Staying Awake: What Martin Said

Delivered at the National Cathedral, Washington, DC on 31 March 1968 © The Estate of Martin Luther King, Jr.
   Remaining Awake Through A Great Revolution

Newsweek tells me that Hillary Clinton heard this speech in Chicago before it was delivered in Washington.  It’s possible that this part was added later, I don’t know.

One day a newsman came to me and said, “Dr. King, don’t you think you’re going to have to stop, now, opposing the war and move more in line with the administration’s policy? As I understand it, it has hurt the budget of your organization, and people who once respected you have lost respect for you. Don’t you feel that you’ve really got to change your position?” I looked at him and I had to say, “Sir, I’m sorry you don’t know me. I’m not a consensus leader. I do not determine what is right and wrong by looking at the budget of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. I’ve not taken a sort of Gallup Poll of the majority opinion.” Ultimately a genuine leader is not a searcher for consensus, but a molder of consensus.

Of course it is a wonderful and prophetic speech.  It’s difficult to choose a passage that will inspire you to go and read it.  Everyone should go and read what Martin said today because we need this man’s inspiration now more than ever.

And I submit that nothing will be done until people of goodwill put their bodies and their souls in motion. And it will be the kind of soul force brought into being as a result of this confrontation that I believe will make the difference.

Working Together VIII: Cesar Chavez – Working Class Hero

 September 11 is a day of spectacular meaning for all of us.  It reminds us of the fragility of life and of the creations of man.  We never know when an ordinary day of just going off to work will inspire us to heroic acts.  Most of us reach the peak of our heroism by showing up to the job we choose.  Extraordinary circumstances can provoke a person into heroic behavior.  Sometimes the quite ordinary circumstances of birth will create a hero.

Senator Robert F. Kennedy called Cesar Chavez “one of the heroic figures of our time.”  Chavez was a second-generation American born on his family farm in Arizona March 31, 1927.  From his early childhood he experienced the cruelties of racism and class discrimination in America.  Speaking only Spanish at home, he was punished for using his language at school.  He said he felt like a monkey in a cage in integrated schools.

  There are several different versions of his childhood circumstances: 1. When Cesar was ten years old he saw his father, Librado, swindled out of their family home by unscrupulous businessmen.  His father had an agreement to clear 80 acres of land in exchange for 40 acres along with their little adobe house.  The owner broke their agreement and sold to another man.  A lawyer advised Librado to borrow money to purchase the land.  When he was unable to make the payments the lawyer then purchased the land and resold it to the original owner.   2. Librado worked on the family farm and  also in a small store and the family of six children lived above the store.  or  3. He lost the farm because of the Great Depression when a long drought set in.

At this point the family became migrant farm workers.  Cesar attended 37 different schools while they followed the crops from Arizona to California.  His father was injured and unable to work in the fields, so Cesar and his older brother left school to work and support their family after Cesar finished the eighth grade.

Note:  My poor computer skills prevent me from posting here the excellent photographs of this time provided here courtesy of the California Museum. Please go see them.  Here is a quote from their exhibit:

“I do not want to see the condition arise again when white men who are reared and educated in our schools have got to bend their backs and skin their fingers to pull those little beets…. You can let us have the only class of labor that will do the work, or close the beet factories, because our people will not do it, and I say frankly I do not want them to do it.”
– Sugar beet growers’ spokesman (1920s)

The men in this photograph are bent double at the waist while harvesting crops by hand. These Mexican or Mexican American men were photographed in 1935 performing the kind of back-breaking “stoop labor” that California farmers claimed white men could not (and even should not) be hired to do. California farmers claimed that Asian and Mexican workers were physically suited for hard farm labor because they were used to stooping, crouching, and bending, while white people were accustomed to standing up straight. White public opinion quickly embraced the racist idea that white people would be lowered and degraded by such work.

Woody Guthrie tried to tell us how it felt:

 I ain’t got no home,
I’m just a-roamin’ ’round,
Just a wandrin’ worker,
I go from town to town.
And the police make it hard wherever I may go
And I ain’t got no home in this world anymore.

My brothers and my sisters are stranded on this road,
A hot and dusty road that a million feet have trod;
Rich man took my home and drove me from my door
And I ain’t got no home in this world anymore.

Was a-farmin’ on the shares, and always I was poor;
My crops I lay into the banker’s store.
My wife took down and died upon the cabin floor,
And I ain’t got no home in this world anymore.

Now as I look around, it’s mighty plain to see
This world is such a great and a funny place to be;
Oh, the gamblin’ man is rich an’ the workin’ man is poor,
And I ain’t got no home in this world anymore.

