Sunday, June 25, 2023

King on What the Negro Wants

King on What the Negro Wants

Thomas Allen


In his speech, “Where Do We Go from Here?” (1967), I Have a Dream: Writings and Speeches that Changed the World (James Washington, ed., Harper Collins Publishers, 1986, 1982), Martin Luther King, Jr., presents what the Negro desiderates. A discussion of some of King’s demands follows.

Most conservatives claim that King is an archconservative. Many believe that he is the greatest conservative ever. Some have even deified him. Therefore, these conservatives should not only agree with all the demands of the greatest conservative ever, but they should also ardently promote them.

Like all integrationists, King blames the poor academic performance of Negroes on segregated schools. He notes, “In elementary schools, Negroes lag one to three years behind whites, and their segregated schools receive substantially less money per student than the white schools.”(p. 170.) Although schools have been integrated for half a century and standards have been lowered to accommodate Negroes, they still lag behind Whites by one to three years academically in elementary and even further behind in high school. Whatever the cause of Negroes lagging behind Whites, it has nothing to do with segregation. Does it ever occur to King, conservatives, and other integrationists that the reason that Negroes lag behind Whites is genetics and not segregation?

(In “The Rising Tide of Racial Consciousness” [1960] of the same book, King describes the high academic achievements that Negroes had accomplished during the Jim Crow Era [p. 64-65], which contradicts much of the agreement of the integrationists. Segregated schools had not held Negroes back academically.)

King declares that Negroes “must no longer be ashamed of being black.” (p. 170.) At least the Negro has overcome this problem. The self-esteem of the typical Negro far exceeds that of the typical White.

Moreover, King complains that the infant mortality rate of Blacks is significantly higher than White infant mortality rate (p. 170). Today, the leading cause of death of Negro infants is abortion. Although in this speech, King does not mention abortion; most likely, today, he would support abortion without restrictions because that is the progressive thing to do.

King was ahead of his time in changing and corrupting language. He favored eliminating negative connotations with “black” and positive connotations with “white” (pp. 170-171). Thus, King was woke decades before wokeism became the guiding principle of the country.

Continuing in his speech, King complains that the Negro contribution to American life has been ignored (p. 171). Black history month solved this problem. For a whole month, America is saturated with minor contributions of Negroes that make the work of Washington, Jefferson, and the other founding fathers pale into insignificance.

Next, King says, “‘Yes, I [the Negro] was a slave through my foreparents and I am not ashamed of that. I’m ashamed of the people who were so sinful to make me a slave.’” Contrary to what King may believe, the Bible does not condemn slavery or consider it a sin. Jesus never commanded that slaves be emancipated. Neither did Paul nor Peter. On the contrary, both Paul and Peter instructed slaves to be faithful to their masters.

Further, King complains about the lack of power that Negroes have (pp. 171-172). Negroes have overcome their lack of power. Today, they can bring down almost any White public figure by accusing him of being a racist, which now has at least 800 definitions, even without proof. Moreover, they have trained Whites to hate themselves so much that they will attack Whites who tell the truth about Negroes and smear them as “racists.”

Continuing, King says, “The problem of transforming the ghetto, therefore, is a problem of power.” (p. 172) Negro ghettoes are located in large cities, many of which Negroes govern. Moreover, these cities receive large influxes of federal grant money. For the most part, Negro ghettoes in these Negro governed cities are worse today than they were under Jim Crow when Negroes presumably had no power. Furthermore, the rest of these cities have deteriorated — this deterioration is directly proportional to the power of the Negro, just as it was in the South during Reconstruction.

Whatever the cause of the plight of the Negro during the Jim Crow Era, it had nothing to do with his lack of power. Where the Negro has had power, the condition of the Negro has not noticeably improved — except for those who govern and their cronies.

Then, King says “We must develop a program that will drive the nation to a guaranteed annual income.” (p. 173.) Consequently, since King is the greatest conservative ever, a guaranteed annual income is conservatism and not progressivism. All these King-worshiping conservatives are blaspheming their lord if they do not support and promote a guaranteed annual income. When are these conservatives going to institute and implement their lord’s demand for a guaranteed annual income?

