04-16-2024  11:33 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather
Earl Ofari Hutchinson of the Last Word
Published: 17 January 2007

Last spring, immigration rights groups loudly demanded that civil right groups take part in immigration rights marches and endorse immigration reform bills in Congress. They branded the immigration battle the new civil rights movement and insisted that if Martin Luther King Jr. were alive he would have backed up their claim. It's risky to say what King would have done on that score.
Yet it's almost certain that, given King's passionate support of the mostly Latino farm workers movement in California, he would have regarded the immigration reform fight as a bonafide civil rights battle. And that would get him in hot water today with many Blacks.
In the 1960s, things were much simpler for civil rights leaders. Their fight was against bigoted sheriffs and mobs. Civil rights leaders firmly staked out the moral high ground for the modern day civil rights movement. It was classic good versus evil.
The gory news scenes of baton-welding racist Southern sheriffs, fire hoses, police dogs and Klan violence unleashed against peaceful Black protesters sickened many White Americans. Blacks had the sympathy and goodwill of millions of Whites, politicians and business leaders, and even a president that shouted, "We shall overcome," the slogan of the civil rights movement.
But those days are long gone. Instead, civil rights leaders must confront the indifference, even outright hostility, of many White and non-White Americans to affirmative action, increased spending on social programs and civil rights marches. They confront a Bush administration that the overwhelming majority of Blacks regard as an inherent enemy of civil rights.
As America unraveled in the 1960s in the anarchy of urban riots, campus takeovers and antiwar street battles, the civil rights movement and its leaders fell apart, too. When they broke down the racially restricted doors of corporations, government agencies and universities, middle-class Blacks, not the poor, rushed headlong through them.
Four decades later, there are now two Black Americas: The fat, rich and comfortable Black America of Oprah Winfrey, Robert Johnson, Bill Cosby, Condoleezza Rice, Denzel Washington and the legions of millionaire Black athletes and entertainers, businesspersons and professionals who have grabbed a big slice of America's pie.
The Black America of the poor is fragmented and politically rudderless. The chronic problems of gang and drug violence, family breakdown, police abuse, the soaring incarceration rate of young Black males, the mounting devastation of HIV and AIDS disease in Black communities, abysmally failing inner city public schools have made things even worse for them. The mostly middle-class civil rights leaders at times have seemed clueless on how to get a handle on those problems.
The political rise of, and soaring influence of Black conservatives, and the furious internal fights among Blacks over gay marriage, gay rights and abortion have tormented, perplexed and forced civil rights leaders — who are mostly liberal Democrats — to confront their own gender and political biases. They have tried to strike a halting, tenuous balance between their liberalism and the social conservatism of many Blacks.
The endorsement of an anti-gay march by one of King's daughters a couple of years ago was another instance of a troubling issue that King didn't have to deal with. She evoked her father's name during the march and was gently rebuked by Coretta Scott King. Though Coretta almost certainly spoke for King in championing gay rights, he still would have been in a bind over how to deal with a family disagreement on whether gay rights is a legitimate civil rights issue or not.
Civil rights leaders will continue to walk a tight rope between the competing and sometimes contradictory needs of Black conservatives, gay rights backers and immigration reform advocates, while still trying to be a voice for the Black poor.
These are weighty challenges that would perplex and frustrate King if he were alive. It was so much easier when the challenge was water hoses, police dogs and Bull Connor.

BlackNews.com columnist Earl Ofari Hutchinson is a political analyst and social issues commentator.

Recently Published by The Skanner News

  • Default
  • Title
  • Date
  • Random

The Skanner Foundation's 38th Annual MLK Breakfast