MLK's Hideous Legacy -- Remembering Reverend King for who he really was.

MLK's Hideous Legacy​

Remembering Reverend King for who he really was.​

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January 1964. The historic Willard Hotel, on Pennsylvania Avenue, just east of the White House. A group of men, including some ministers, gather in a room with young female parishioners. They discuss which of the women would be suitable for various sex acts, each more debased than the last. When one of the girls raises her voice in disapproval at the talk, a Baptist minister forcibly rapes her as another minister of the gospel “looked on, laughed and offered advice.”

The man who laughed was Martin Luther King Jr., according to author and historian David Garrow. Nine months after that alleged rape, on October 14, 1964, King was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

Ahead of MLK Day this year, Boston unveiled a monument with all the aesthetic charm of a malignant tumor that represents the hug King shared with his wife, Coretta Scott King, after winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964. Some of King’s fans have lamented its appearance, but its grotesqueness accords well with the hideousness of his real legacy, which you won’t find with any ease these days, and for a good reason: King’s hagiography is integral to the mythos that rationalizes the incumbent political order; whether something is good or bad depends on whether it is closer to or further from King’s ostensibly color-blind “dream.” But it, like his official biography, hides the rot beneath a mawkish veneer of moral decency.

King was more than a sexual predator. He inaugurated the age of anti-whiteness and the “diversity, equity, and inclusion” regime. He supported affirmative action and racial quotas, contrary to conservative fairytales that cling to King’s blather about character over skin color. He gladly accepted help from known communists and was, in fact, funded by them. But it is the moral bankruptcy evinced by his adultery that sets the stage for reckoning with the rest. Plutarch wrote that he “must have his own house in good order who undertakes to order the affairs of his friends and the public,” for “ill-doings on the part of husbands to their wives” will eventually come to light and call all the rest into question.

No one has brought more damning evidence against King’s standing as archon of America’s morality in this regard than Garrow. No conservative critic is he. Garrow is a democratic socialist who donated to Bernie Sanders’ 2016 campaign with bylines in The New York Times, The Nation, The Financial Times, and The New Republic. In 1987, he even won a Pulitzer Prize for a biography about King, Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The back cover makes clear the significance of Garrow’s contribution to the corpus of King lore.

Winner of the 1987 Pulitzer Prize for Biography and the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award, this is the most comprehensive book ever written about the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Based on more than seven hundred interviews with all of King’s surviving associates, as well as with those who opposed him, and enhanced by the author’s access to King’s personal papers and tens of thousands of pages of FBI documents, this is a towering portrait of a man’s metamorphosis into a legend.

But in 2019, the historian published a discovery that rocked the foundations of the shrine he had helped build for King. Garrow found never-before-seen evidence of King’s extensive extramarital affairs with dozens of women and his presence in a hotel room when one of King’s colleagues, a Baptist minister, allegedly raped a parishioner as the civil rights leader “looked on, laughed and offered advice.”
Garrow submitted an article with his findings to The Atlantic, The Washington Post, The Guardian, and the Times. Naturally, all rejected his submission. He turned his efforts across the pond again to Standpoint, a British right-of-center magazine, which agreed to publish his exposé: “The troubling legacy of Martin Luther King.” It was the culmination of weeks that Garrow had spent painstakingly poring over hundreds of FBI reports and surveillance summaries just recently made available through the Byzantine National Archives website.

In 1977, U.S. District Judge John Lewis Smith signed a court order requiring the FBI to hand over all materials concerning its electronic surveillance of King to the Archives. “Said tapes and documents,” Smith stated, would be “maintained by the Archivist of the United States under seal for a period of fifty years.” And when that seal breaks on January 31, 2027, Garrow believes that “a painful historical reckoning concerning King’s personal conduct seems inevitable.”
But we don’t have to wait until then.

Garrow found a web of sordid affairs with many women, including some who were married. For instance, one of King’s girlfriends was Dolores Evans, the wife of a black dentist in Los Angeles. Another was a member of his Ebenezer Baptist Church congregation in Atlanta named Barbara Meredith. King’s sexual liaisons stretched from Illinois to Nevada and New York. There’s even evidence that he secretly had a child born to one of these mistresses. In all, King’s “occasional partners” included 40 or more women, free and paid. One traumatized prostitute told investigators that King subjected her to “the worst orgy I’ve ever gone through.” When Coretta complained to King about his behavior, he reportedly told her that she should have some affairs of her own.