Continuing with his speech, King argues for a war on poverty, which President Johnson gave him and every president has since continued (p. 174). (Since archconservative King advocated a war on poverty, then all good conservatives must fervently support the federal government’s war on poverty, the Constitution notwithstanding.) The country has been at war with poverty for 60 years and has little to show for it other than the squandering of trillions of dollars.

(In “The Rising Tide of Racial Consciousness” [1960] of the same book, King describes how Negroes were making enormous advances economically during the Jim Crow Era [p. 65]. And, they were doing so by their own efforts and merit, unlike today where their advancement depends mostly on handouts and governmental coercion such as affirmative action, quotas, set-asides, etc.)

Nevertheless, if all the noncash welfare benefits are considered, many of those identified as paupers live better than many taxpaying wage earners. Only a few homeless people are truly paupers. So, in this sense, the war has been won.

When King gave this speech in 1967, he said that riots were futile because “the local police, the state troopers, the National Guard and, finally, the army to call on—all of which are predominantly white.” (p. 175.) Today, many local police forces are predominately nonwhite — and the State police, National Guard, and the army are becoming ever more nonwhite. Most of the time, even Whites side with the Negro rioters. Consequently, riots can be and have been more effective in the twenty-first century than in the 1960s at cowardizing Whites into surrendering to Negro demands. 

One of the main reasons that King opposed a violent revolt by Negroes was that he believed that the Negro could not win such a revolt (p. 175). He was probably right. However, through propaganda, guile, threats, protests, and occasionally riots, the Negro could and finally did defeat the White man. Thus, following King’s advice, the Negro has not only defeated the White man; with the aid of self-hating Whites, the Negro is also well on his way to annihilating the White race.

Although King expressed a great desire for love and disdain for hate in his speech (pp. 175-176), his movement has led to a great deal of hatred toward Whites. This hatred is concealed in crime statistics of violent Negroes crimes perpetrated against Whites (see “The Dirty War: America’s Race War” by Thomas Allen). Worse, King’s movement has led to the hatred of White realists and White separatists by White albusphobes and Whites racial nihilists.

Like all good conservatives, King blames capitalism for poverty (p. 176). He favors an economic system between communism and capitalism — a blend of the two, which is what the country has today. Although he does not use the terms, what King is advocating is democratic welfare-state fascism, which is called democratic socialism in Europe. All good King-worshiping conservatives should support King’s economic philosophy.

Moreover, King opposed foreign investments because they exploited poor countries and led to the use of military force to protect foreign investments (p. 177). So far, King’s followers have failed to eliminate foreign investments and the concomitant wars. (Neoconservatives and establishment conservatives, who are the most ardent worshipers of King, are the most warmongering conservatives. Why have they ignored their god on this point?)

Also, in “Facing the Challenge of a New Age” (1957) of the same book, King writes:

There is nothing in all the world greater than freedom. It is worth dying for; it is worth losing a job; it is worth going to jail for. I would rather be a free pauper than a rich slave. I would rather die in abject poverty with my convictions than live in inordinate riches with the lack of self-respect. Once more every Negro must be able to cry out with his forefathers: “Before I'll be a slave, I'll be buried in my grave and go home to my Father and be saved.” (p. 27.)

Many of King’s followers have ignored his teachings about freedom. Many Negroes have enslaved themselves to the government via the welfare state. They prefer loafing in comfort with cradle-to-grave care to living free as a pauper.

Negroes have not gotten everything that King claimed that they wanted, such as a guaranteed annual income, although the welfare state comes close to it. In some respects, they have gotten more than they thought possible, such as getting Whites to genocide themselves. (Nevertheless, White supremacy will continue to exist long after the White race becomes extinct because White supremacy is so powerful that it will continue to dominate the world forever. Besides, Negroes cannot let White supremacy die because then they will have to accept responsibility for their failures instead of blaming Whites for their failures.)


Copyright © 2023 by Thomas Coley Allen.

