[We have a guest post today written by SEIU Executive Vice Presidents Eliseo Medina and Gerry Hudson. Please stay on-topic in this comment thread, any off-topic discussions should be taken to the prior thread. Thank you! -- CHS]
But we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt…
that there are insufficient funds in the great vaults of opportunity of this nation…
And so let freedom ring…from every hill and molehill of Mississippi.
From every mountainside, let freedom ring.—Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., 28 August 1963
The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday is a time for those of us within the activist movements he energized to pause to reflect on Dr. King’s vision of universal freedom and opportunity for all. His dream is no less than the American dream, a dream that lives on and impels us to constantly ask ourselves the question: does freedom ring in America today?
The answer, it seems, depends on who you ask.
Ask Karl Rove or another Bush administration architect, or any of an increasing number of federal judges, and if you’re lucky, they may take you aside and show you their blueprint for freedom—for how to free civic and corporate America from their obligations to our nations’ senior citizens, children, the poor, and the sick.
Ask Henry Kravis or any one of the new private equity barons that make their fortunes buying up public companies, taking them private, and making huge profits at the expense of workers and all American taxpayers. They could tell you of the freedom they have won from the tax obligations that apply to nurses, firefighters, and many other American workers; from much of the S.E.C. oversight endured by their public corporate peers; and from the community accountability that would come with a business model more transparent than theirs.
Kravis and Rove and their kin embody the freedom of narrow self-interest and unfettered accumulation. But the list of those heralding this freedom is getting shorter.
Ask Paula Hall if freedom is ringing for her these days, and you’ll hear what it’s like to live enslaved by $250,000 of medical debt stemming from an on-the-job injury that left her husband unable to work or care for himself.
Ask the many former co-workers of Elirose Pierre-Louis, who organized a union with their fellow janitors but were fired just as they thought they’d finally won real change. They’ll tell you how Elirose died from a treatable illness and a lack of options.
Ask Wisly Jonatas if he heard freedom ringing when after working his late-night shift, he walked to an empty seat for the ferry ride home…and it cost him his job.
Ask Jim Longley if it’s freedom he sees when he’s sent in to shut off the power of families who work hard but have fallen behind on their soaring energy bills.
For Paula, Elirose, Wisly, Jim, and countless others, working hard and playing by the rules still aren’t enough to guarantee freedom or economic security in the richest democracy on earth.
"We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny," wrote Dr. King in 1963; he preached that oppression anywhere is a threat to freedom everywhere. And by this measure, the freedom imposed by unrestrained capitalism and its social implications is not freedom at all, but rather an instrument of disunity and a symptom of social regress.
Dr. King’s message and enduring witness remind us that we’re all in this together, and that each of us has a role to play in healing what divides us, forging a new path forward, and moving freedom up the mountain. We must decide together that we will no longer wait for the wealth to trickle down, the jobs to spring forth, or the tide of discrimination to dry up.
Only if we act together, can we ensure that our children don’t have to protest in the streets for the civil right to basic healthcare.
Only if workers from all sectors and income brackets speak out for fairness and balance, can we overcome inequality’s costs and arrive at an economy that rewards work.
Only if those whose skin color spares them suspicious looks, interrogation, or deportation stand with those who aren’t so lucky can we make sure that another mother won’t be separated from her child because of a broken immigration system.
And despite the problems that endure from King’s day to today, we have reason to hope. For the first time in history, a woman, a black person, and the son of a factory worker are all serious contenders for the presidency of the United States…and there’s a debate about which of their universal health plans is the best. In 2007, more than a million eligible immigrants—more than ever before—filed applications for U.S. citizenship. And Americans across the spectrum are giving back to their communities at historically high rates.
We’ve come a long way, but forty-five years later the fees at the bank of justice remain unacceptably high. For Dr. King’s sake, for ours, and for our children’s, let us work together to revive his vision of freedom rooted in solidarity; together we can throw open the great vaults of opportunity for all.
(YouTube of an excerpt of the MLK Mountaintop speech -- his last speech -- via Democracy Now! Full text and audio here.)
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Wow thanks
Happy aniversary MLK
Thank you very much to the SEIU, and to Eliseo and Gerry for this post. Lots to think about here, especially about the leadership of Dr. King by comparison to where leadership is and is not taking us today.
Thank you to SEIU which has faced off against some of the worst in our society including the health care industry.
Where George Bush has the freedom to snatch you off the street and send you to another country to be tortured,just because he wants to.
Hi Christy and thanks to the people from SEIU!
Hello, and welcome Eliseo: we have not crossed paths since Chicago. Glad to see you among us!
My welcome also to Gerry.
It is difficult not to wish ill on the entire Bush family.
