173 Congressional Record (May 29, 1968), p. E4784.
174 Congressional Record (May 25, 1961), pp. 8349-8350. The Congress of Racial Equality-an organization that states its objectives are for bringing about ?racial equality,? as noted by its name-has an interesting way of showing it. Its constitution explicitly states that the positions that whites can maintain in its organization are limited. Jared Taylor, Paved with Good Intentions: The Failure of Race Relations in Contemporary America (New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1992), p. 235. Will Maslow, who was on CORE’s Excecutive Committee and was also the executive director of the American Jewish Congress, experienced the hate that CORE has firsthand. During a meeting he attended, a black teacher and fellow member told him that ?Hitler had not killed enough Jews.? Because of that incident, Maslow resigned. Wilmot Robertson, The Dispossessed Majority (Cape Canaveral, Florida: Howard Allen, 1972), p. 220.
175 Carl Rowan, Breaking Barriers: A Memoir (Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1991), p. 303.
176 Carl Rowan, Breaking Barriers, p. 290.
177 Carl Rowan, Breaking Barriers, p. 302.
178 Carl Rowan, Breaking Barriers, p. 302.
179 Quayle et al., Martin Luther King, Jr., p. 35. The Dialectical Society, which was comprised of only Blacks while King attended college, presumably derived its name from Karl Marx and Friedrich Engel’s asinine theory of transforming civilization into a ?classless society,? which was called ?dialectical materialism.? (Dialectical materialism simply amounts to the people in government telling you how many socks you can keep while they keep your extras to themselves, which actually happened in one communist nation.)
180 Congressional Record (May 29, 1968), p. E4785.
181 It was probably not too difficult for the Communists to ?work for a change of the passive attitude of the NAACP,? hoping to have the NAACP follow the communist doctrines more diligently. W.E.B. DuBois, one of the founders of the NAACP, was a certified communist, according to the August 5, 1964, edition of the New York Journal American .
182 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3005.
183 These organizations and their affiliations are also listed in the Congressional Record (May 29, 1968), pp. E4783-E4788.
184 Gus Hall was the ?general secretary of the [Communist] party.? Testimony of John Edgar Hoover, Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation, United States Department of Justice, Before the House Subcommittee on Appropriations on February 10, 1966, p. 47.
185 Karl Prussion, Documentary Report on Martin Luther King [Jr.].
186 Congressional Record (May 29, 1968), p. E4785.
187 Congressional Record (May 29, 1968), p. E4785.
188 Congressional Record (May 29, 1968), p. E4784.
189 Congressional Record (April 5, 1967), H3529.
190 Congressional Record (April 5, 1967), H3529.
191 Congressional Record (May 16, 1968), p. E4311.
192 Congressional Record (September 13, 1965), p. [S]22708.
193 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3007.
194 Congressional Record (April 23, 1968), p. E3205.
195 Congressional Record (October 4, 1967), p. H13016.
196 Congressional Record (May 2, 1967), p. H4973.
197 Congressional Record (May 2, 1967), p. H4973.
198 Congressional Record (April 23, 1968), p. E3205.
199 Congressional Record (April 10, 1967), p. A1684.
200 Congressional Record (April 10, 1967), p. A1684. In King’s jeremiad, he decided not to include several paragraphs of his original speech. One paragraph made the ludicrous charge that U.S. policy would lead to an American colony in Vietnam. It also suggested that the Vietnam War would goad China into a war which would permit the U.S. to bomb Peking’s nuclear installations. There is little doubt that it was written merely to make people sympathetic to his cause. Congressional Record (April 5, 1967), p. H3581.
201 Congressional Record (April 10, 1967), p. A1684.
202 Congressional Record (April 10, 1967), p. A1684. If he would have spent as much time to look up facts as he spent on making his rhetoric, King would have noticed that black troops made up 11 percent of the enlisted personnel serving in Vietnam, and 10.5 percent of the general population at the time was black. Congressional Record (October 4, 1967), p. H13006. Also, blacks accounted for 9.8 percent of the U.S. armed forces who died in combat during Vietnam. Jerry Sullivan, ?Today’s American Military Is Fighting Racism, Not Breeding It,? The Cincinnati Post (March 25, 1994), p. 15A.
