Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Editorial

OUR VOICES: ‘A Morally Inclement Climate’

Monument of Martin Luther King Jr.
Monument of Martin Luther King Jr.

By Marian Wright Edelman

April 4 was the 54th anniversary of the assassination of our nation’s prophet of nonviolence, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

On the same day we received new warnings from international scientists that our world remains headed towards an environmental climate catastrophe, this date was a sad reminder that before his death, Dr. King presciently warned us about a metaphorical climate crisis that also threatened us all.

Shortly after President John F. Kennedy’s 1963 assassination, Dr. King wrote that it was time for our nation to do some soul-searching, and while the question “Who killed President Kennedy?” was important, answering the question “What killed President Kennedy?” was even more critical.

Dr. King said he believed “our late President was assassinated by a morally inclement climate”:

“It is a climate filled with heavy torrents of false accusation, jostling winds of hatred, and raging storms of violence.

“It is a climate where men cannot disagree without being disagreeable, and where they express dissent through violence and murder.

“It is the same climate that murdered Medgar Evers in Mississippi and six innocent Negro children in Birmingham, Alabama.”

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Dr. King also noted that the undercurrents of hatred and violence that made up this morally inclement climate were fueled by our cultural embrace of guns: “By our readiness to allow arms to be purchased at will and fired at whim, by allowing our movie and television screens to teach our children that the hero is one who masters the art of shooting and the technique of killing, by allowing all these developments, we have created an atmosphere in which violence and hatred have become popular pas-times.”

The same winds of hatred, storms of violence, and easy access to and glorification of guns he believed killed President Kennedy would soon kill Dr. King, too. Decades later, we are still being ravaged by the same storms.

On April 3, six people were killed and 12 others injured in a shooting in downtown Sacramento, California, one of the worst mass shootings in the city’s history.

Afterward, President Biden released a statement :

“Today, America once again mourns for another community devastated by gun violence. … Families forever changed. Survivors left to heal wounds both visible and invisible. … We know these lives were not the only lives impacted by gun violence last night.

“And we equally mourn for those victims and families who do not make national headlines. But we must do more than mourn; we must act.”

Will we? President Biden went on to list steps Congress could take to curb gun violence right now: “Ban ghost guns. Require background checks for all gun sales. Ban assault weapons and high-ca-pacity magazines.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Repeal gun manufacturers’ immunity from liability.”

We know what could help. But we also know how many members of Congress remain resistant to doing anything at all.

Meanwhile, gun violence is now the leading cause of death for children and teens ages 0-19 and is taking a growing number of lives — a fact that is sometimes lost in the middle of the pandemic. Violence still saturates our communities and our culture. We are raising another generation in a morally inclement climate. We must do more than mourn.

We must put actions behind our words and thoughts and prayers.

In his eulogy at Dr. King’s funeral, Dr. Benjamin E. Mays said:

“Here was a man who believed with all of his might that the pursuit of violence at any time is ethically and morally wrong; that God and the moral weight of the universe are against it ; that violence is self-defeating; and that only love and forgiveness can break the vicious circle of revenge. He believed that nonviolence would prove effective in the abolition of injustice in politics, in economics, in education, and in race relations. He was convinced, also, that people could not be moved to abolish voluntarily the inhumanity of man to man by mere persuasion and pleading, but that they could be moved to do so by dramatizing the evil through massive nonviolent resistance. … He believed that the nonviolent approach to solving social problems would ultimately prove to be redemptive.”

Our world is still in desperate need of leaders who share this belief today.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.
Edelman is founder and president emerita of the Children’s Defense Fund.
ADVERTISEMENT

News Video

E. coli outbreak linked to McDonald's Quarter Pounder hamburgers
A severe E. coli outbreak in multiple states has been traced to Quarter Pounder hamburgers served by McDonald's. (Scripps News)
0 seconds of 37 secondsVolume 0%
Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
00:00
00:37
00:37
 

IMM Mask Promos

I Messenger Media Radio Shows

ADVERTISEMENT

Related Articles

Spotlight Story

Victor’s Restaurant & Bar is a vibrant restaurant situated two miles west of the Bishop Arts District. Dinner with friends, a night out on...

News

By Stephen A. Crockett Jr.Get Up Mornings with Erica Campbellhttps://getuperica.com/ It’s one thing to say that diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives give an unfair...

Editorial

By: Vincent L. Hall Well, if you want Black History these days, you better get it for yourself. Any time the federal government scrubs...

News

By Christopher RhodesBlavityhttps://blavity.com/ Some federal workers and outside observers recently noticed a curious change made by the Trump administration to federal regulations meant to fight discrimination. Acting on...

Advertisement