The night after the alleged rape occurred in 1964, King and his friends resumed their escapades and “participated in a sex orgy,” according to a surveillance summary reviewed by Garrow. “When one of the women shied away from engaging in an unnatural [sex] act, King and several of the men discussed how she was to be taught and initiated in this respect. King told her that to perform such an act would ‘help your soul.’” Reporting these unsavory details did Garrow no professional favors. The Times downplayed his findings as merely “factoids aplenty” and gave other scholars space to attack Garrow. The headline of a similar barb launched by The Guardian was self-explanatory: “A historian’s claims about Martin Luther King are shocking—and irresponsible.”

The main complaint of Garrow’s critics amounts to something like this: the FBI wanted to discredit King, so naturally, the documents, transcripts, and summaries reviewed by Garrow are tainted to that effect. However, Garrow notes throughout his article that the people in charge of surveilling King operated under the assumption that these things wouldn’t see the light of day and, therefore, had little reason to embellish and deceive. Garrow points to Assistant Director William C. Sullivan, head of the Domestic Intelligence Division, who led the efforts to bug King’s hotel rooms. He writes:

in 1977 Justice Department investigators would publicly attest to how their own review of both the tapes and the transcripts showed them to be genuine and accurate. Throughout the 1960s, when no precedent for the public release of FBI documents existed or was even anticipated, Sullivan could not have imagined that his and his aides’ jottings would ever see the light of day. Similarly, they would not have had any apparent motive for their annotations to inaccurately embellish upon the actual recording and its full transcript, both of which remain under court seal and one day will confirm or disprove the FBI’s summary allegation.
Another criticism is that the FBI had no real reason to surveil King. But the truth is that the FBI became so obsessed with the minister’s perverted sex life that it almost overlooked his concrete connections to communism in the U.S.

Before it finally acquired Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy’s authorization to wiretap King, the FBI spent months convincing Kennedy that King’s closest confidant and advisor, Stanley D. Levison, was a “secret member” of the Communist Party USA. Levison “had a talent for raising funds from left-wing contributors who preferred giving money to him personally to giving it directly to the Communist Party,” according to historian Murray Friedman. “Levison’s opposition to the McCarran Act, which required the registration of officers of the Communist party, and his support of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg brought him under surveillance by the Federal Bureau of Investigation,” Friedman adds.

Citing some of Garrow’s work, Friedman writes that Levison served as a “financial angel for the Communist Party” starting in 1945 or 1946. The FBI knew this because it had informants “high up in the party.”

The bureau was informed that Levison, in 1953 or early 1954, began assisting in the management of Communist party finances. When the party’s national treasurer, William Weiner, died in 1954, Levison became the interim chief administrator of its highly secret funds. In this connection, according to Garrow, he is said to have created business fronts to earn or launder money for the party.
Just how influential was Levison as a close friend of King? For starters, he co-wrote one of the drafts of the famous “I Have a Dream” speech. But more importantly, he bankrolled King. Indeed, upon a review of King’s tax returns from the Internal Revenue Service, the FBI discovered a bombshell. According to Garrow:

in 1957 and 1958, Stanley Levison, who had first met King only at the very end of 1956, had arranged for King to receive a total of $10,000 in cash gifts—the equivalent of $87,000 in 2019 dollars—from himself and a close friend, 70-year-old Alice Rosenstein Loewi. In early 1961, the IRS had subjected King’s late 1950s’ returns to “investigative scrutiny” and determined that he owed an additional $1,556.02 but had had no fraudulent intent.
Garrow notes those “gifts” to King “had taken place simultaneously with Levison’s ongoing contributions to the Communist Party,” for which he was a substantial fundraiser. Between 1957 and 1962, Levinson and his twin brother Roy contributed the equivalent of more than $700,000 today to the party. There’s also evidence of Levison having a direct connection to Moscow around this time.

In John Barron’s 1996 book, Operation SOLO: The FBI’s Man in the Kremlin, the author notes that King’s friend frequently met with Victor Lessiovsky, a high-ranking KGB officer in New York under the cover of special assistant to United Nations Secretary General U Thant. Lessiovsky’s expertise was in the recruitment and manipulation of “Third World peoples.”