203 Congressional Record, (September 20, 1965), p. A5300.
204 Congressional Record, (September 20, 1965), p. A5300.
205 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3005.
206 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. H2863.
207 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. H2863.
208 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3007, citing Human Events (April 1, 1967), p. 12.
209 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3007, citing Wanderer (November 17, 1966).
210 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3007, citing The Tulsa Tribune (November 8, 1966).
211 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3008.
212 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3008.
213 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3008.
214 Congressional Record (April 23, 1968), pp. E3204-E3205.
215 Congressional Record (April 23, 1968), p. E3205.
216 Congressional Record (May 29, 1968), p. E4786.
217 Congressional Record (October 4, 1967), p. H13006.
218 Congressional Record (October 4, 1967), p. H13006.
219 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3005, citing theWashington Observer Newsletter (February 15, 1966). Attorney General Nicholas De B. Katzenbach initially ?lied and denied? that the file existed in the presence of Lyndon Johnson, who was President at the time, in the White House. However, the House Committee on Un-American Activities was able to obtain a copy of the report that Katzenbach initially said did not exist.
220 Quayle et al., Martin Luther King, Jr., p. 58. King obtained some of his money ?legitimately.? For instance, Jimmy Hoffa gave King a check for $25,000. Congressional Record (May 29, 1968), p. E4784.
221 Quayle et al., Martin Luther King, Jr., pp. 74, 94, 95.
222 Congressional Record (May 16, 1968), p. E4310.
223 Congressional Record (May 28, 1968), p. E4752.
224 Congressional Record (May 9, 1967), p. A2293.
225 Congressional Record (May 9, 1967), p. A2293.
226 Congressional Record (May 28, 1968), p. E4751.
227 Senator Clifford Hansen of Wyoming said, ?Mr. President, yesterday the House concurred in the Senate-amended civil rights bill. The Members of the other body were under great pressures. There were those who advised against hasty action which might be interpreted as yielding to violence and rewarding the rioters. At the other extreme, it was argued that violence and racial disorder was bound to spread ever wider over American cities if the bill was not passed.? Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E2978. Many politicians probably did, in fact, sign the bill just to shut up the rioters. It was probably more than mere coincidence that the bill was accepted during the fires of hate that were fueled by the rioters.
228 Congressional Record (April 10, 1968), p. H2740.
229 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), E2926.
230 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), E2926.
231 Congressman Watson, on April 8, 1968, described the rationale behind the rioters: ?These rioters and looters were not mourning the death of King; but, as the mayor of Washington said as he rode around, these rioters were not in an attitude of mourning, but they were laughing as they were looting and burning down stores.? Congressional Record (April 8, 1968), p. H2669. It appears that the looters were just looking for a reason to destroy, and they found one.
232 Quayle et al., Martin Luther King, Jr., p. 118.
233 Congressional Record (Aprill 11, 1968), p. E2979.
234 Congressional Record (April 23, 1968), p. E3242.
235 Congressional Record (April 23, 1968), p. E3242.
236 Congressional Record (April 23, 1968), p. E3243.
237 Congressional Record (May 16, 1968), p. E4307; citing John Milton, ?Black Power Joins `Poor’ Ranks,? Columbus Citizen-Journal..
238 Congressional Record (May 28, 1968), p. E4754.
239 Congressional Record (May 28, 1968), p. E4754.
240 Congressional Record (April 23, 1968), p. E3242.
241 Congressional Record (April 8, 1968), p. H2669. There had been an earlier planned attempt against King’s life that had failed. According to the FBI, a ?source indicated that King was to have been killed when the Statue of Liberty was supposed to have been destroyed.? Carson, Malcolm X, p. 367. The attempt to destroy the Statue of Liberty was done by the Black Liberation Front, who wanted to divide the U.S. George Carpozi, Jr., ?The Cop Who Saved Liberty,? Real (May 1965), p. 4.
242 Newsweek (December 24, 1990), p. 20.
243 Life (April 1993), p. 59.
244 Life (April 1993), p. 62.
245 USA Today (January 15, 1993), p. 11A.
246 In the same article, she lambastes former President Bush for the Gulf War, seemingly suggesting (in an almost paranoid tone) as if the entire war’s purpose was to hurt ?brown people.? Reynolds said, ?Internationally, President Ambush and Saddam Insane are trapped in a violent game of machismo in which brown people lose and chunks of integrity fall from our national soul.? USA Today (January 15, 1993), p. 13A.
