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Helms on MLK = McCain on Obama

On October 3rd, 1983, Senator Jesse Helms articulated his opposition to a national holiday for Martin Luther King, Jr. Here is the opening statement:

Remarks of Senator Jesse Helms

Congressional Record,
October 3, 1983,
Vol. 129, No. 130, pages S 13452 through S 13461.

Mr. President, in light of the comments by the Senator from Massachusetts (Mr. Kennedy), it is important that there be such an examination of the political activities and associations of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., principally from the beginning of his work in the civil rights movement in the mid 1950s until his death in 1968. Throughout this period, but especially toward the beginning and end of his career, King associated with identified members of the Communist Party of the United States (CPUSA), with persons who were former members of or close to the CPUSA, and with CPUSA front organizations. In some important respects King's civil rights activities and later his opposition to the Vietnam war were strongly influenced by and dependent on these associations.

There is no evidence that King himself was a member of the CPUSA or that he was a rigorous adherent of Marxist ideology or of the Communist Party line. Nevertheless, King was repeatedly warned about his associations with known Communists by friendly elements in the Kennedy Administration and the Department of Justice (DO J) (including strong and explicit warning from President Kennedy himself). King took perfunctory and deceptive measures to separate himself from the Communists against whom he was warned. He continued to have close and secret contacts with at least some of them after being informed and warned of their background, and he violated a commitment to sever his relationships with identified Communists.

Throughout his career King, unlike many other civil rights leaders of his time, associated with the most extreme political elements in the United States. He addressed their organizations, signed their petitions, and invited them into his own organizational activities. Extremist elements played a significant role in promoting and influencing King's opposition to the Vietnam war-an opposition that was not predicated on what King believed to be the best interests of the United States but on his sympathy for the North Vietnamese Communist regime and on an essentially Marxist and anti-American ideological view of U.S. foreign policy.

King's patterns of associations and activities described in this report show that, at the least, he had no strong objection to Communism, that he appears to have welcomed collaboration with Communists, and that he and his principal vehicle, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), were subject to influence and manipulation by Communists. The conclusion must be that Martin Luther King, Jr. was either an irresponsible individual, careless of his own reputation and that of the civil rights movement for integrity and loyalty, or that he knowingly cooperated and sympathized with subversive and totalitarian elements under the control of a hostile foreign power.


Comments (5)

avatar

Wow, nothing changes. Nice find. Rec'd.

Helms in dead. As Grace Slick said, "There's ONE less!"

In college, a roommate and I had a photo of Helms we used as a dart board. Wasn't much left of it after a while...

Apparently the GOP side of the election is crawling with questionable associations themselves. *Ahem*

Well, McCain didn't like Martin Luther King either.

Hey! I just found something he hasn't changed his mind on! He doesn't like capable, strong, honorable black men. Well, well, well...it was bound to happen...something John McCain is consistent about.

plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose, as the French might say. The more things change, the more they stay the same. For McCain, desperate times call for desperate measures, but his desperation seems cowardly to me.

I wonder how old McNasty would take to be called a coward?

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