After King was warned to discontinue contact with Levison, he stayed in touch with him indirectly through Clarence Jones. Jones was discharged from the Army as a security risk in 1955 after he refused to sign the Armed Forces Loyalty Certificate stating that he was not a member of the Communist Party. The FBI identified Jones as a member and leader of the Labor Youth League, described by the leftist daily People’s World as “a Marxist-Leninist youth organization with fraternal relations with the Communist Party.” Jones also co-wrote with Levison the draft of King’s “I Have a Dream Speech.”

Simply put, the FBI had good reason to monitor King for his connections to the Communist Party, the truth of which undermined the façade of an “all-American” political movement. But it was the affairs uncovered by the bureau that exposed King as a moral reprobate who inaugurated the age of diversity, equity, and inclusion.

Despite the happy talk about judging people by the “content of their character,” King sought to force companies working in black communities to hire a certain percentage of black employees—the very definition of affirmative action and racial quotas. “If a city has a 30 percent Negro population, then it is logical to assume that Negroes should have at least 30 percent of the jobs in any particular company, and jobs in all categories rather than only in menial areas,” King said. From janitorial work to board rooms and bankers and professors. It’s easy to see how King paved the road for people like Ibram X. Kendi.

“Full equality, King said, would require not merely the elimination of legal segregation, but the far broader achievement of ‘untrammeled opportunity for every person to fulfill his total individual capacity,’” recalled Garrow. For King, John Kennedy’s civil rights bill wasn’t nearly enough. “Housing and employment opportunities seem most critical—if any priority can be assigned to the many ills the Negro suffers,” King stated.

Nor is it obvious that King intended for any such “diversity” programs to be temporary. In fact, there is more evidence that he had in mind the radical and permanent transformation of American society. King even criticized figures like Booker T. Washington as naïve for preaching that blacks should focus on self-help. “I do not share the notion that he was an Uncle Tom who compromised for the sake of keeping the peace,” wrote King. “Washington’s error was that he underestimated the structures of evil; as a consequence his philosophy of pressureless persuasion only served as a springboard for racist Southerners to dive into deeper and more ruthless oppression of the Negro.” Even here, the language of “structural” and “systemic” racism requiring radical political surgery is evident.

King explicitly called for lawfare to change the U.S. legal system and engineer social behavior and attitudes. “Let us never succumb to the temptation of believing that legislation and judicial decrees play only minor roles in solving this problem,” said King in 1962. “Morality cannot be legislated, but behavior can be regulated. Judicial decrees may not change the heart, but they can restrain the heartless.”

Among those “heartless,” King counted “white moderates” who were sympathetic but ultimately queasy about the true cost of King’s not-so-colorblind crusade. “I had hoped that the white moderate would understand that law and order exist for the purpose of establishing justice, and that when they fail to do this,” King wrote, “they become dangerously structured dams that block the flow of social progress.” There is little difference between this rhetoric against recalcitrant whites and what you might read today from Kendi or some other racial huckster.

The only people who might be surprised by any of this are those unaware of the disconnect between King’s public persona as a humble, decent minister and the reality of his moral depravity, perfectly conveyed by the recently unveiled atrocity in Boston. But given King’s centrality in the liberal moral pantheon, where he towers above even Washington himself, the ineluctability of a reckoning is doubtful. That day will not come until enough people take up the iconoclast’s hammer and begin to do to King’s legacy with their own hands what his acolytes have done to the history and heroes of America.

 
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King was more than a sexual predator. He inaugurated the age of anti-whiteness and the “diversity, equity, and inclusion” regime. He supported affirmative action and racial quotas, contrary to conservative fairytales that cling to King’s blather about character over skin color. He gladly accepted help from known communists and was, in fact, funded by them.
Sounds like he would fit in well with the modern left.
 
King was more than a sexual predator.

So, he was tried, right? Charged?

...someone called the cops, at least?

There's absolutely no reason for me to change the way I evaluate sexual assault allegations, and there should be plenty to criticize King about (like being in bed with communists) that doesn't rely on manipulative charges like these. It's smarmy to say this and then repeatedly refer to the rape that would make him a sexual predator as "alleged". I can't not see this as a deliberate tightrope walk ("sexual predator" is like "sex pest" in that it isn't a legal designation, and can be stretched-- it'd be different if he called him a "sex offender"), and since the man is dead and can't sue for libel, it's likely a walk done for rhetorical and moral reasons.

