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Jan. 9, 2024 - Skeptoid
18:23
Skeptoid #918: Martin Luther King Jr. Myths

We break down four popular myths about Martin Luther King Jr. that just won't go away. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Transcriber: nvidia/parakeet-tdt-0.6b-v2, sat-12l-sm, and large-v3-turbo
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Four MLK Myths Debunked 00:06:31
Today we have some very specific and timely myths in that they all apply to Martin Luther King Jr., perhaps history's most famous civil rights activist.
King was as contentious a figure to some as much as civil rights are a contentious topic.
They shouldn't be, but for some people, that's how they roll, and they make up misinformation in much the same way as a playground bully might.
And that's coming up right now on Skeptoid.
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Four Martin Luther King Jr. Myths.
Welcome to the show that separates fact from fiction, science from pseudoscience, real history from fake history, and helps us all make better life decisions by knowing what's real and what's not.
On Martin Luther King Jr. Day, there are a few things you're sure to hear.
One is excerpts from I Have a Dream, one of the most famous speeches in world history.
Another is perspectives on his life and what he worked for.
Another is the purpose of the day, which is to reflect on the principles of racial equality and nonviolent social change espoused by Dr. King.
And a fourth one, especially if you go onto the internet, is misinformation about him.
Myths about Martin Luther King Jr. are spread by harmless ignorance, by deliberate racists, and by lazy repeaters.
Today we're going to have a look at four of the most popular and thus arm ourselves to recognize them when we see them and not become a part of the problem.
Myth number one, King was killed by Lloyd Jowers, not James Earl Ray.
The major conspiracy theory that dominates retrospectives on Dr. King was the question of who assassinated him.
The official story, which has been ratified and reinforced every single time any investigation has looked into it, is that James Earl Ray, a loner ex-con with southern roots, acted alone to murder King.
No clear motive was ever proven.
Although he may have had associates, no evidence has ever surfaced.
All the evidence that does exist is that Ray, his rifle, his binoculars, and other personal items, all flamboyantly festooned with his fingerprints, were at the scene when the bullet was fired.
One breed of conspiracy theorists have long believed that Dr. King was murdered by a coalition of the U.S. government and the mafia.
Even much of the King family remains persuaded of this.
In 1993, a quarter of a century after the killing, a random weirdo named Lloyd Jowers came out of the woodwork and announced on the ABC news show Primetime Live that he had been hired by the mafia and the government for $100,000 to pull the trigger.
And he's the one who killed King.
His story was full of contradictions and it made little sense.
Jowers worked with the King family and with attorney William F. Pepper, a broad-spectrum conspiracy theorist, to have them sue Jowers in court for $100 for killing Dr. King.
For four weeks, Pepper brought in more than 70 other conspiracy theorists who all recited their claims.
Few of them had any actual connection to the case.
Jowers offered no defense, and so the jury needed only as much time as it took to fill in the forms to find in favor of the King family.
Jowers paid the $100, then promptly died.
Conspiracy theorists have pointed to this judgment as legal proof that James Earl Ray was innocent.
But of course, it doesn't prove anything at all, except that it's not all that difficult to abuse the court system.
Myth number two, King was a Republican Every year when Martin Luther King Jr. Day comes around, there's one thing you're almost certain to see, some paid advertisement claiming that Dr. King was a Republican.
Was he?
Well, obviously no, but it's also not as simple as that.
King's father, often called Daddy King, was indeed a Republican in the early and mid-20th century, but became a Democrat later.
This had less to do with his own feelings changing than it did with the well-documented swap in many positions between the Democrats and Republicans that took place mid-century.
Prior to that, the Democratic Party, especially in the South, was closely tied to segregation and generally opposed the civil rights movement.
Blacks tended to be Republicans, as that party was the one that had been founded on anti-slavery principles, going back to Republican President Abraham Lincoln, the great emancipator.
By the time Dr. King rose to national prominence, things were different in America.
Under President Eisenhower, Republicans began to take a slower and more cautious approach to civil rights.
It was Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson, who, with King's help, passed both the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
Democrats were all in on civil rights and, at least as far as party leadership was concerned, had fully abandoned its earlier segregationist roots.
Nevertheless, it is true that Dr. King absolutely did not identify as a Democrat, and neither did he identify as a Republican.
King's Views on Affirmative Action 00:08:42
Of party politics, he once famously said, I feel someone must remain in the position of non-alignment so that he can look objectively at both parties and be the conscience of both, not the servant or master of either.
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Myth number three, King opposed affirmative action.
Often, when one faction opposes another, they co-opt one of that group's heroes and claim that that person held a view contrary to the rest of the faction.
