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Education emerges as a beacon of hope amidst family challenges, with cherished memories of schools like Booker T. and Dillard. Terence Rosemore recounts his return to academia after 30 years, fulfilling a promise to his late mother.

These tales of determination and resilience serves as a powerful reminder of the impact of perseverance and the quest for personal growth.

Black History Month

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Deep Dive: Confronting Inequality and Oligarchy in Modern America

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy remains a cornerstone of moral and political discourse in the United States, with 81% of Americans viewing his impact as positive. While his advocacy for racial equality is widely celebrated, his later work—focused on dismantling systemic economic inequality, challenging concentrated wealth, and reimagining democracy—resonates with renewed urgency in an era defined by billionaire dominance of politics and widening poverty gaps. King’s critique of “the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism” offers a prophetic framework for addressing today’s crises of oligarchy and social fragmentation.

King’s 1968 assertion that “the solution to poverty is to abolish it” clashes with a political system that allocates $2.5 trillion annually in tax breaks and subsidies to corporations and the wealthy while 11% of children live in poverty.

In 2025, the combined wealth of the 20 richest Americans ($2.7 trillion) is more than half the net worth of all Black households.

King warned that unchecked capitalism fosters oligarchy, where “the wealthy elite hold disproportionate power, leaving the majority with little influence.” He would likely condemn policies enabling this disparity, such as the 2017 tax cuts that boosted billionaire wealth by 77% while social safety nets eroded.

His 1967 observation that “the privileged few twist democracy to their narrow self-interest” anticipates today’s lobbying blitzes by tech and fossil fuel giants to block climate and antitrust reforms.

Conclusion: King’s Uncompromising Challenge to Oppressive Power

Dr. King’s 81% approval reflects nostalgia for his conciliatory 1963 persona, not his radical 1968 vision. He would condemn today’s “socialism for billionaires” as a betrayal of democracy, urging mass mobilization to:

* Enact a federal guaranteed income and wealth tax to break oligarchic control

* Divest from militarism to fund green jobs and reparative climate policies

* Expand voting rights and abolish systemic racism in policing, education, and housing

As tech titans and politicians co-opt his rhetoric, King’s unyielding demand—“a radical revolution of values”—remains the path to salvaging democracy and a more perfect union.

In his words, “Power without love is reckless; love without power is sentimental.” The task ahead is to wield both.



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