Cesar escaped this life at age 17 when he joined the US Navy and served in the Pacific from 1944 to 1946.  When he returned home he was disgusted to see that nothing had changed for the migrant workers, and vowed to dedicate his life to their service.
Soon he married Helen Fabela and took her on a honeymoon trip visiting all the California Missions.  They settled in the San Joaquin Valley to start a family which would grow to include eight children.  At this time Cesar began his study of Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., and non-violent resistance.  He became an organizer for the Community Service Organization, beginning with registering voters.

Unable to convince the CSO leaders of the need for a union for farm workers, he used his life savings to start the National Farm Workers Association, which became the United Farm Workers union..  Cesar traveled California and Arizona meeting with farm workers to convince them that their power lay in a shared unity of purpose.

 Five years of boycotts and strikes in the 1960’s led to contracts and agreements between farm owners and workers.  In 1969 he led a march of grape pickers through the California central valley to the capital in Sacramento which grew larger with every town it passed through. Grapes became the real forbidden fruit for every American.  Cesar’s union brought fair wages, medical coverage, pension benefits, dignity and respect to the workers.  He attracted the attention of Congress and inspired investigations into civil rights violations against his people.  He said  “The love for justice that is in us is not only the best part of our being, it is also the most true to our nature.”

Despite opposition within the union, Cesar continued to promote strikes and boycotts, even undertook hunger strikes himself to focus national attention on the bad treatment of agricultural workers.  A comfortable and complacent American middle-class responded to his efforts.  He taught us all that slavery had not vanished from our country.  

Because of Cesar’s efforts in  1975 California’s legislature passed the groundbreaking  Agricultural Labor Relations Act to protect the rights of farm workers.

Befriended and admired by the rich and famous, Cesar shunned the life of celebrity and materialism that so many find tempting.  He saw media attention as a tool to be used in service to people who suffered.  He never earned more than $6,000 a year, never owned a house, continued to live simply, learning and working for the benefit of mankind.  At age 61, five years before his death in 1993, he endured a 36-day “fast for life” to highlight the harmful impact of pesticides on farm workers and their children.

Cesar Chavez brought Steinbeck’s Tom Joad to life:  “…And when the people are eatin’ the stuff they raise and livin’ in the houses they build. I’ll be there too.”  Cesar lived a humble life of devotion and sacrifice – he walked the walk.  There is no more noble heroism than his.

Cesar’s life came full circle when he was buried close to his birthplace in Arizona.  50,000 people attended his funeral services in California.   His family started the Cesar Chavez Foundation to educate people about his life and work.  Please visit their website.

  We continue to honor his memory when we tell each other “Si se puede.”  Yes, it can be done.  We can do what we must with the inspiration of Cesar and other such leaders.

100,000 US Horses Slaughtered

100,000 is the number of horses that foreign-owned slaughterhouses kill here yearly, and ship the meat off to Europe and Asia.  Twice our Congress has acted to forbid this slaughter by profiteers on our land, but lobbyists have managed to manipulate the situation to allow for the continuation of their butchering of these noble animals.

Today the House will vote on H.R. 503 – The American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act.  Please call your Representative and help us put a stop to this outrage.  The Congressional switchboard can be reached at 202-224-3121, or congress.org can give you a contact number.  If you’re not sure what to say, try this: “I am a constituent and I am calling to ask that the Representative please protect American horses from slaughter and support H.R. 503, the Horse Slaughter Prevention Act. I also urge you to oppose any amendments to H.R. 503. I am very concerned about American horses and I don’t want them slaughtered.”

This is my third diary on this subject within one year, and I’d like to be finished with the subject.  I’m just too lazy today to search out links.  The Humane Society of the US can give you the story if you want details.  

Thanks for your help.
 

Help Me! Stop George!

I have been partially paralyzed for ten years – tried every medical and  esoteric treatment for a cure that I could find. At this point in my affliction I conclude that stem cell research is my only hope of recovery.

Everybody knows that george plans to veto whatever stem cell bill Congress sends him.

The show will go on from the rose garden this afternoon.

I’m asking for your help in contacting your members of Congress and urging them to over-ride this veto.  This could be the victory we have long waited for.  The majority of Americans want the hope that stem cell research gives us in treating so many illnesses – Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, stroke, MS, etc.
 
It’s time for us to send the radicals packing.  The deaths of our soldiers and the destruction of our soul (New Orleans) not to mention global shame, hasn’t provoked enough response so far.  But I’m hoping that this blatant theft of our future health will be the tipping point.  The media will not ignore this, they are people too.  

