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What Would King Tell Obama?

What would Martin Luther King, Jr., whose birthday we celebrate on January ninetenth, say to Barack Obama, inaugurated as President of the United States on January twentieth? A friend of mine is judging student essays on that question for the King Holiday. It’s a good question, with possibly some surprising answers.

King thought in terms of progressive phases of history. He saw “phase one” of the American freedom movement as the struggle for legal integration, equal opportunity, and full voting rights. He saw “phase two” as a struggle for economic justice. “Something is wrong with capitalism as it now stands in the United States,” he said. It “takes necessities from the masses to give luxuries to the classes.”

In phase two, King sought remedies for capitalism’s defects. He launched his Poor People’s Campaign demanding that government divert funds being spent for war to education, housing, and jobs. King also went to Memphis to support a strike of sanitation workers for the right to have a union. King, saying “all labor has dignity,” supported unionization as a portal to a decent life.

In phase two, King also vigorously challenged America’s militarist foreign policy. He saw the slaughter of millions in Indochina and regretfully condemned his country as “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today.” Guns and bombs would never create security for anyone; violent means would only produce violent ends.

Today, King would urge Obama to continue building a broad consensus for change, to pass new labor laws to help workers organize unions, to gain health care for all, and to put America back to work. He would support Obama’s pledge to restore civil liberties and the rule of law, after the travesty of the Bush years, and to use diplomacy to bring peace. Like Obama, King sought tangible gains for people, not pie in the sky.

But King would go further. He wanted a new kind of society based on love and justice. He wanted America to undertake a “moral revolution” to replace self-seeking individualism with concern for the common good. He said racism, poverty and war are intertwined problems that can only be resolved together.

King wanted a larger agenda and a better kind of world. To put America to work, to overcome systemic racial and other forms of inequality, to study war no more: that agenda would constitute a politics of hope worthy of the legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr.