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kentuck

(111,110 posts)
Mon Jul 20, 2015, 12:28 PM Jul 2015

Martin Luther King, Jr. and the "Black Power" movement

Are African-Americans going thru another similar period of history with Black Lives Matter? Who is old enough to remember these times?
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http://kingencyclopedia.stanford.edu/encyclopedia/encyclopedia/enc_black_power/

<snip>
Although African American writers and politicians used the term ‘‘Black Power’’ for years, the expression first entered the lexicon of the civil rights movement during the Meredith March Against Fear in the summer of 1966. Martin Luther King, Jr. believed that Black Power was ‘‘essentially an emotional concept’’ that meant ‘‘different things to different people,’’ but he worried that the slogan carried ‘‘connotations of violence and separatism’’ and opposed its use (King, 32; King, 14 October 1966). The controversy over Black Power reflected and perpetuated a split in the civil rights movement between organizations that maintained that nonviolent methods were the only way to achieve civil rights goals and those organizations that had become frustrated and were ready to adopt violence and black separatism.

On 16 June 1966, while completing the march begun by James Meredith, Stokely Carmichael of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) rallied a crowd in Greenwood, Mississippi, with the cry, ‘‘We want Black Power!’’ Although SNCC members had used the term during informal conversations, this was the first time Black Power was used as a public slogan. Asked later what he meant by the term, Carmichael said, ‘‘When you talk about black power you talk about bringing this country to its knees any time it messes with the black man … any white man in this country knows about power. He knows what white power is and he ought to know what black power is’’ (‘‘Negro Leaders on ‘Meet the Press’’’). In the ensuing weeks, both SNCC and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) repudiated nonviolence and embraced militant separatism with Black Power as their objective.

Although King believed that ‘‘the slogan was an unwise choice,’’ he attempted to transform its meaning, writing that although ‘‘the Negro is powerless,’’ he should seek ‘‘to amass political and economic power to reach his legitimate goals’’ (King, October 1966; King, 14 October 1966). King believed that ‘‘America must be made a nation in which its multi-racial people are partners in power’’ (King, 14 October 1966). Carmichael, on the other hand, believed that black people had to first ‘‘close ranks’’ in solidarity with each other before they could join a multiracial society (Carmichael, 44).

Although King was hesitant to criticize Black Power openly, he told his staff on 14 November 1966 that Black Power ‘‘was born from the wombs of despair and disappointment. Black Power is a cry of pain. It is in fact a reaction to the failure of White Power to deliver the promises and to do it in a hurry.… The cry of Black Power is really a cry of hurt’’ (King, 14 November 1966).

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Martin Luther King, Jr. and the "Black Power" movement (Original Post) kentuck Jul 2015 OP
We are tired of being killed by cops and the racist system that defends them. craigmatic Jul 2015 #1
Great answer, your title sums it up perfectly XRubicon Jul 2015 #2
 

craigmatic

(4,510 posts)
1. We are tired of being killed by cops and the racist system that defends them.
Mon Jul 20, 2015, 12:49 PM
Jul 2015

We are tired of never having a movement that speaks just for us. The reason why those protesters were mad at O'Malley the other day is because he tried to co-opt and dilute the message of black lives matter by trying to include other people who don't face the same problem. You didn't see gays fighting for poly rights and you didn't see latinos boycotting trump over things he said about black people in the past. People back in King's day were right to cry black power when we were getting killed by cops and our rights were repeatedly violated on a daily basis and that's not to mention all the wealth that has been stolen from us over the generations. That's why those riots happened and that's why King was wrong. King might have got whites to let us come in the front door to shop but he had no plan to build wealth in the black community outside of us joining with whites. This is an issue where Malcolm was more right and blacks should've paid equal attention to both. That's why you're going to see more black separatists in the future because we see now that there is no room for all of us at the table. Besides other races self segregate too and nobody has a problem with it- Chinatown seems to be the apt example.

XRubicon

(2,213 posts)
2. Great answer, your title sums it up perfectly
Mon Jul 20, 2015, 01:27 PM
Jul 2015

I don't know why this is so hard to get for some people...

If you had millions in "free speech" you could get private meetings with politicians, but the current strategy seems to get their attention for free.

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