Please join me in telling your representatives in Washington that we are tired of rule by the radical right.  Tell them that one of our fundamental rights as Americans is hope in the future.

Congress.org has the final vote  and they can connect you to your representative.  Thank you.

TAPS

I want to pass along a spooky forwarded email that I just received from a former serviceman:
” If any of you have ever been to a military funeral in which taps were played; this brings out a new meaning of it.
 Here is something every American should know, until I read this, I didn’t know, but I checked it out and it’s true: We in the United States have all heard the haunting song, “Taps”. It’s the song that gives us that lump in our throats and usually tears in our
eyes. But do you know the story behind the song? If not, I think you will be
interested to find out about its humble beginnings.

 Reportedly , it all began in 1862 during the Civil War, when Union Army
Captain Robert Ellicombe was with his men near Harrison ‘s Landing in Virginia . The Confederate Army was on the other side of the narrow strip of land.
 During the night, Captain Ellicombe heard the moans of a soldier who lay severely wounded on the field. Not knowing if it was a Union or Confederate soldier, the Captain decided to risk his life and bring the
stricken man back for medical attention. Crawling on his stomach through the gunfire, the Captain reached the stricken soldier and began pulling him toward his encampment.
 When the Captain finally reached his own lines, he discovered it was actually a Confederate soldier, but the soldier was dead.
 The Captain lit a lantern and suddenly caught his breath and went numb with shock. In the dim light, he saw the face of the soldier. It was his
own son. The boy had been studying music in the South when the war broke out. Without telling his father, the boy enlisted in the Confederate Army.
 The following morning, heartbroken, the father asked permission of his superiors to give his son a full military burial, despite his enemy status.
 His request was only partially granted. The Captain had asked if he could have a group of Army band members play a funeral dirge for his son at the funeral. The request was turned down since the soldier was a Confederate.
 But, out of respect for the father, they did say they could give him only one musician.
 The Captain chose a bugler. He asked the bugler to play a series of musical notes he had found on a piece of paper in the pocket of the dead youth’s uniform.
 This wish was granted. The haunting melody, we now know as “Taps” . used at military funerals was born.
 
The words are:
 Day is done.
 Gone the sun.
 From the lakes
 From the hills.
 From the sky.
 All is well.
 Safely rest.
 God is nigh.

 Fading light.
 Dims the sight.
 And a star.
 Gems the sky.
 Gleaming bright.
 From afar.
 Drawing nigh.
 Falls the night.

 Thanks and praise.
 For our days.
 Neath the sun
 Neath the stars.
 Neath the sky.
 As we go.
 This we know.
 God is nigh

 I too have felt the chills while listening to “Taps” but I have never seen all the words to the song until now. I didn’t even know there was more than one verse. I also never knew the story behind the song and I didn’t know if you had either so I thought I’d pass it along.
 I now have an even deeper respect for the song than I did before.
 Remember Those Lost and Harmed While Serving Their Country. Also Remember Those Who Have Served And Returned; and for those presently serving in the Armed Forces.
 Please send this on after a short prayer.
 Make this a Prayer wheel for our soldiers…please don’t break it.”

Another Battle We Thought Was Over

When I was in fourth grade circa 1958, my teacher was an intense woman who was obsessed with nuclear war.  Our class project was a fallout shelter model, and a lot of our discussion centered on planning for that eventuality.  Our school had air raid drills rather than fire drills.  When the sirens went off, we all walked single-file downstairs to the basement, lined up covering our heads with our arms and faced the walls.  No silly ‘duck and cover’ for us big kids.

I talked to my parents about getting a fallout shelter.  We had a small yard that barely held a swingset and a wading pool, small details about where to put it didn’t occur to me.
All I knew was my teacher and the media said we needed it.  My Dad felt the pressure to provide us that protection, and studied design and inventory suggestions.  Mother insisted there was no way she would ever enter such a place – this terrified me.

Public conversation centered on how to behave if you had a shelter and your neighbors didn’t.  Should you get a gun to keep them away?  The horror of thinking about it got worse when I saw a Jerry Lewis movie in which he was in a test shelter and somehow eating irradiated peanut butter.  It all became a blur to me.
By the time I was 13 and heard Bob Dylan sing  Let Me Die In My Footsteps I forgave my mother for what she had said.   Then came the sixties and as Dick says `other priorities.’

 I had a beautiful childhood in a nice community with a loving family, but looking back,  it was contaminated by fear inflicted by society.  My home was in upstate New York. Now I find myself wondering if little george had a similar experience at Sam Houston elementary, and whether Shotgun Cheney was ever nine years old and uncertain of the future.

