February is Black History
Month, and a perfect time to reflect on the nonviolence and antiwar stance
of Dr. Martin Luther King. Recently, my colleague, Mark Thompson, reminded
me of an important Dr. King quote when I appeared on his radio
show to discuss the Tucson
shooting. It was a speech the slain civil rights leader gave at Riverside
Church in New
York on April 4, 1967, a year and a day before he was assassinated.
In
the speech King was discussing the conversations he had had with angry
and desperate young black men in the northern ghettos. He tried to convince
them that nonviolent action, not rifles or Molotov cocktails, would solve
their problems and bring social change. “But they asked - and rightly
so - what about Vietnam? They asked if our
own nation wasn’t using massive doses of violence to solve its problems,
to bring about the changes it wanted,” King said. “Their questions hit
home, and I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence
of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to
the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today - my own government.”
King said he could not be silent, so he broke that silence and spoke out
against the Vietnam War, most likely to his peril.
And
although he uttered these words 44 years ago in, a different era, about
a war that ended decades ago, his words are as relevant and clear as if
he spoke just yesterday. America
is the greatest purveyor of violence around. You only need look at the
latest shootout massacre du jour on U.S.
soil. These perennial bloodbaths occur so frequently that Americans have
accepted them as a part of daily life, the price of doing business, as
they say.
With
90 guns for every 100 people, according to the Small Arms Survey in Switzerland,
the U.S., by far, is the most
heavily armed nation in the world. Yemen,
in second place, has 61 guns per 100 people, while Switzerland
has 46, followed by Iraq
with 39.
And
not surprisingly, America
has the world’s highest gun-related death rate, with nearly 100,000 people
shot or killed with a gun each year. Over a million Americans have been
killed with guns since King and Robert F. Kennedy were assassinated, according
to the Childrens’ Defense Fund. Moreover, the Brady Campaign to Prevent
Gun Violence says that America’s
homicide
rate is 6.9 times higher than rates in the other 22 advanced nations combined.
And among 23 high-income countries, 80 percent of firearms deaths occur
in the U.S.
This
is a travesty and an embarrassment in the industrialized world. And with
guns aplenty in a nation that is hungry, ill and need of repair, guns
are readily available for the mentally
unstable, domestic abusers, criminals and
others who should be prohibited from having a gun. But what do you do
when the county itself is sick? As Michael Moore recently noted on Twitter,
“Tons ’o guns &
unstable people all over world but they don’t kill each other like we
do. Guns Don’t Kill People. Americans Kill People. Why?”
The Second Amendment - an anachronism that was meaningful
only when people hunted for their food - reads, “A well-regulated militia,
being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and
bear arms, shall not be infringed.” It is hard to believe, but the gun
lobby and right-wing militia groups who would wage violence against the
government have interpreted this to apply to an unlimited right for individual
citizens, the right to amass a personal army. The weapons makers pay politicians
millions of dollars to back it up. Unfortunately a right-wing Supreme
Court tends to agree.
As
other countries distinguish themselves as leaders in green technology
and high-speed rail, the U.S. is the leader in guns. And we export our
violence abroad. The teargas canisters that the Egyptian police used against
the Cairo protestors in Tahrir Square were
made in Jamestown, Pennsylvania. Egypt’s
military hardware was made in the U.S.A.,
because the American government props up Egypt’s petty dictator, Hosni Mubarak, to the
tune of $1.3 billion a year. And apparently he pockets that money, given
that he has become a billionaire through “public service.” Yet, his people
protest their poverty, rising food prices, and a level of economic
inequality that could someday become as bad
as that of the U.S. Further, Mubarak’s new handpicked hack vice
president, Omar Suleiman, was the torture and renditions liaison for the
CIA. Now, Suleiman has been charged with investigating the hoodlums that
Mubarak unleashed on the nonviolent protestors in the Cairo streets.
President
Obama finds himself in a quandary, as someone who admires King’s words
and philosophy, yet is also the head of the American empire. Both men
received a Nobel Peace Prize, but only one of them earned his. The other
received his in good faith - as a down payment on prospective achievements,
if you will - while inheriting two pointless wars from his warmonger predecessor
that he can’t seem to shake off. Still, you could see hints of King coming
out of Obama when he essentially told Mubarak that his time in office
is up. And yet, the President backtracked and toned it down. The U.S. is addicted to empire, spending nearly half
of its discretionary budget on war, and nearly half
of the world’s military expenditures. We fund dictators, tyrants and
potentates to do our bidding, to keep an illusory Cold War peace, as we
preach democracy and export fast food. Other nations are becoming leaders
in green jobs and high-speed rail. China,
a huge, authoritarian country, spends one-sixteenth as much as the U.S.
on its military, but twice as much on clean energy technology.
But
Americans, at least we have our guns, right? Yeah, right.
BlackCommentator.com Executive Editor, David
A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate based in Philadelphia, is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania Law School. and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, theGrio, The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These
Times and Philadelphia
Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily Kos, and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love.
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