247 The Cincinnati Post (February 19, 1993), p. 2C.
248 The Cincinnati Enquirer (August 29, 1993), pp. A1, A5. Some were disappointed at the number of people who attended. The rally that occurred in 1963 had a little over one-tenth of one percent of America’s population-more than three times the number that attended in 1993. In comparison, a little-known fireworks display that was held in Cincinnati, Ohio, on Labor Day had more than six times the number of people attending than the Washington, D.C., rally of 1993.
249 The Cincinnati Enquirer (August 29, 1993), pp. A1, A5.
250 The Cincinnati Enquirer (August 29, 1993), pp. A1, A5. Jackson claimed to have cradled Martin Luther King, Jr., shortly after King was shot. Of course, that was a lie. Irvine and Kincaid, Profiles of Deception, p. 100.
251 The Cincinnati Post (July 12, 1993), p. 2A.
252 ?Gay, Lesbian Group to Be Part of Inaugural Party,? The Cincinnati Enquirer (December 15, 1992), p. A3.
253 Traditional Values Coalition; 100 S. Anaheim Blvd., Suite 350; Anaheim, California 92805.
254 Gay Rights, Special Rights: Inside the Homosexual Agenda (Anaheim, California: Jeremiah Films, 1993).
255 Gay Rights, Special Rights.
256 Gay Rights, Special Rights.
257 Gay Rights, Special Rights. Apparently, the North American Man-Boy Lover Association (NAMBLA), a group of men with homosexual-pedophile tendencies, was one of the groups who attended the March on Washington. NAMBLA is one of the organizations that makes up the International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA), a coalition of 300 homosexual groups that exist in over 50 nations. The Economic and Social Council of the United Nations gave ILGA Non-Governmental Organizational status. However, the U.S. Mission threatened to change its vote because of NAMBLA being a member, which would cause ILGA’s NGO status to be debated again. At the time of this writing on ly 4 of the 35 U.S. homosexual groups who were members of ILGA supported NAMBLA’s expulsion. Duncan Osborne, ?Which Side Are We On?? The Village Voice (February 8, 1994), p. 13. The Mafia now sells child pornography to the pedophiles, thereby furthering the deviancy in the U.S. Goombata: The Improbable Rise and Fall of John Gotti and His Gang (Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1990), pp. 76, 236-237.
258 Gay Rights, Special Rights.
259 ?King’s Family Urges Action,? The Cincinnati Enquirer (January 19, 1993), p. A2.
260 ?King’s Family Urges Action,? The Cincinnati Enquirer.
261 Brian Duffy et al., ?Days of Rage,? U.S. News & World Report (May 11, 1992), p. 25.
262 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3004.
263 Congressional Record (April 11, 1968), p. E3004.
264 Congressional Record (May 29, 1968), E4784-4785.
265 Adam Parfrey, ed., Apocalypse Culture (Los Angeles: Feral House, 1990), pp. 218-219. G. Brock Chisholm, who was once the head of the World Federation of Mental Health, promulgated the United Nations’ Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization’s extremely strange goal: ?What people everywhere must do is practice birth control and miscegenation in order to create one race in one world under one government.? Ibid. In the past, Chisholm suggested that people who refuse to follow his ideology should be sent to mental institutions. He suggested that morality is a ?perversion? and that the citizens of the U.S. should rid themselves of the ?concept of right and wrong.? Chisholm suggested that the U.S. should strive for ?the re-interpretation and eventual eradication of the concept of right and wrong.? Also, Chisholm said that the citizens of the U.S. should give what they created to other nations so that there would be a ?redistribution of wealth.? John Stormer, None Dare Call It Treason (Florissant, Missouri: Liberty Bell Press, 1964), pp. 155-159, 162-163. It seems that the only people who were actually in need of a mental institution, however, judging from Chisholm’s absurd comments, were Chisholm and his comrades who supported, to put it lightly, some very bizarre ideas. However, he is probably in the care of a retirement home by now (if he is still alive), where he, apparently, belonged a long time ago.
266 Mokgethi Motlhabi, Challenge to Apartheid: Toward a Moral Resistance (Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1988), p. 144.