Once this stuff was a terribly important reality, but now I don’t know what young people think about nuclear weapons.  I can guess what they learned about it in school.  I remember a Boolady’s diary about watching the test blasts in Nevada (sorry- forgot who) and wish we could have a conversation about our nuclear situation, which seems to be unmentionable.

Interesting links: Britain’s Reliable Replacement Warhead
Nuclear Policy Research Institute
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization
Atomic Archive

To My Valentines

Love, love, love.
Love, love, love.
Love, love, love.

There’s nothing you can do that can’t be done.
Nothing you can sing that can’t be sung.
Nothing you can say but you can learn how to play the game.
It’s easy.

Nothing you can make that can’t be made.
No one you can save that can’t be saved.
Nothing you can do but you can learn how to be you in time.
It’s easy.

All you need is love.
All you need is love.
All you need is love, love.
Love is all you need.

All you need is love.
All you need is love.
All you need is love, love.
Love is all you need.

Nothing you can know that isn’t known.
Nothing you can see that isn’t shown.
Nowhere you can be that isn’t where you’re meant to be.
It’s easy.

All you need is love.
All you need is love.
All you need is love, love.
Love is all you need.

All you need is love (all together, now!)
All you need is love. (everybody!)
All you need is love, love.
Love is all you need (love is all you need).

Yee-hai!
Oh yeah!
She loves you, yeah yeah yeah.
“All you need is love, but a little chocolate now and then doesn’t hurt.” – Charles Schultz

So much for the will of the people: Lobbyists push USDA to ignore Congress

From the Humane Society:

In a hard-won battle last year, the American people convinced Congress to stop the use of tax dollars to promote horse slaughter. Never did we imagine that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the administrative agency charged with carrying out Congress’ will, would ignore this mandate and work to find a way to continue its involvement with the cruel and un-American horse slaughter for export industry.

 Shockingly, as 2006 begins, it appears that USDA is seriously considering a petition submitted by the foreign-owned slaughter plants that would create a whole new manner of paying for horse slaughter, an effort that directly undermines Congress’ mandate.
Please tell U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Mike Johanns to stop bucking the will of Congress and implement the horse slaughter ban here

The Washington Times suggests an email to mike.johanns@usda.gov or a call to his office at 202-720-3631.  Let’s tell the gentleman that sometimes Congress does speak for us and we are not to be ignored.

ALITO IS NOT A DONE DEAL

Don’t relax now – it’s not over yet.  We have all worked hard on protecting the Court from Bush’s cronyism.  It would feel really good to relax and  recuperate for the next battle, but let’s not quit before the end.  I couldn’t say this any better – this is from the People’s Email Network this morning.

  NOT A Done Deal, NOT A Done Deal

NEW ACTION PAGE TO FILIBUSTER ALITO: here

CALL YOUR SENATORS RIGHT NOW at 888-818-6641, 888-355-3588 or 800-426-8073.

NEWS FLASH: THE ALITO VOTE HAS BEEN DELAYED A WEEK. WE CAN WIN THIS!!!

We’ve noticed the most curious thing. Publically Alito’s supporters state
pronouncements that his confirmation is a “done” deal. And yet behind the scenes
they are stilly lobbying furiously for a vote as quickly as they can get it.
What do we make of this?

It’s con, folks. It’s a great big honking corporate media lie. There is only one
way the extreme right wing can win this one, and that is by discouraging the
rest of us from speaking out. We’d have to be pretty stupid to go for that one,
huh? We’d have to be total chumps, huh? Why else would anyone surrender a fight
when they had the numbers to win?

And we do have the numbers. We are the majority. The president is back down to
39% approval rating and dropping again. And even if the majority did NOT oppose
their radical dictator president agenda, and all we need are 41 votes to
filibuster. We HAVE 41 votes. We HAVE 41 votes. We HAVE 41 votes. All we need to
win is to exercise the power we have, the will to win!

We’ll make you a deal. For the next two weeks, we all repeat these words as a
mantra

ALITO IS NOT A DONE DEAL

If you just do that, ALL of you, repeat it in your minds until it drives out the
negativity, until it drives out the defeatism, until it drives out the despair,
until it drives out the insidious right wing talking point which the cable TV
propagandists have planted in our own minds. Just do that one thing, and we
promise that we will deliver the victory for you.

