January 15, 2007

FROM THE ARCHIVES: BRIDGE TOO FAR:

Where Dr. King Went Wrong (Joel Schwartz, Winter 2002, City Journal)

A few years before his tragic death in 1968, the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. famously had a change of heart about the proper cure for persistent black poverty. He began to look increasingly to big government to help poor blacks, even though throughout his life he'd been an advocate--indeed a preacher--of the virtues of self-help. It was a change of worldview that was dead wrong, however understandable it might have been as a response to the grim reality then unfolding among America's inner-city blacks. It was a mistake that had terrible consequences for black America and for the nation as a whole. [...]

Guided by his father's example, King celebrated self-help as central to the project to integrate blacks from the moment he became a public figure, and he continued to celebrate it through much of his career, though in a considerably muted way after his turn to big government. In its concrete details, King's message of personal responsibility and individual and communal striving offers a time-tested recipe for getting ahead, as the success of countless immigrants, including African and West Indian blacks, proves beyond doubt.

The message centers on the work ethic. King rejected the common liberal view that jobs requiring minimal or no skills (those most likely to be available to the poor) were "dead end" jobs and therefore not worth taking. "Whatever your life's work is, do it well," he advised. "If it falls your lot to be a street sweeper, sweep streets like Michelangelo painted pictures, like Shakespeare wrote poetry, like Beethoven composed music." King stuck with this stance despite criticism from trusted advisors like Bayard Rustin, who held that "to want a Cadillac is not un-American; to push a cart in the garment center is."

Black workers should hold themselves to universal standards of excellence, King strongly believed. In a 1957 address to the Montgomery Improvement Association (a forerunner of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference), he told his black audience to "set out to do a good job," not "a good Negro job." Three years later, he was even more adamant: "We must seek to do our life's work so well that nobody could do it better. The Negro who seeks to be merely a good Negro, whatever he is, has already flunked his matriculation examination for entrance into the university of integration." Even the later King touted this line. "[W]e must work assiduously to aspire to excellence," he proclaimed in 1967.

For King, the ideal of hard work, meeting high universal standards, had to be central to the education of young blacks. Anything less, he correctly reasoned, would trap them in second-class status. King would despise a multi-culti educational fad like Ebonics ("black English"), designed to make poorly educated black kids feel good without challenging them. He excoriated schoolteachers "who can't even speak the English language" and wouldn't know a verb "if it was as big as that table." "For a college graduate to be standing up talking about 'you is,'" he charged, "there is no excuse for it." He added angrily: "And some of these people are teaching our children and crippling our children."

Thrift was a second key virtue that King thought could help blacks propel themselves into the American mainstream. In his 1957 talk, he urged his listeners: "Let's live within our means. Save our money and invest it in meaningful ends." Blacks shouldn't spend more than they could afford on houses and cars, he counseled, and they should especially "stop wasting money on frivolities," such as "all these alcoholic beverages." "It would be one of the tragedies of this century," he maintained, "if it is revealed that the Negroes spent more money for frivolities than we spent for the cause of freedom and justice and for meaningful ends." Here, too, King persisted in his views even after his big-government turn. In his 1967 book, Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community?, he called for "the development of habits of thrift and techniques of wise investment," so that "the Negro will be doing his share to grapple with his problem of economic deprivation."

King practiced what he preached, as was clear when he went on trial in Alabama for tax evasion in 1960. To virtually everyone's amazement, an all-white southern jury found him not guilty, largely because he kept a diary carefully detailing his speaking fees and travel expenses. King's record keeping, explains historian Taylor Branch, was "a habit drilled into him from childhood by Daddy King, who taught that keeping a penny-conscious budget was the first rule of frugality."

Joining work and thrift in King's self-help vision was a no-nonsense stance toward black crime and disorderly behavior. If blacks were to integrate themselves into America, King felt, black crime rates had to fall. "Let's be honest with ourselves and say that . . . our standards have lagged behind at many points," he declared in 1957. "Negroes constitute ten percent of the population of New York City, and yet they commit thirty-five percent of the crime," he observed.

A decade later, with America's black ghettos becoming so dangerous that a child born and raised in one had worse chances of survival than a U.S. soldier in World War II, King called for a moral renewal in the black community that might bring the chaos under control. "We can begin a constructive program which will vigorously seek to improve our personal standards," he said. "It is not a sign of weakness, but a sign of high maturity, to rise to the level of self-criticism," King declared. "Through group unity we must convey to one another that our women must be respected, and that life is too precious to be destroyed in a Saturday night brawl, or a gang execution."

For King, what today we call "faith-based institutions" would be indispensable in this project of moral uplift--after all, he was a clergyman, who understood the traditional moral authority of the black churches. "Through community agencies and religious institutions, we must develop a positive program through which Negro youth can become adjusted to urban living and improve their general level of behavior."

A fourth part of King's self-help message was his stress on the fundamental importance of the traditional family. However helpful hard work, thrift, and law-abiding behavior might be to future black success, King felt, the breakdown of the black family, the institution that most nurtured the strength of character that is the key to self-help, threatened to undermine any gains blacks made. "[N]othing is so much needed," King wrote in 1967, "as a secure family life for a people seeking to rise out of poverty and backwardness." King himself wasn't that much of a success as a family man; we know both from FBI wiretaps and from the testimony of friends and associates about his compulsive philandering. But if he didn't walk the correct walk, he talked the right talk, from early on. "[W]e have eight times more illegitimacy than white persons," a troubled King reminded black listeners as far back as the late 1950s. And blacks "must work to improve these standards," he insisted.

