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Tuesday, January 21, 2014

IMPORTANT LESSON: Martin Luther King, Jr., His Communist Affiliations and Some Quotes You've Maybe Never Heard..

The Jewish Communist behind Martin Luther King
 
Posted by  Charleston Voice
 
Jan 19, 2014
 
The Jewish Communist Stanley Levison can best be described as the manipulator behind Martin Luther King. Levison, who for years had been in charge of channeling funding to the Soviet Communist Party USA, was King's mentor and was actually the mastermind behind many of the most successful tactics of King. It was Levison who edited King's book, Stride Toward Freedom, who dealt for a publisher and even who prepared the tax returns of King. It was Levison who really controlled the fund-raising and agitation activities of the SCLC. Levison wrote many of King's speeches. King described Levison as one of their "best friends". [___]..
 
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Martin Luther King (MLK)...and His Communist Affiliations
 
Posted by  Charleston Voice
Excerpted from COMMUNIST REVOLUTION in the STREETS by Gary Allen
 
Jan 19, 2014
 
THERE IS NO living American today who has been praised as uncritically, by the highest officials in the federal government, radio and television commentators and leading daily newspapers as the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King.   King has been named Man Of the Year by national magazines and has been the recipient of a Nobel Peace Prize. His image as a noble crusader for "freedom" and "justice" through nonviolence makes him almost immune to criticism.
 
Any factual information on Reverend King that would tend to muddy his shining image is simply ignored by most of the major vehicles of the mass media. The inference is that any criticism of King must be of a racist nature. But the legitimate criticisms of King have nothing to do with the Negro race which suffers the consequences of King’s actions. The American public is starting to look at the other side of the King’s coin, looking to see whether the coin may be minted in Moscow.[___].
 
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Also read this:
 
The greatest MLK speeches you never heard
 
By John Blake,   .........and can you believe.... in CNN
 
January 20, 2014
 
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Begins with: -- Here's a pop quiz for anyone who calls the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. an American hero.
Can you name any of his great speeches or written works without citing "I Have a Dream" or the "Letter from Birmingham Jail"?
     Most Americans would likely flub this quiz. King may be a national hero whose birthday the country commemorates on Monday, but to many he remains a one-dimensional hero -- the vast body of his work unknown. Though he wrote five books and delivered up to 450 speeches a year, he's defined by one speech and one letter. [___]..
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Excerpts:  Some overlooked gems from King, any extraordinary spoken or written words people don't typically hear during King commemorations.
 
At Riverside Church in New York on April 4, 1967 King stated:    “Money that should have been spent on Johnson's War on Poverty was being lost in Vietnam's killing fields. He said, "A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death." The speech distilled King's belief that racism, economic exploitation and war were all connected as "triple evils."
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Speech delivered on March 25, 1965, in Montgomery, Alabama, at the end of the Selma-to-Montgomery march..(non violence movement):    The speech was the culmination of one of the movement's most brutal but critical campaigns. Three civil rights activists were killed and other marchers were beaten at the Edmund Pettus Bridge.
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Delivered just before the 1963 campaign in Birmingham, Alabama:     In private King had a wicked sense of humor. He was a man who nicknamed one of his top aides, "Lil' Nigger," drank Harveys Bristol Cream sherry and smoked in private, and liked "playing the dozens," an African-American tradition of friends good-naturedly trading insults.
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Written on July 18, 1952, to his future wife, Coretta Scott:    in which King revealed some surprising thoughts on capitalism and communism:   King's 1952 letter reveals he was radical far earlier than most people realize.... "I imagine you already know that I am much more socialistic in my economic theory than capitalistic. And yet I am not so opposed to capitalism that I have failed to see its relative merits. It started out with a noble and high motive, to block the trade monopolies of nobles, but like most human systems it falls victim to the very thing it was revolting against. So today capitalism has outlived its usefulness. It has brought about a system that takes necessities from the masses to give luxuries to the classes."
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King's fifth book was published in 1967:    This is King's last -- and most radical -- book. By 1967, he was organizing a "Poor People's Campaign," a plan to dispatch an interracial army of poor people to occupy Washington and force the U.S. government to address poverty. [___].. "I get so tired of people turning Dr. King into a dreamer," says Doreen Loury, a sociology professor at Arcadia University in Pennsylvania, who says she was blown away by the book when she first read it in the 1960s.  "They made him safe. He was a revolutionary."
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Oliver Stone drops out of Martin Luther King Jr. project:
 
By Samantha Highfill, in Entertainment Weekly (EW)
 
Updated January 17, 2014
 
 

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