The main complaint of Garrow’s critics amounts to something like this: the FBI wanted to discredit King, so naturally, the documents, transcripts, and summaries reviewed by Garrow are tainted to that effect. However, Garrow notes throughout his article that the people in charge of surveilling King operated under the assumption that these things wouldn’t see the light of day and, therefore, had little reason to embellish and deceive.
The FBI doesn't surveil people in order to broadcast their findings.

Despite the happy talk about judging people by the “content of their character,” King sought to force companies working in black communities to hire a certain percentage of black employees—the very definition of affirmative action and racial quotas. “If a city has a 30 percent Negro population, then it is logical to assume that Negroes should have at least 30 percent of the jobs in any particular company, and jobs in all categories rather than only in menial areas,” King said. From janitorial work to board rooms and bankers and professors. It’s easy to see how King paved the road for people like Ibram X. Kendi.
This is what I mean-- this is something he provably said, and it's very in line with the "progressive" movement as we know it. His wife, at least, said that they were prepared to pursue other causes like gay marriage and "pro-choice" after civil rights. But when you talk about alleged rape that was never even brought to cops, you just make a mess of what you have to say. Is it not bad enough that he was being bankrolled by communists, or that he was a farce of a minister (he denied the divinity of Christ and tried to co-opt the Gospel for strictly non-religious social purposes)?

When one starts playing footsies with salacious stuff that is very much unconfirmed, I can't help but suspect them as a fed meant to discredit criticism of MLK and his activism as opposed to the guy that wants to share "the truth they won't tell you in the classroom!".

Among those “heartless,” King counted “white moderates” who were sympathetic but ultimately queasy about the true cost of King’s not-so-colorblind crusade. “I had hoped that the white moderate would understand that law and order exist for the purpose of establishing justice, and that when they fail to do this,” King wrote, “they become dangerously structured dams that block the flow of social progress.” There is little difference between this rhetoric against recalcitrant whites and what you might read today from Kendi or some other racial huckster.
That's a fallacious comparison, though. It doesn't matter if Kendi would have said it-- he's right, and barring that, it makes sense for his purposes that he said something like this. People that only offer their sympathy only want to assuage themselves. They became unsure that they're "good" people and want to make sure by repeating some special phrase that's acknowledged by those to whom they offer it, but they don't want to exert the energy in committing in any material way because that involves a palpable sacrifice on their part.

It's like with the people "speaking out" against the current transgender zeitgeist. They feel "uncomfortable" with it, but they're still going to give credence to the gender ideology that justifies transgendered people. They're still going to use the "preferred pronouns" that transgendered people insist they use for them. They're still going to vote for the very people that facilitate said gender ideology wherever they can. They express sympathy for the cause, but they're blatantly half-hearted.

It's an application of a general principle that deserves more than "that's what Kendi would have said!".
 
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the virgin "malcom" vs DOCTOR MARTIN LUTHER CHAD JR
 
Quite frankly MLK didn't give a shit about economics and I think he even said as much. However, from the economic remarks we made I would say while MLK wasn't a communist (He just associated himself with the Civil Rights movement which was infested by commies thanks to Active Measures. However apparently a lot of Active Measures programs were focused on sabotaging MLK and making Americans think he either was part of the KKK or a Soviet Asset to spread seeds of distrust) he definitely was a socialist:

Call it democracy, or call it democratic socialism, but there must be a better distribution of wealth within this country for all God's children.

