In his last years, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr broke with the liberal Warfare/Welfare State and the institutionalized slavery embodied in it. The move cost him his life. We see similar strains running through the run-up to the 2012 election. Washington still holds the disenfranchised citizens as slaves, but Wall Street now owns the plantation. When it suits their purposes, the fat cats will allow the POTUS the occasional foreign policy success. The citizens can't appreciate them and the Republicans lack the mental capacity to absorb them. Domestically, Wall Street has bought the government to serve them on a step-and-fetch-it basis. The general public has succumbed to fears generated by the Military/Industrial Complex and spread by the controlled media.
At any moment the powers-that-be can unleash the dogs of depression, famine, pestilence, war and death. These dogs patrol the pathways to hell and most human beings are familiar with them.
Most fat cats achieved their status through criminality. They use their power and influence to stay out of prison. They fear people such as MLK who are on to their games. Tom Englehardt is one of these and I quote him here:
Last weekend, at the dedication of the Martin Luther King, Jr. National
Memorial on the Washington Mall, two of King’s children gave
shout-outs
to Occupy Wall Street, now spreading around the country and the world.
His daughter Bernice spoke of it as “a freedom explosion” and his son
Martin eloquently hailed “the young people of the Occupy movement all
over this country and throughout the world [who] are seeking justice...
for working class people barely making it, justice for middle class folk
unable to pay their mortgages... justice for the young people who
graduate from college and are unemployed and burdened by student loans
they cannot repay, justice for everyone who is simply asking the wealthy
and corporations to pay their fair share.”
When President Obama gave his
speech
on King, he referred to the Occupy movement only once and obliquely.
“If [King] were alive today,” he said, “I believe he would remind us
that the unemployed worker can rightly challenge the excesses of Wall
Street without demonizing all who work there...” Amid the list of King's
accomplishments, he conspicuously did not mention that his last act
before being assassinated was to organize the
Poor People’s Campaign, including
“Resurrection City,”
a shantytown of “plywood, teepee-looking A-frames, houses,” all built
on that same Mall to reveal the look, and so the existence, of the poor
to the eyes of the rich -- and to the nation.
Daniel Levine, a 20-year-old college student manning the Occupy Wall
Street information table at Zuccotti Park, responded to President
Obama’s “demonizing” remark this way: “He’s trying to make excuses for
the rich people who donate to his campaign. The rich demonized
themselves the second they decided they were going to make fraudulent
derivative swaps, the minute they decided to evict people from homes
they didn’t even own.” It was a sentiment that might be widely seconded
throughout the Occupy movement (from which, in word or image, the
president remains
missing in action).
Give Obama credit, though. He practices what he preaches. While he did once refer to the denizens of Wall Street as
“fat cats,” the Washington Post
recently reported
that his 2012 election campaign has done anything but demonize them.
In fact, so far early in this election season, according to new
fundraising data, the campaign has “managed to raise far more money...
from the financial and banking sector than Mitt Romney or any other
Republican presidential candidate.” (Not that Romney has been suffering
when it comes to Wall Street, where he’s
raising money hand over fist from all the firms you love to hate.)
Meanwhile, in New York City, Mayor Bloomberg is making no less subtle
distinctions than the president. Having tried and failed to demonize
and evict the occupiers of Zuccotti Park on the grounds of
uncleanliness, he is now coming out in favor of the rights of human
beings -- but not of tents. At a recent news conference, he
announced
that “the Constitution doesn’t protect tents, it protects speech and
assembly.” Except for medical tents, few Zuccotti Park occupiers have
them, but in his urge to oust the protesters the mayor is obviously
confusing the tent cities of the homeless with the encampment in his
jurisdiction. As Barbara Ehrenreich, author of
Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America (now in a 10th anniversary edition with a
new afterword), makes clear, for the 1%, the fate of the homeless and of the demonstrators in lower Manhattan is merging. Tom
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