I like the examples of real people so we can understand. Not flowery words.
Edwards uses this method speaking of the people who are being hurt. I get sick when I think of a hungry child.
I would like to point out that unions still have a voice in this country,there is still clout and endorsements to be sought in this election year.
We still have a say in who we would like to see run this country.
I only wish there were more of us.
Bustednuckles, local 360, Painters Union.
we BETTER get freedom back soon,because ,unspeakable acts are BEING DONE in our name
http://rawstory.com/news/2007/....._0121.html
Bush and The Republican Party have been the agents of change…because of them we are at the start of an economic disaster of major proportions. (The US Stock Market meltdown will probably begin this week.) In the coming bad times how will the Country respond? Will we turn farther right or will positive social change be the response as it was in the ’30’s?
First SEIU (and most importantly) many thanks. My spouse is a member of SEIU and you are by far the best union there is, not only in how you support members and encourage them to participate in political issues, but also in your very effective role in helping Patrick get elected in Massachusetts. What a difference from so many other unions whose leaders sold them out!
Two questions: 1) Do you see other unions as following your lead in any way
2) do you have any perspective on the Nevada Dem vote, that you would like to share?
Hi Pach - it was pretty hot downstairs, happy for the cooler minds here.
Great statement, and welcome SEIU.
Maybe this is off point but what to do about the Clintons? PLEASE accept the premise that the Clintons are an albatros. Even if Obama wins the nomination, the Democrats still have to deal with the Clintons. Under the Clintons our dependence on foreign oil grew dramatically. The Clintons energy proposal in this campaign is low emissions and better insulation for houses. That’s it folks.
The Clintons will continue our fossil fuel economy without change for 8 more years and I am absolutely confident that Obama will not stand by and not try to change that.
MLK represents to me a person who would respond to adversity in all its forms and the Clintons are not in the tradition of MLK but Obama is and it is not a race issue. It just so happens that our history may show that the only true leaders in our country post WWII happen to be from the oppressed.
In response to Bustednuckles @ 5
It is difficult not to wish ill on the entire Bush family.
____________________
Dr. King had the answer for that.
The teachers union in Nevada, joining the Clintons in a lawsuit against another union that was simply trying to vote, was very disturbing to me.
http://ruralvotes.com/thefield/?p=269
Why would another Union try to suppress the vote of other unions?!?! I understand different unions endorse different candidates, but to join a lawsuit right after the Culinary Workers endorse Obama?!?
I thought “divide and conquer” was a Republican tactic. Oh yea, we’re talking about the Clintons.
Can’t we do something about Rick Berman
http://www.americanrightsatwor.....iQodImbZTg
The culinary workers chose not to support the Teachers Union and istead through in with the Casinos to oppose an increase in a tax that would have benefited the schools.
As others have pointed, only after Culinary decided to support Obama, did the Teachers Union decide to bring the suit. I think Bill Clinton’s emotional commentary speak to this as well.
It all depends on whether or not the Republics retain any power. They created this mess, but the Democrats are unable or unwilling to articulate this in a way that echoes outside of themselves. Change is impossible with Republics holding any power.
That story of Wisly Jonatas is chilling. The rich really are different from you and me.
When I read this story I couldn’t believe it was 2007 that it was happening.
If you haven’t watched the YouTube, it is audio of the MLK Mountaintop speech — the last one he gave before he was killed. And one of my favorites. Wanted to share it with everyone this morning…
We are an SEIU family and wifey works with those who can’t get health care every day and she is on the lines of that battle.
A right is not something that someone gives you, but something that no one can take away.
We want our rights and we are tired of being screwed over by greedy people. Capitalism doesn’t like people with power… and hates unions. Regan demonstrated that.
Dr. King was such a visionary man and articulate spokesman for the people and democracy. His message was too powerful and his charisma too seductive to let his message be heard. They took him away from us.
We will struggle on for MLK and his vision.
Dr. King’s writings have informed my life. I was in high school in the deep south when he was murdered. I’ve since read his writings, listened to his speeches and studied the history of the movement he lead. He was a deep thinker and the powers that be obviously saw him as a dangerous man. That he didn’t let this stop him and that his words and his memory and the truth he spoke is still the truth we need to hear today encourages me to keep putting one foot in front of the other in the long struggle for justice and freedom.
Thank for for this post, and for the links. The story of Wisly Jonatas is, as I type, being read by people in my office I’ve been prosyletizing to vote Democratic. It’s a powerful teaching tool.
I seriously doubt that this or any congress will legislate away the power that corporations have which is at the heart of all the problems of America.
Power has corrupted absolutely and too many pols are tainted.