However, he also was pretty clearly against moral relativism and said the reason he didn't like Communism was its relativism which is closest to based thing he said:

I think we have been in the mountain of moral and ethical relativism long enough. To dwell in this mountain has become something of a fad these days, so we have come to believe that morality is a matter of group consensus. We attempt to discover what is right by taking a sort of gallup poll of the majority opinion. Everybody is doing it, so it must be all right, and therefore we are caught in the clutches of conformity... In a sense, we are no longer concerned about the ten commandments-they are not too important. Everybody is busy, as I have said so often, trying to obey the eleventh commandment: "Thou shalt not get caught." And so, according to this view, it is all right to lie with a bit of finesse. It's all right to exploit, but be a dignified exploiter. It's all right to even hate, but dress your hate up into garments of love and make it appear that you are loving when you are actually hating. This type of moral and ethical relativism is sapping the very life's blood of the moral and spiritual life of our nation and our world. And I am convinced that if we are to be a great nation, and if we are to solve the problems of the world we must come out of this mountain. We have been in it too long. For if man fails to reorientate his life around moral and ethical values he may well destroy himself by the misuse of his own instrument.
...
There is also the danger that our system can lead to tragic exploitation. We must come out of the mountain and be concerned about a more humane and just economic order. And I say, this afternoon, that we cannot solve this problem byturning to Communism. Communism is based on an ethical relativism and a metaphysical materialism that no Christian can accept. I do believe that in America we must use our vast resources of wealth to bridge the gulf between abject, deaden-ing poverty and superfluous, inordinate wealth. God has left enough space in this universe for all of his children to have the basic necessities of life.

Even in this speech he was a socialist economically, that pretty clear-cut, however beging against moral relativism is still a commendable belief (Aside for showing he himself never followed what he preached). As a side note, apparently he did say some based stuff about women or gays however so he was socially conservative. However, there were more based African Americans like Booker T or Sowell or even Carson who also weren't constantly having affairs.

The biggest issue I have is he was a godawful and beyond heretical when it came to Christianity. As shown by his affairs and willingness to be even within 2 degrees of separation of communists, he behaved unchristian. However his theology was completely blasphemous. He denied the divinity of Christ, the Trinity, the resurrection, miracles, everything. He is as much of a Christian as the Dalai Lama is. That alone makes me gravely distrust him because it makes all of his rhetoric come off as dishonest charlatanry of a self-absorbed relativist heretic.
 
January 1964. The historic Willard Hotel, on Pennsylvania Avenue, just east of the White House. A group of men, including some ministers, gather in a room with young female parishioners. They discuss which of the women would be suitable for various sex acts, each more debased than the last. When one of the girls raises her voice in disapproval at the talk, a Baptist minister forcibly rapes her as another minister of the gospel “looked on, laughed and offered advice.”

The man who laughed was Martin Luther King Jr., according to author and historian David Garrow. Nine months after that alleged rape, on October 14, 1964, King was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

I got a hold of a digital copy of this book, the 1987 edition, and I cannot for the life of me find any direct reference to this incident. I searched Willard, rape, sex, Nobel, and I skimmed the section during which this incident allegedly took place (the book is written as a linear chronology). I did, however, find this. This is from pages 372-374 if you want to check it yourself:

Despite the bright prospects in Selma, Martin King was depressed. He told Ralph Abernathy during their January 2 trip to Selma that he should be prepared to take over as president of SCLC, since he, King, might meet his own end before the campaign concluded. Then, two days after he returned home, Caretta found and opened a thin box containing a reel of tape that had been received at SCLC headquarters a month earlier. Staff members had assumed it was a recording of one of King's speeches and put it aside for Caretta, who collected them, but upon playing it, she realized that this was not a speech. On some of the tape was her husband's voice, but his remarks certainly had not been delivered to any public audience. Furthermore, the box also contained an anonymous threatening letter:

KING,
In view of your low grade . . . I will not dignify your name with either a Mr. or a Reverend or a Dr. And, your last name calls to mind only the type of King such as King Henry the VIII. . . .
King, look into your heart. You know you are a complete fraud and a great liability to all of us Negroes. White people in this country have enough frauds of their own but I am sure they don't have one at this time that is anywhere near your equal. You are no clergyman and you know it. I repeat you are a colossal fraud and an evil, vicious one at that. You could not believe in God. . . . Clearly you don't believe in any personal moral principles.
King, like all frauds your end is approaching. You could have been our greatest leader. You, even at an early age have turned out to be not a leader but a dissolute, abnormal moral imbecile. We will now have to depend on our older leaders like Wilkins [,] a man of character [,] and thank God we have others like him. But you are done. Your "honorary" degrees, your Nobel Prize (what a grim farce) and other awards will not save you. King, I repeat you are done.
No person can overcome facts, not even a fraud like yourself. . . . I repeat—no person can argue successfully against facts. You are finished. . . . Satan could not do more. What incredible evilness. . . . King you are done.
The American public, the church organizations that have been helping—Protestant, Catholic and Jews will know you for what you are—an evil, abnormal beast. So will others who have backed you. You are done.
King, there is only one thing left for you to do. You know what this is. You have just 34 days in which to do (this exact number has been selected for a specific reason, it has definite practical significant
[sic]). You are done. There is but one way out for you. You better take it before your filthy, abnormal fraudulent self is bared to the nation.

