June 8, 2019
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
Those Martin Luther King Sex Abuse Tapes: Will Anything Happen?
Friends,
The news broke (in England) at the beginning of
last week that Pulitzer Prize winning biographer of the late Martin Luther King
Jr., Dr. David Garrow, had unearthed a cache of new documents, many supposedly
under strict lock-and-key at least until 2027, detailing some horrific cases of
sexual activity by King, as many as forty such incidents, and one in which King
stood by and watched and egged on a fellow black Baptist minister.
Here is the background of what happened: On
January 31, 1977, Federal District Judge John Lewis Smith signed a court order
that instructed the FBI to deposit all of its extensive electronic surveillance
material—audio tapes, notes accompanying, etc.—with the National Archives, and
sealing them for fifty years. However, as Garrow relates in a blockbuster
article (nearly 8,000 words, with documentation) in the English journal, Standpoint:
…in recent months, hundreds of never-before-seen FBI reports and
surveillance summaries concerning King have silently slipped into public view
on the Archives’ lightly-annotated and difficult-to-explore web site. This has
occurred thanks to the provisions of The President John F. Kennedy
Assassination Records Collection Act, which mandated the public release of tens
of thousands of government documents, many of which got swept up into
congressional investigations of US intelligence agencies predating Judge
Smith’s order. Winnowing the new King items from amidst the Archive’s 54,602
web-links, many of which lead to multi-document PDFs that are hundreds of pages
long, entailed weeks of painstaking work. [https://standpointmag.co.uk/issues/june-2019/the-troubling-legacy-of-martin-luther-king/]
In his long essay Garrow
continues his explanation of how supposed-to-be secret documents and tapes
became available to him:
Wiretap summaries…were
supposed to be sealed pursuant to Judge Smith’s 1977 order, but by then the
Department of Justice had forced the FBI to share many of its King records with
the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Activities, often called the Church
Committee after the name of its chairman, Idaho Democrat Frank Church. In turn,
all of the FBI’s documents relating to the Church Committee and the subsequent
House Select Committee on Assassinations came to be covered by the 1992 Kennedy
assassination records act.
Now, Garrow is not a
conservative, no right wing fanatic out to “besmirch” the reputation of the
late civil rights icon. Not at all.
He was—at least until this
article and its implications—a highly respected, liberal author and academic,
whose biography of King, Bearing the
Cross (1986), won him praise and a Pulitzer, and has been used as the basis
of film and screen adaptations.
But after his Standpoint essay, The Washington Post dropped the guillotine’s blade on him: he had
said and written too much, he was no longer a “respectable” (that is,
establishment liberal) historian, his findings were pronounced to be “dubious”
and “of little value.” Indeed, the Post found a whole slew of its favored
leftwing “historians” to literally denounce Garrow for his transgressions, even
though he had written that he believed these new revelations would not damage
King’s reputation [“No. Not at all. I don’t think that’s possible”]. [https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2019/05/30/irresponsible-historians-attack-david-garrows-mlk-allegations/?utm_term=.63596b697564]
The FBI recordings and notes
document as many as forty “sexual episodes” involving King, a married man, with
women, many of them “rough” and unnatural sex. But perhaps the most revolting occurred when
King and a fellow black pastor, Logan Kearse, were staying at the Willard Hotel
in Washington D.C., in early January 1964.
Garrow continues:
Kearse ‘had
brought to Washington several women ‘parishioners’ of his church”, a
newly-released summary document from [FBI Assistant Director William C.]
Sullivan’s personal file on King relates, and Kearse invited King and his
friends to come and meet the women. “The group met in his room and discussed which women
among the parishioners would be suitable for natural or unnatural sex acts.
When one of the women protested that she did not approve of this, the Baptist
minister immediately and forcibly raped her,” the typed summary states, parenthetically citing a
specific FBI document (100-3-116-762) as its source. “King looked on, laughed and offered advice,” Sullivan or one of his deputies then added in handwriting.
Professor
David Greenberg of Rutgers University, writing in the highly-respected Politico, June 4 [ https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2019/06/04/how-to-make-sense-of-the-shocking-new-mlk-documents-227042], raises a number of
serious questions about these new revelations and what they may portend not
just for the “King legacy” and its meaning, but also for how Americans view
their history. Unlike The Washington Post
and other zealously leftist media outlets who either attempted to ignore
the story, or else downplayed it as meaningless “speculation,” not based of
substantiated or confirmed fact, Greenberg—no conservative himself—understands that
this new documentation and its significance should be confronted. It could not
simply be explained away or swept under the carpet and ignored.