Late in his career, King offered a powerfully plausible analysis of the forces conspiring to weaken the black family. Slavery was partly to blame, he argued, beginning "with the break-up of families on the coasts of Africa" and continuing on the plantation, "where the institution of legal marriage for slaves did not exist." These "shattering blows," King argued, made the black family "fragile, deprived and often psychopathic." Intensifying slavery's evil effects were potent anti-family forces at work in American culture as a whole during the permissive 1960s. "History continues to mock the Negro today, because just as he needs ever greater family integrity, severe strains are assailing family life in the white community," King wrote. "In short, the larger society is not at this time a constructive educational force for the Negro."

King's fears over black family breakdown even led him to become one of the few civil rights leaders not to reject outright Daniel Patrick Moynihan's controversial 1965 report, The Negro Family, which warned about the rising illegitimacy rate among blacks (at the time 25 percent, well below today's rate). In fact, without mentioning the report directly, King sympathetically discussed its contents in a talk shortly after its publication, saying that family collapse threatened the "very survival" of American blacks. He dismissed the views of "a good many writers who have tartly denigrated the role of the family."

King's belief in the virtues of self-help made him critical of welfare. To begin with, he didn't like the way it then operated. The system came laden with perverse incentives, King complained in the mid-sixties. Consider the regulations that "deprive a family of Aid to Dependent Children if a male resides in the house," he suggested. Don't such rules entice a man "to abandon his family" so that he is in effect "coerced into irresponsibility"? Welfare regulations, by placing stringent limits on the assets a recipient could possess, also sapped the work ethic vital to self-help. "If you receive public aid in Chicago, you cannot own property, not even an automobile, so you are condemned to the jobs . . . closest to your home," King insisted. A smart welfare system would shore up two-parent families and back the efforts of recipients to find work--basically the goals welfare reformers have pursued over the last decade.

But further, King's dislike of specific welfare rules extended to wider misgivings about welfare itself. He was aware of the growing problem of welfare dependency among blacks. He pointed out in 1957 that, in St. Louis, "the Negroes constitute twenty-six percent of the population, and yet seventy-six percent of the persons on the list for [A]id to [D]ependent [C]hildren are Negroes." Several years later, he regretted that "56 percent of Negro children at some point in their lives have been recipients of public aid."

But if King fretted over dependency, he never gave a full-bore criticism of the welfare system.


PBS is showing Citizen King this week, nowhere near as good as Eyes on the Prize, but interesting nonetheless. It's disheartening when the riots start and Dr. King basically excuses them. Just as the nation started rising above its racism the man who'd done so much to achieve that end helped set those communities back for decades. Then in coming out against the war in Vietnam, in favor of economic redistribution, and attempting to integrate neighborhoods he marginalized the civil rights movement and lost the support of white America.

[ORIGINALLY POSTED ON 2005-01-17]

Posted by Orrin Judd at January 15, 2007 12:00 AM
Comments

King could only stray so far from his flock, who were ... and remain ... overwhelmingly socialist in their political views.

Posted by: ghostcat at January 16, 2006 8:36 PM

“Let’s live within our means. Save our money and invest it in meaningful ends.” Blacks shouldn’t spend more than they could afford on houses and cars, he counseled, and they should especially “stop wasting money on frivolities,” such as “all these alcoholic beverages.” “It would be one of the tragedies of this century,” he maintained, “if it is revealed that the Negroes spent more money for frivolities than we spent for the cause of freedom and justice and for meaningful ends.”

No American peoples in the 20th century have managed to live up to that ideal, although some have done better than others, and it is INDEED a shame.

In America, we spend over a billion dollars a year on flavored sugar water, another few hundred million on cell-phone ringers...

While there might be a intense argument over what that money would be better spent on, few would argue that those purchases are the best-use of that money.

Posted by: Michael Herdegen [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 17, 2006 3:12 AM

Except that we save so much it's silly to begrudge the amount we waste.

Posted by: oj at January 17, 2006 7:24 AM

"Saving" is another use of money that isn't necessarily in "the cause of freedom and justice and for meaningful ends.”

Some savings is obviously beneficial, for a rainy day, but since we already have FOUR YEARS' worth of GNP "saved"*, for what are we holding such abundance in reserve ?

If we were to spend a mere $ 10 trillion on improving the world, we could substantially increase the wellbeing of others, without harming our own in the least.


* by your unorthodox and fairly unsupportable method of measure; however, it's certainly clear that we have at least 2 - 3 years' worth of GNP "saved", and so we can still spare the ten big ones.

Posted by: Michael Herdegen [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 18, 2006 10:01 PM

GDP is $12 trillion Household Net Worth is $50+

Posted by: oj at January 18, 2006 10:17 PM

Yes, but the vast majority of that "net worth" isn't in cash or equivalents, it's unrealized capital gains, which have a way of evaporating when times get rough.

It's NEVER a good idea to confuse "nominal value" with "cash on the barrelhead".

Which is why NOW is a desirable time to cash out some of that equity, and use it for "meaningful ends" - we'll get a good price, and only use a fraction of our "savings".

Posted by: Michael Herdegen [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 19, 2006 7:51 AM

It also doesn't include the value of human capital we have on hand. We have plenty of wealth socked away.

Posted by: oj at January 19, 2006 8:23 AM
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