Surprised and shocked, Caretta called her husband, and King summoned several confidants—Abernathy, Young, Joseph Lowery, and Chicago lawyer Chauncey Eskridge—to listen to the tape and examine the frightening letter. King and his aides had little doubt about the origin of the package: J. Edgar Hoover's FBI. The material on the tape—dirty jokes and bawdy remarks King had made a year earlier at Washington's Willard Hotel, plus the sounds of people engaging in sex—had obviously been acquired by bugging King's hotel rooms. Their surmise was correct: The embarrassing recording, and the threatening letter that seemed to suggest King commit suicide, had been prepared at the behest of Assistant FBI Director William C. Sullivan just two days after Hoover's public attack on King in mid-November. Sullivan had instructed the Bureau's laboratory to prepare a tape containing the "highlights" of the many recordings of King that the Bureau had garnered over the preceding ten months. Then Sullivan composed the threatening letter, and directed one of his agents to fly to Miami with it. On November 21—thirty-four days before Christmas—the agent arrived in Miami, phoned Sullivan for further instructions, and was ordered to mail the package to King at SCLC headquarters.

this is the citation given:

17. Ebony 1/70, pp. 40-50; Oates, Trumpet, p. 329; Garrow, FBI, pp. 125-26, 133-34; SAC Atlanta to Director, 1/5 & 6/65 , 100- 106670-71 5 , 716; Murphy Report, pp. 44-45; Young in Raines, My Soul, pp. 427-28 ; Howell, "Interview with Young," pp. 17-18.

the book follows up by describing MLK's sexual habits in detail, which are somewhat at odds with the alleged rape:

The FBI's frightening threat sent King into an even worse state of mind. He became so nervous and upset that he could not sleep, and was certain that the Bureau would do anything to ruin him. "They are out to break me," he told one close friend over a wiretapped phone line. "They are out to get me, harass me, break my spirit." The most intimate details of his personal life, King said, ought to be no business of the FBI's. "What I do is only between me and my God." Neither his relatives nor his aides pressed him about the contents of the tape, but their reserve could not relieve the severe emotional tension King was experiencing. Caretta later laughed off questions about the tape, saying, "I couldn't make much out of it, it was just a lot of mumbo jumbo," but on one occasion she revealed more clearly why she had not confronted her hus band with angry questions about the tape:

During our whole marriage we never had one single serious discussion about either of us being involved with another person. . . . If I ever had any suspicions . . . I never would have even mentioned them to Martin. I just wouldn't have burdened him with anything so trivial . . . all that other business just didn't have a place in the very high-level relationship we enjoyed.

Unfortunately, Martin King, as a small number of close friends knew, had certain compelling needs that could not be satisfied within a "very high-level relationship." Serious marital differences already existed over King's insistence on giving away the Nobel money, his demand that the family live in the most modest circumstances possible, and his belief that Caretta's primary role was to stay home and raise the children. Out weighing them all, however, was the fact that there were some things Martin King badly needed that he could not find at home. Now that King faced the threat of having his personal life exposed in excruciating detail to the entire nation, the inner pressures were worse than ever.

King already realized that his private life was no secret. Many movement activists were aware of his various sexual involvements with a number of different women, and James Farmer was not the only person who had cautioned King about the serious damage that the proliferating stories could do. CUCRL Director Wiley Branton raised the problem directly one day. "'I think you ought to know what it is some people have come to me with and have said, and I feel obligated to at least tell you what's being said.'" Movement colleagues "did not want to see King hurt in any way, and they were trying in some way to get him to come to grips with whatever those problems were." Branton did not ask King for any response, and King had little to say. Another friend broached the subject of his compulsive sexual athleticism with him after being prompted by a worried mutual acquaintance. "'I'm away from home twenty-five to twenty-seven days a month,"' King answered. '"Fucking's a form of anxiety reduction.'"

