[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 58 (Tuesday, April 4, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H2634-H2635]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MILITARISM, MATERIALISM, AND RACISM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Tennessee (Mr. Cohen) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, this is the 49th anniversary of the
assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Dr. King, Jr., was, sadly, struck down in Memphis, Tennessee, by an
aberrant individual who wanted to kill him and chased him all over the
country. It so happened that Memphis was the spot that he had that
final opportunity.
In Memphis, there will be activities today celebrating the life of
Dr. King and commitments to community service in his spirit.
Ironically, today, while it is the 49th anniversary of his
assassination, it is also the 50th anniversary of his greatest speech,
in my opinion. Not the ``I've Been to the Mountaintop'' speech that he
made the night before in Memphis, the great speech where he said: I
have been to the mountaintop, and I may not get there with you; but I
want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the
promised land.
His greatest speech, in my opinion, was the speech at the Riverside
Church in New York, in Manhattan, on April 4 of 1967, when he spoke of
the three isms that bother this country and are the enemies of this
country: militarism, materialism, and racism.
The speech was called ``Beyond Vietnam.'' A prescient Dr. King saw
the need to get out of Vietnam, to make a unilateral step, cease the
bombing, save lives. He was indeed right about that. We should have
gotten out of Vietnam then, but we didn't.
It was months later that Richard Nixon interfered with the peace
process for political reasons and got word to Vietnam not to
participate; that they might get a better deal from Nixon; and that
stopped President Johnson from possibly concluding the war in 1968.
The racism, the militarism, and the materialism are still pervasive.
Dr. King wouldn't like what he sees today. We have a budget giving 56
or $57 billion extra to the military and cutting away from diplomacy
efforts, foreign aid efforts that militate against war. And it takes
away from funding for people, African Americans and poor people in
America, who need government assistance.
That is part of what Dr. King was concerned about in this ``Beyond
Vietnam'' speech. And here it is 50 years later and we still suffer
with the same tight budget and the same misguided priorities.
We have an Attorney General who is looking at ending consent decrees
on police violence against African Americans in Baltimore, Maryland,
and also in Ferguson, a suburb of St. Louis, Missouri.
We are going the wrong direction, and it is sad that one of our
greatest prophets and one of our greatest leaders told us about it 50
years ago.
Have we learned.
The disparity in wealth is greater than ever in this country. The
rich are getting richer and richer and richer. It is incomprehensible
that there are billionaires--and there are lots of them out there--and
that the tax breaks that we offer in the Tax Code are going to give
millionaires and billionaires hundreds of thousands and millions of
dollars of tax breaks at the expense of
[[Page H2635]]
government programs for people who don't have enough.
There is no consideration of a minimum wage. And Dr. King was strong
on believing that if people worked a full-time job, they shouldn't be
paid a part-time wage.
{time} 1015
We need to go a lot further. We need to reflect on Dr. King's
Riverside speech and understand that it is still a guide for us, and we
need to look at a more understanding budget that cares about people
first and not the military industrial complex that President Eisenhower
warned us about; that we try to avoid wars through diplomacy and
foreign aid and goodwill; and that we support our people with WIC
programs and LIHEAP programs and Meals on Wheels and health care and
public education; and that we try to give tax breaks to the middle
class--large tax breaks, and not tax breaks to those who already have
enough.
Thank you, Dr. King. You served us well. We mourn your loss. We
remember your words.
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