April 6, 2025

MLK’s Voice Rings Loud As Trump Tries To Erase Black History – The Seattle Medium

By Stacy M. Brown, Senior National Correspondent
Fifty-seven years ago, an assassin’s bullet struck Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on a Memphis balcony, and in that single, devastating moment, the world lost a moral giant, and Black America lost one of its most powerful and courageous champions. April 4, 1968, didn’t just mark the end of a life, it ripped open the hearts of millions who had found hope in King’s dream, his faith, and his unrelenting pursuit of justice, equality, and peace. That loss remains fresh in the memory of those who understand that King’s legacy is not just historical, it is urgent, present, and needed now more than ever.
Today, as the MAGA movement pushes a whitewashed version of American history, and as the Trump administration and its far-right allies at the Heritage Foundation threaten to release so-called “unflattering” information about King, many see the attempt for what it is: a desperate, racist agenda that seeks to destroy truth and suppress the voices of those who dared to imagine a better America. No matter how loudly the architects of Project 2025 plot their dismantling of civil rights, diversity, equity, and inclusion—no matter how brazenly they peddle disinformation and try to erase the accomplishments of Black Americans and other people of color—King’s words still thunder across generations. His sermons and speeches remain sacred texts for the American conscience, impossible to silence, inconvenient to white supremacy, and unyielding in their moral clarity.
In 1956, from the pulpit, King warned in “Paul’s Letter to American Christians”:
“Oh America, how often have you taken necessities from the masses to give luxuries to the classes… You can use your powerful economic resources to wipe poverty from the face of the earth. God never intended for one group of people to live in superfluous inordinate wealth, while others live in abject deadening poverty.” For many, that sermon rings louder today as the current administration slashes programs for the poor while enriching the ultra-wealthy. It rings in the ears of every voter, activist, and dreamer who sees Project 2025 as an assault on progress and humanity.
In his iconic “I Have a Dream” speech in 1963, King didn’t mince words:
“We can never be satisfied as long as the Negro is the victim of the unspeakable horrors of police brutality… until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.” Police brutality still plagues Black communities. Voter suppression remains alive and well. Black children continue to be stripped of their selfhood. And some who sit in power seem all too eager to strip the word justice from every federal agency’s mission. King’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” reminds the comfortable that injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
“It is even more unfortunate that the city’s white power structure left the Negro community with no alternative,” King wrote. The MAGA movement’s calls to suppress protests, deny systemic racism, and erase uncomfortable truths from school curricula reflect that same white power structure—this time on a national scale. In 1964, during his “Nobel Peace Prize lecture,” King cautioned that technological advancement without moral advancement was dangerous. “There is a sort of poverty of the spirit which stands in glaring contrast to our scientific and technological abundance… We have not learned the simple art of living together as brothers,” he asserted. That spiritual poverty is evident in a political climate that prioritizes military aggression over human needs, censorship over dialogue, and authoritarianism over democracy.
By 1966, in his “Proud to be Maladjusted” speech, King declared:
“I never intend to adjust myself to racial segregation and discrimination… to economic conditions that will take necessities from the many to give luxuries to the few.” Many say if he were alive today, King would no doubt still be maladjusted. He would speak out against economic cruelty masked as policy and against those who demonize the poor while protecting billionaires. In “The Other America,” delivered in 1967, King said, “A riot is the language of the unheard. And what is it that America has failed to hear?” He might ask the same question now, as protests are criminalized and the root causes—poverty, inequality, state violence—are deliberately ignored.
In his “Three Evils of Society” sermon, King condemned militarism, racism, and economic exploitation. “Unemployment rages at a major depression level in the Black ghettos, but the bi-partisan response is an anti-riot bill rather than a serious poverty program,” he declared. That quote could be lifted straight into today’s headlines as military budgets swell and social safety nets shrink. Then came his “Beyond Vietnam” speech—his most controversial, but perhaps his most prophetic.
“If America’s soul becomes totally poisoned, part of the autopsy must read ‘Vietnam,’” King insisted. He warned then that militarism abroad infects democracy at home. The Trump administration’s embrace of global authoritarian regimes, its anti-immigrant agenda, and its disdain for diplomacy shows King’s warning was not heeded. And finally, just one day before his death, in “I’ve Been to the Mountaintop,” King declared, “All we say to America is to be true to what you said on paper… Somewhere, I read that the greatness of America is the right to protest for rights.”
Those words are a rallying cry in today’s political darkness. A reminder that freedom of speech, assembly, and the fight for justice are not fringe ideas. They are fundamental to what America claims to be. So, while Trump, with the guidance of Project 2025, attempts to rewrite reality, King’s words have already been written in the hearts of generations. And as long as injustice exists, his voice will echo—not just in Black America but throughout the world. “We are going on. We need all of you.”
© 2024, Tiloben Publishing Co., Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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