Certainly, as Greenberg admits, many of
our American heroes, despite their many virtues, have had “feet of clay,” have
had their faults. Nevertheless, we have
continued to admire them…at least, that has been the case until fairly recently,
when, it seems the fanatical Neo-Marxist social justice warriors have sought to
totally cleanse our culture and our country of practically all figures of historical significance, specifically if they were
white and male. Now no one is safe from the howling and frenzied mob of
brainwashed students and professional race-and-sex warriors.
And it is not just the statues to
Confederate volunteers who went off to war and died for their states, such as
the “Silent Sam” monument that was violently toppled by a crazed mob on the
campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on August 20, 2018,
or the equestrian monument to Robert E. Lee at Charlottesville, Virginia. Now
literally the existence or names of hundreds of statues, plaques, schools,
highways, and other symbols of historic figures, including of Founders such as
Washington, Jefferson and James Madison, are severely threatened with disposal
in the waste bin of history…and memory.
Will these new revelations affect King’s contemporary
position in America, a position and symbolism revered not only by the political
and cultural Left, but also by the pseudo-conservative establishment, who also
claim his legacy?
Not likely. The King case is unique. As
demonstrated by The Washington Post’s
strenuous attempt to discredit Garrow and defend King as a kind of plaster
saint, largely untouchable, but also illustrated by the reaction of the
dominant Neoconservatives (on Fox News), King’s status will remain sacrosanct
in the increasingly authoritarian culture and society where the new dogmas on race and sex reign supreme, and woe be to anyone who dares transgress or come
close to denying them.
Witness an episode on the Laura Ingraham
Show (May 29, 2019), after both the [London] Sunday Times and Daily Mail
had first reported the revelations. [See https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/fbi-tapes-reveal-martin-luther-kings-affairs-with-40-women-058h7k9wd
and https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7071713/FBI-tapes-Martin-Luther-King-Jr-40-affairs-laughed-friend-raped-parishioner.html] Dinesh D’Souza, who fancies himself an historian
of merit, but whose level of historical knowledge and comprehension is far less
than that of my intelligent cocker spaniel Jasper, attempted to explain that
all America’s black leaders historically were conservatives and Republicans: “[When I think of] The great black
Americans of our history I think of Frederick Douglass, Ida B. Wells, Harriet
Tubman and Booker T. Washington," he said during an interview with Laura
Ingraham on Fox News. “All of these were Republicans, they
were conservatives….” [https://www.newsweek.com/dinesh-dsouza-martin-luther-king-frederick-douglass-ida-b-wells-booker-t-1437784 ] And Martin Luther King was just
the latest in that line: he had his faults, yes, but his “message of equality”
was far greater and simply must be celebrated by all, including conservatives.
He was, in short, an epochal giant who ushered in the final stage of completing
that revolutionary message.
And in this sense, D’Souza like the dominant Neoconservative
narrative, echoed another vaunted exponent of the King mythology, Jonah
Goldberg (August 28, 2013):
“…the genius of King’s appeal to an ideal of colorblindness was
deeply patriotic, rooted in the foundational principles of the republic….When the architects of our republic wrote the magnificent words of
the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, they were signing a
promissory note to which every American was to fall heir. This note was a promise that all men, yes, black men as well as white men, would be guaranteed
the unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. In the American context, these are universal
appeals. King pleaded for the fulfillment of America’s classically liberal
revolution.” [Italics mine][http://www.nationalreview.com/article/356887/martin-luther-king-jrs-real-message-jonah-goldberg]
Which is a complete inversion of the American
Founding and a more-or-less misreading, purposeful or not, of American history.
The symbolic canonization of Martin Luther King
and the obligatory imposition of his cult on the nation was and is an action,
collaborated in by both the zealous progressivist Left and the slightly
less-Leftist Establishment conservative movement, with more dogmatic power and
enforcement than any hierarch in Rome or any despot in Soviet Russia ever
dreamed of, because it is more pervasive, far more than skin deep or simply a prophylactic,
as the old Soviet power over Eastern Europe was for forty-five years. It is
emblematic of not only the insistence on external assent in actions and words,
but of a steady internalization which is equally monitored, the slightest
variance from which brings excommunication, denunciation, loss of reputation
and position, shunning, shaming, and even imprisonment.
This, then, is the legacy of King and those like him, those
who protected him and glorified him, and the so-called civil rights
transformation which opened the door wide for the aberrations and hideous
results in racial and sexual questions we see and experience around us today.
Another great article! I am sure the radical females of the left with treat King's sexual adventures the same way they treat the anti-female Islamist. There is no logic on the left--except the logic of our destruction.
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