267 Motlhabi, Challenge to Apartheid, p. 146.
268 Motlhabi, Challenge to Apartheid, p. 61.
269 International Defence and Aid Fund, Nelson Mandela: The Struggle Is My Life (New York: Pathfinder Press, 1990).
270 Larry Martz et al., Newsweek (July 2, 1990), p. 19
271 ?Slayers of Top ANC Official Get Death Penalty,? The Columbus [Ohio] Dispatch (October 16, 1993), p. 4A. Hani was killed by some people who were not too fond of the idea of communism being applied to South Africa, and they were apprehended and given the death penalty.
272 Motlhabi, Challenge to Apartheid, p. 73. ?We have an important programme before us and it is important to carry it out very seriously without delay,? said Mandela.
273 USA Today (June 27, 1990), p. 11A. Bishop Desmond Tutu, who is black, once said that blacks should kill whites: ?Imagine what would happen if only 30 percent of domestic servants (in white South African households) would poison their employers’ food.? So, it should be no great surprise that he received the Nobel Peace Prize. Irvine and Kincaid, Profiles of Deception, p. 213.
274 ?South African Leaders Share Peace Prize,? The Columbus [Ohio] Dispatch (October 16, 1993), p. 2A.
275 Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini, head of the Inkantha Freedom Party, has asked de Klerk to assist the Zulus-8 million blacks-to regain a land of their own where they can rule themselves; and Zwelithini has warned that there may very well be a secession if his plea is not met. Bruce Nelan, ?Spoiling for a Victory,? Time (February 21, 1994), p. 36. ?I demand that you give the Zulu nation the opportunity to become free once again and to choose their own destiny,? said Zwelithini. De Klerk could not fathom why blacks would want to live a life of their own. ?I’m not in favor of secession for any part of South Africa,? said de Klerk. Associated Press, ?Zulu King Demands Independence, Land,? The Cincinnati Enquirer (February 15, 1994), p. A3. In Zimbabwe, which used to be the British colony Rhodesia before the whites handed over the government to blacks, the black vice president has recently asked the 80,000 whites who still reside there a small favor. Vice President Joshua Nkomo demanded that whites ?move out of our country now, before it’s too late.? ?Zimbabwe Vice President Tells Whites to Leave,? The Birmingham News (June 6, 1994), p. 5A.
276 ?Race to Defend Homeland Ends with Sudden Slayings,? The Cincinnati Enquirer (March 12, 1994), p. A2.
277 International Defence and Aid Fund, Nelson Mandela: The Struggle Is My Life (New York: Pathfinder Press, 1990), p. 173. When asked if he was a communist, Mandela replied, ?Well, I don’t know if I did become a communist.? Ibid., p. 91.
278 ?Akbar Muhammad Getting Big Time Results in Ghana,? Your Black Books Guide (April 1994), p. 18.
279 Associated Press, ?Farrakhan: Jews Plotting,? The Cincinnati Post (January 25, 1994), p. 2A. The African-American director Spike Lee has a similar opinion: ?Black South Africans gonna have to kill people. . . . Righteousness is gonna win out-from the barrel of a gun. . . . I saw those little kids [in South Africa] chanting, `One bullet, one [white] settler.’ I’ll be rejoicing. Who knows? We might see the same tactic here some day. . . . ? Barbara Harrison, ?Spike Lee Hates Your Cracker Ass,? Esquire (October 1992), p. 137.
280 Los Angeles Times, ?Multiracial Panel Takes Reins Until S. Africa Vote,? The Cincinnati Enquirer (December 8, 1993), p. A3.
281 Associated Press, ?U.S. Might Double Assistance,? The Cincinnati Enquirer (March 12, 1994), p. A2. Clinton and his comrades eventually decided to give South Africa $600 million a year over a period of three years after Mandela was elected, which he felt that U.S. taxpayers wanted to give. And, all boycotts that were used against South Africa were stopped. Because of this extra money being pumped into South Africa and the boycotts being stopped, it will give South Africans the temporary illusion that Mandela’s socialistic beliefs are working. However, when the handouts stop, it might just get nasty there.
282 Bruce Nelan, ?Spoiling for a Victory,? Time (February 21, 1994), p. 35.