But the system will collapse on its own as it is doing now. But when it does, we need to move to a progressive, socially oriented government which put the needs of people first. We need to rid ourselves of the military and its “complex” which is sucking our resources and destroying nations around the world.
We need a redo a regime change and a paradigm shift. This nation has been led too far down the wrong path, let by bankers, and corporations and people who live for wealth.
and the I Have a Dream speech and text are here.
Too much has not changed. And we are not satisfied…
Thank you Christy and SEIU for bringing another powerful reminder of just how important is our activism and our $$$ and our VOTE this year.
More and better Democrats!
~ Prairie, IBEW daughter
People so often forget that a single voice, speaking up at the right moment and gathering others to the cause so that they speak up in harmony with them can make such an enormous difference as we move forward. Imagine if everyone who was disaffected, disgusted, or downright angry about the direction of this nation of ours stood up with one voice and said “enough!” What a powerful message that would be.
And then that gets backed up with votes — an avalanche of votes cast loudly and with the force of real conviction behind them? Movement in that direction would be too much to sweep aside. We saw that in any number of individual districts in the last Congressional election, and we can build on that momentum for all of our futures. But it will take all of us — doing the work, educating our peers, getting the apathetic involved, knocing on doors, making the calls, registering folks to vote and then getting them to the polls…all of the work has to be done and done well for this to happen.
We have from now until November to get it done. For our sakes and for every generation that follows.
Am registering to vote today, does that count? [Calif]
I’d say that counts. ;-)
Native American spirit man would say;
(((HO!)))
Beautifully said Christy!!
I’m still waiting for the Credit Suisse investigation to start… Bwaaahahahahaha (rolls on floor laughing again, tears in eyes, not holding breath, etc.)
Very nice! Thanks for posting.
And thank you for alluding to Edwards. If elected, I believe that he would be the greatest practical friend to organized labor of him, Clinton, and Obama.
Hear, hear!
Sorry if you saw this on another thread but as a white male over 50 the three men I admire most are Jesus, Gandhi and Martin Luther King all of whom changed the course by speaking truth to power and all were assassinated for their effort. Listen to the Riverside Church speech where he first spoke out against the illegal, immoral ,unconstitutional military police action in Vietnam against innocent human beings, our true brothers and sisters. Please consider joining the coalition for peace action today and if there isn’t a chapter near you consider starting one. For further information go to www.peacecoalition.org a 25 year old organization committed to peace now.
I hope this is on topic.
I have a weird family background when it comes to civil rights/civil disobedience.
Both my parents were in the FBI after WWII. My mother was one of JEHoovers’s personal phone operators (before direct dial) tasked with listening into her share of his phone conversations. (So he could prove he never said it THAT way.)
My parents were both involved actively helping the inner city people in Chicago during the first part of the civil right stuff, in fact we always adopted other families for Christmas. My mother worried openly about what Mr. Hoover thought about her involvement in Civil Rights and what he had put in her Jacket (his name for his file on everyone). Actually, she was terrified of that man’s wrath 5 years after he died!
We moved to suburban DC in 1969. My mother cried for weeks after Dr. Kings murder, not just for him, but also for the people she cared about started destroying their own area out of utter frustration (the riots).
My dad, on the other hand, talked like it was good thing!!!! If you wanted hear real racial hate speech, just listen to him in our home; it was horrible! I know, thanks to him, every horrible name you can call someone, and EVERY slanderous accusation that Hoover had tried to pin on Dr. King and anyone who sympathized.
So I was torn between the two sides growing up, although I NEVER acted or actually thought bad about anyone I actually knew.
My epiphany came when, as a 20 something went to visit my dad at his office at the FCC. The minute I walked in I was literally mobbed by a sea of black faces! The people in his office, mostly black being in DC, were tripping over each other to grab me and tell me what a great man my father was! They, one by one, told me that, in his office, if you had a problem and were straight with him, he would go to the mat for you! They said that that man was the best example of integrity and fairness they had ever known in their lives! NO ONE held back, and some actually had tears in their eyes. I think they were desperate to tell anyone connected to him how much they appreciated him. To top it off, I met the one person he considered his best friend and one of the few other higher level people he respected: He was the blackest person I had ever seen!
This, to this day, changed my life. I still only have a vague idea about why my dad talked that way at home (never in public BTW). (I suspect that finding out, after he retired, that he had a White-House Security clearance most of his career may be a key. I will never know why.). My mother, of course. then educated me about the things my dad had actually DONE with our church in Chicago.
Dr. King has been since then, one of my greatest heroes.
I now know not to take everyone 100% for what they say or appear to mean, they may have something good or bad to hide in their words. Actions are what it’s all about.
Thanks for sharing that. Great story.