The following is my syndicated column from January 20, 2004. I believe prescience of the article speaks for itself.
With the ever-present cacophony of those who pervert Dr. Martin Luther King’s call for the same unencumbered opportunity for blacks as for whites to one of lowered expectations without accountability, it is only fair to compare what he said juxtaposed to the reality of today.
Upon receiving the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964 Dr. King said:
"I am mindful that only yesterday in Birmingham, Ala., our children, crying out for brotherhood, were answered with fire hoses, snarling dogs and even death. I am mindful that only yesterday in Philadelphia, Miss., young people asking to secure the right to vote were brutalized and murdered."
Forty years later, the polar opposite is the case. It is not police with fire hoses and dogs who bring misery and death; rather it is the vicious crimes perpetrated by blacks against other blacks who are trapped in multigenerational wastelands of self-imposed poverty.
"Today it is not the Klan riding through our neighborhoods killing our men and raping our women. It is our own neighbors depriving us of our civil rights, and it is our own leaders who seem preoccupied with blaming cops, the system and everyone else."
— Jerry Oliver, chief of police, Richmond, Va., Aug. 27, 2000
Today in Philadelphia, Miss., a bustling community of 7,300, the president of the Board of Supervisors is black, as are the fire chief and alderman. There are black administrators, teachers, police officers and professionals. King died too soon.
In 1960, Dr. King said:
"Only 7.8 percent of the Negro students in the South are attending integrated schools this year, a hundred years after our emancipation from slavery. At this pace it will take 92 more years to integrate the public schools of the South."
Dr. King did not live long enough to see the inclusion of blacks into every facet of the educational landscape.
A question: How long will it now take for black students to end the detestable practice of self-segregation? An observation: How misguided is the black student who accepts the idea that striving for academic excellence is to be equated with being "white," when in actuality it is equipping oneself with the best possible chance for economic success? I believe King would have told them to look in the mirror — for it is there they will find the man most responsible for their ills.
"We must have freedom now. We must have the right to vote. We must have equal protection of the law," said Dr. King after a march on the Alabama state capitol. Yet today – despite unparalleled advancement – the Congressional Black Caucus, the NAACP, the Jacksons and Sharptons, et al., would tell us that America is fundamentally flawed, that it purposefully excludes great numbers of blacks because of their color. But questions need answering before one accepts their premise.
First, if blacks are being excluded, how does one reconcile the litany of blacks participating in every aspect of America’s opportunities? How do they substantiate their claims of exclusion and racism, when they themselves live in gated communities and gilded townhouses, while sending their children to the most elite private academies and universities?
"I could never adjust to the separate waiting rooms, separate eating places, separate rest rooms, partly because the separate was always unequal, and partly because the very idea of separation did something to my sense of dignity and self-respect."
— Dr. King, 1958
Today the self-segregation of blacks sends an unambiguous message of self-centered contempt, not a message of common goals and concerns. It is the shameful and senseless practice of heterotypicism of blacks – spurred on by their false prophets. When combined with poor academic skills, poor — if any — marketable abilities and an abject absence of sound biblical teaching, one can understand why so many in the urban environs are misguided and angry.
King said,
"Segregation not only harms one physically, but injures one spiritually. It scars the soul; it is a system which forever stares the segregated in the face, saying, ‘You are less than …’ ‘You are not equal to …’"
But why would the Congressional Black Caucus, NAACP, et al. change their message? After all, private clubs, schools and salons – in brief, their lifestyles as a whole – are not getting any cheaper. If they correct their message, they will lose their meal ticket … and they cannot afford to have that happen.
Mychal S. Massie is the former National Chairman of the conservative black think tank, Project 21-The National Leadership Network of Black Conservatives; and a member of its parent think tank, the National Center for Public Policy Research. You can find more at mychal-massie.com.