A familiar example of this is how some Christians claim that Stephen Hawking or Albert Einstein or someone recanted their atheism on their deathbed and admitted they were religious all along.
It's false, but it's one way that a group can gaslight an opposing group into thinking they've been hypocrites all this time.
Similarly, opponents of affirmative action have often held up Dr. King as one who opposed affirmative action.
See, if your hero believes this, then it must be true and you must all be wrong.
Well, of course, it's as false as Stephen Hawking or Albert Einstein having deathbed conversions.
The view that Dr. King opposed affirmative action has been notably advanced by conservative activist Dinesh D'Souza in a deceptive effort to dissuade liberals against the policy.
D'Souza has described Dr. King as having views similar to those of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, who is black and who openly opposes affirmative action on the basis that true advancement for blacks in America comes from personal merit, not from outside help.
Thomas's may be a minority view within the civil rights movement, but it is one view.
Consider the famous line from Dr. King's speech.
I have a dream my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.
It is not unreasonable to interpret this as meaning that blacks should be neither impeded nor assisted based on the color of their skin.
The content of their character is the tool they should use to either progress or to stagnate.
However, such an interpretation of I Have a Dream ignores the entire context of Dr. King's work.
An undeniable example is Operation Breadbasket.
In the late 1960s, Dr. King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the SCLC, founded Breadbasket as a nationwide organization which conducted pickets and boycotts of companies operating in black communities to pressure them to hire representative numbers of black employees.
Among its leaders was King's protégé, Jesse Jackson.
It was the prototypical grassroots affirmative action organization.
Some confusion may also lie in the fact that Dr. King did not advocate affirmative action only to benefit blacks, but poor whites as well.
He favored affirmative action according to economic need, not simply to race.
One of his best-known campaigns was for Congress to create an economic bill of rights to benefit what he termed a multiracial army of the poor.
A read of Dr. King's final book, Where Do We Go From Here, Chaos or Community, leaves no doubt that King advocated a version of affirmative action that would guarantee equal opportunity, not just for blacks, but for all disadvantaged groups.
This policy of to each according to his need rings with echoes of Karl Marx, and it's well known that King had deeply studied Marxism, and while he ultimately rejected Marxism and the label of socialist, he was drawn to its model of what he termed economic justice.
Recall that during the American Civil War, Marx had corresponded with President Abraham Lincoln in the hope of driving the war to evolve into a communist revolution.
Lincoln, however, wasn't having any of that and flat out rejected Marxist socialism.
But both men were in agreement that the termination of slavery was essential.
Marx, because that would elevate the labor class, and Lincoln, out of basic human morality.
Dr. King embraced both motives and founded his model of non-racial affirmative action on both humanitarian and economic principles.
Myth number four.
King's birth name was Martin Luther King Jr.
Sure enough, one of the most famous names in the world was not always his name.
Dr. King's birth certificate shows his name simply as Michael King, no middle name, and no junior.
His father, Daddy King, was also Michael King, with no known middle name.
Michael King Sr. was the senior pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia.
In 1934, he attended the Baptist World Alliance Congress in Berlin, Germany.
Hitler had been appointed Chancellor of Germany and was in the midst of rising to Fuhrer.
The Congress toured sites associated with Martin Luther, the German theologian and architect of the Protestant Reformation.
When King Sr. returned to Atlanta, he was said to be a changed man.
He began to use the middle name Luther and was often known as M.L. King, though still Mike to his friends.
Soon he went all the way, changing his name to Martin Luther King, and then going back to his son's birth certificate, where it once said Michael King, the Michael was crossed out, a comma was added after the last name King, and Martin Luther Jr. was appended.
And so came into being one of the most famous names in American history.
Like all humans, Dr. King was a complicated being.
He was not a perfect person.
His views did evolve over time.
He was a man of conflicts.
Although a champion of civil rights, he was openly sexist, denying women advancement within his SCLC, and was a serial philanderer.
In fact, if we were to include a fifth myth today, it could be that he believed in equal rights for all, men and women.
He was at once loved and hated by world authorities, being the youngest person yet to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964 at the age of 35, while also the target of a decades-long dragnet by his own government looking to dig up dirt on him.
The FBI Dragnet Myth 00:03:06
It was J. Edgar Hoover's COINTEL PRO that produced the proof of King's extramarital affairs using illegal wiretaps.
And so, while you might not be able to encapsulate him, you may not be able to say any one thing about him that was always true, you can, always, make up falsehoods about him.
And every year, racists and opponents of what Martin Luther King Jr. stood for.
We'll always do just that.
We continue with one more that's not a myth.
It's the factual account of how J. Edgar Hoover's FBI once tried to get King to kill himself in the ad-free and extended premium feed.
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