If you are listening to a progressive show, and you hear someone say that it is
not worth fighting anymore, IMMEDIATELY call them and chew them out. Demand that
they give out one of the toll free numbers over the air, 888-818-6641,
888-355-3588 or 800-426-8073. And to do it not in some “ain’t gonna work anyway”
tone of voice, but to do it with enthusiasm and the belief that it WILL work.
Demand that they make

WE CAN STOP ALITO

a recurring theme of every one of their shows for the next two weeks. If they
are not giving out the toll free numbers periodically, demand to find out why.
There are other good action pages besides our own but they should be giving out
something. For the purpose of something to be given out over the air it should
be something that is easy to say and remember like

http://www.nocrony.com

If you visit a progressive blog and you do not see the toll-free numbers and
links to action pages RIGHT AT THE TOP of the page as prominently displayed as
possible, email them and demand to know why. We control an enormous amount of
page space on the internet and it is NOT being used effectively to advocate for
policy change. EVERY home page MUST have these toll free numbers and action
links FEATURED on them now without exception.

Send the emails to the bloggers, post messages. Ask them, are you activists or
are you not? Why are you not helping with the fight? Why are you not using your
media prominence to help save our Supreme Court? What are you not acting? Why
have you not dedicated space on your site to the cause? Why are you not
contributing to the mental energy of believing we can prevail? Do you want to
win or not?

If we all do just that, a magical thing will take place. People will begin to
believe that we can win. People will believe that we can make a difference.
People will believe that democracy can work. And it will work. And we will win.
We promise.

Please take action NOW, so we can win all victories that are supposed to be
ours, and forward this message to everyone else you know.

If you would like to get alerts like these, you can do so at
http://www.usalone.com/in.htm

Powered by The People’s Email Network
Copyright 2005, Patent pending, All rights reserved

SAMMY GET YOUR GUN

I know what the Constitution says about guns, but I am personally opposed (though resigned) to their very existence.  Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito  seems to believe they are vitally important to our nation.  This is from an email I received today:

Judge Alito has shown a dangerous hostility to strong federal gun laws.

In a case involving the illegal sale of machine guns at gun shows, Judge Alito concluded that the federal machine gun ban is an unconstitutional exercise of Congressional power. If Alito’s extreme view prevailed at the Supreme Court, federal gun laws that protect our families could be placed in jeopardy. Possession of machine guns, which fire continuously with one pull of the trigger and can discharge hundreds of rounds in seconds, would no longer be a federal crime.

For this reason, the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence has announced its first-ever opposition to a Supreme Court candidate and has urged the Senate to reject Alito’s nomination. Please join us in opposing the confirmation of Judge Alito.

In the case of U.S. v. Rybar, gun dealer Raymond Rybar, Jr. attended a gun show in Pennsylvania and sold a fully automatic Chinese Type 54, 7.62-mm submachine gun and a U.S. Military M-3 .45 caliber submachine gun. Rybar was prosecuted for violating federal law, which barred his possession of machine guns. Rybar pled guilty, but argued that he should be set free because the federal machine gun ban is unconstitutional. In a 2-1 ruling, the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit held that the federal ban on machine gun possession was constitutional.
Judge Alito cast the dissenting vote, stating that the machine gun ban was an unconstitutional “novel law.”

Dismissing years of Congressional findings on the impact of illegal guns and criminal gun violence, Alito demanded that Congress and the President “assemble[] empirical evidence” for him to review in order to “protect our system of constitutional federalism.”

In Judge Alito’s view, if Congress provided him with such “empirical evidence,” that “might” be sufficient to persuade him to uphold the law. Alito also argued that Congress may not even have the power to regulate “the simple possession of a firearm,” as this “is not ‘economic’ or ‘commercial’ activity….” If Alito’s view became the law, it could place other federal restrictions on gun possession in similar jeopardy.

Alito’s dissent was sharply criticized by the other judges in the Rybar case as having “no authority” in the law. The majority stressed that Judge Alito’s attempt to create new hurdles for Congress and the President tramples “a basic tenet of the constitutional separation of powers.”

Even conservative Republican Senator Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, in an interview on Meet the Press, agreed that Alito’s dissent represented improper judicial activism. Coburn stated, “Those aren’t decisions judges should be making. Those are decisions legislators should be making. And that’s how we’ve gotten off on this track is, that we allow judges to start deciding the law….” Senator Coburn went on to state that Alito’s Rybar opinion was “wrong” and amounted to “legislating” from the bench.

Judge Alito is a dangerous example of a judicial activist — twisting the law to fit his personal views. Alito’s nomination poses a threat to our nation’s gun laws and the public’s safety.

StoptheNRA.com offers an email letter to your senators here to  express your opposition to Alito’s views on the second amendment.