Three particular relationships had flowered to the status of something more than occasional one-night stands, and for almost the past two years King had grown closer and closer to one of those women, whom he saw almost daily. That relationship, rather than his marriage, increasingly became the emotional centerpiece of King's life, but it did not eliminate the incidental couplings that were a commonplace of King's travels. Some longtime friends viewed it as "a natural, human concomitant" of the tense, fast-paced life King had led for almost a decade. Others thought of it as standard ministerial practice in a context where intimate pastor parishioner relationships long had been winked at, and where King and theology school classmates joshed openly about their success in "counseling" attractive women. Some activists considered King's pattern typical of the overall movement—"this was not at all a sour-faced, pietistic" endeavor, Michael Harrington remembered. "Everybody was out getting laid." King's opportunities, however, were virtually limitless, as one staffer learned at a suburban New York fund-raising party. "I watched women making passes at Martin Luther King. I could not believe what I was seeing in white Westchester women. . . . It was unbelievable. . . . They would walk up to him and they would sort of lick their lips and hint, and [hand him] notes. . . . After I saw that thing that evening, I didn't blame him."

King's closest friends accepted and indeed respected his attitude toward women. "He loved beautiful women , " one longtime family intimate remembered. "The girls he 'dated' were just like models . . . the girls were tall stallions, all usually were very fair, never dark. He was really a Casanova . . . but [with] a quiet dignity. He would give the girls respect. " At home and at the office, however, King operated on very traditional assumptions. Caretta openly complained about her husband's insistence that she take care of the home and family and not become involved in movement activities. "I wish I was more a part of it," she told one interviewer. "Martin didn't want her to get too active," Andrew Young recalled. Bernard Lee put it more bluntly. "Martin . . . was absolutely a male chauvinist. He believed that the wife should stay home and take care of the babies while he'd be out there in the streets." Dorothy Cotton saw it regularly. " He would have had a lot to learn and a lot of growing to do" concerning women's rights. "I'm always asked to take the notes, I'm always asked to go fix Dr. King some coffee. I did it, too," but she fully realized "the male chauvinism that existed within the movement." "They were sexist male preachers" and "grew up in a sexist culture. . . . I really loved Dr. King but I know that that streak was in him also."

King's sexual behavior stood a t great distance from his professed beliefs about sexuality, and the contradictions created painful and at times overwhelming guilt. "What God creates is good and . . . must be used properly and not abused," King told one interviewer:

Sex is basically sacred when it is properly used and marriage is man's greatest prerogative in the sense that it is through and in marriage that God gives man the opportunity to aid him in his creative activity. Therefore, sex must never be abused in the loose sense that it is often abused in the modern world.

King's pronouncements on sexuality could be harsh: "Modern man has strayed to the far countries of secularism, materialism, sexuality and racial injustice." He spoke of "the psychological problems that bring the looseness into being," and decried "the causal basis of sexual promiscuity, the deep anxieties and frustration and confusion of modern life which lead to the abuses." Sex might indeed be anxiety-reducing, but King considered himself a sinner for being unable to ward off those needs. "Each of us is two selves, " he told his Ebenezer congregation:

And the great burden of life is to always try to keep that higher self in command. Don't let the lower self take over. . . . Every now and then you'll be unfaithful to those that you should be faithful to. It's a mixture in human nature. . . . Because we are two selves, there is a civil war going on within all of us. . . . "

Two days after discovering the FBI's threatening letter and embarrassing tape, King preached at Atlanta University. He spoke about "disarming the whole world," and how war, along with racism and poverty, was one of the three basic evils that man must eliminate. But, King warned, "When you stand up against entrenched evil, you must be prepared to suffer a little more. I cannot promise you that if you stand up against the evils of our day, you will not have some dark and agonizing moments," moments that King knew all too well.
 
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MLK was a Communist who incited negro rioting in the cities of America under instructions from Moscow. Source is some retired policeman, but it seems as good an explanation as any.
He spoke against rioting, in fact.

Everyone talks about "rioting is the language of the unheard" but they don't bother talking about how he explains immediately after that the only person who loses from rioting is the black man. The former statement is him sympathizing with rioters, but he doesn't do more than that.
 
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