that received 99.9% of the black vote but has now invited into his inner chambers two former heads of agencies that were notorious for their mistreatment treatment of African-Americans, the EPA under Carol Browner and the Department of Commerce under William Daley. In fact, before Daley, a J. P. Morgan executive could accept this new appointment he had the unenviable task of shedding $7.6 million worth of stock in the bank, according to a regulatory filing.

“This President prefers to mimic the style of the great peacemaker while ignoring the demands of King's principles.”

Rather it is far more likely that an 82 year old Martin Luther King would have approached the Nobel committee with much sadness and little fanfare when he returned his Peace Prize because he could no longer in good conscience subscribe to the broadening definitions of peace and peacemakers that the current President's acceptance speech endorsed. This President prefers instead to mimic the style of the great peacemaker while ignoring the demands of King's principles. In the process of remembering our peacemakers, particularly today, the President needs to make a choice between style and substance.

Marsha Coleman-Adebayo, Ph.D, is Chairwoman of the No FEAR Coalition and author of the up-coming book, No FEAR: A Whistleblowers Story of Corruption, Betrayal and Retaliation at the EPA. Kevin Berends is Director of Communication, No FEAR Institute, co-founder of Lake Affect Magazine and producer of the independent television program streetlevel.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti
    Remembering Mario Joseph, BAI Managing Attorney
    09 Apr 2025
    The world has lost a champion of justice with the passing of Mario Joseph, a Haitian human rights lawyer who spent nearly three decades fighting for victims of state violence, cholera negligence, and…
  • Palestine Chronicle Staff
    Sole Survivor of ‘Paramedics Massacre’ in Rafah Exposes Israeli War Crime
    09 Apr 2025
    Monther Abed, the sole survivor of the Israeli attack on paramedics in Rafah, reveals the details of the crime in which 15 humanitarian workers were killed.
  • Alan MacLeod
    Betar: the Far-Right Hate Group Helping Trump Deport Israel’s Critics
    09 Apr 2025
    Betar U.S., a far-right Zionist organization with ties to violent extremism, is quietly shaping Trump administration policy, compiling lists of pro-Palestine activists for deportation while openly…
  • Jehad Abusalim
    "It Is Neither Death, Nor Suicide"
    09 Apr 2025
    For 76 years, Gaza has been has been the defiant heart of Palestinian resistance. Today, as Israel’s genocidal war lays bare the brutal dead end of Zionism, Gaza’s struggle transcends geography,…
  • Hands Off protest
    ​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist , Dr.Wilmer J. Leon, III
    Ajamu Baraka on What the Hands Off March Left Out
    09 Apr 2025
    Tens of thousands filled the streets this weekend—marching, chanting, fists raised in defiance. It looked like a movement powerful enough to shake the earth. But beneath the banners and speeches,…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us