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Friday, June 16, 2023

Progressives

Progressives

Thomas Allen


In “A Tale of Two Americas," Chronicles Magazine of American Culture (July 2021), pages 10–11, Bruce Frohnen describes progressives and compares them with traditionalists. These two represent a fundamental divide in character that has led to a political divide in America. Nevertheless, only one of these two “is capable of self-government in a free constitutional republic”: the traditionalist.

Americans fall into two major groups. One group is the traditionalist, who is “centered on family, faith, and freedom.” The other group is the progressive, who is “dominated by abstract ideals of the administrative state.” “The first is a constitutional order of limited, decentralized, separated powers that protect the more fundamental institutions of local life. The second centers on ‘diversity, inclusion, and equity’ implemented by a centralized government that protects people against disease with lockdowns, crime (and ‘domestic terrorism’) with a surveillance state, poverty with a welfare state, and against all kinds of dangers to life, limb, and self-esteem through a seamless web of administrative agencies and rules.”

This progressive new world order began during the Progressive Era, gained a foothold during Wilson’s New Freedom, and accelerated during Roosevelt’s New Deal and especially Johnson’s Great Society. Progressives have indoctrinated people into believing that America is “irredeemably racists, sexist, and homophobic.”

Under progressivism, order, safety, prosperity, and justice depend on a bureaucratic elite of “experts” telling everyone how to live their lives.  Consequently, these “petty commissars have replaced independence and public service with fear and loathing as our necessary virtues, rendering roughly half our people unfit for and even hostile to our inherited constitutional order.”

Frohnen writes, “Progressives feel justified punishing supposedly disloyal Americans who try to defend electoral integrity, personal responsibility, and institutions such as the family.” Progressives are convinced that traditionalists are not suited for the new world order that they (the progressives) have built —and rightly so.

Progressives believe in training (forcing) people to trust and depend on technocrats to control their lives. Thus, technocrats decide what school children attend, what businesses stay open, what is said on social media, and just about everything else.

By contrast, traditionalists believe in a constitutional order that rests on independent people who are left to live their lives within their families, churches, local associations, and communities. Generally, they love and fear God and are mostly churchgoers. They marry, spend time with their families, work hard to support their families, and participate in their communities. Furthermore, they value integrity over advancement.

In contrast, progressives have ceased living and valuing the lifestyle of the traditionalists. If they go to church, it is one that teaches the prosperity gospel, the social gospel, or some similar nonscriptural gospel. “They value comfort and status, but see manual labor as a burden.” Also, progressives focus on self-improvement and support the “currently approved opinions on race, gender, climate changes, and public safety.” Even if they are married and have children, their family is secondary.

Although many progressives are decent people, they “have no real attachment to America’s constitutional order even denying that to has a right to exist.” They promote a “living constitution,” which politicians, bureaucrats, and especially judges can twist and mold to fit their personal prejudices and biases. Consequently, they reject the rule of law and free government. Instead, progressives advocate the unlimited power of the government — a government powerful enough to enforce any program that the progressive elite desires, such as, disarming the people, establishing socialized medicine, and silencing anyone who opposes the progressive agenda.

Moreover, progressives seek to transform the country by destroying what is left of free and self-governing people. To accomplish this goal, they use massive immigration of nonwhites (most of whom are unskilled laborers who are dependent on governmental support) and no-work welfare. Further, progressives use public health policies to destroy people’s independence by destroying their livelihoods. Antiwhite programs are also used to transform America into a technocratic state ruled by an elite of “experts.”

Traditionalists are found mostly outside New England, the Mid-Atlantic States, the Upper Midwest, and the West Coasts. Progressives predominately inhibit these regions . While traditionalists are more common in the Red States, progressives are more common in the Blue States.

Frohnen writes that American has three options to choose from:

1) restore traditional values and, with them, America's constitutional order; 2) accept continued political dominance by a new culture, a new, unconstitutional order, and a new, unfree people; or 3) split these United States into two separate political entities, with some remaining political ties, such that each culture and people can go its separate way in peace.

His preference is option one followed distantly by option three.

One option that he does not mention is a civil war where the traditionalists and progressives battle each other with arms for control of the country and the federal government. If the traditionalists prevail, this option is less destructive than option two. If the progressives prevail, fewer people will be around to enjoy their enslavement.


Appendix.

The following compares the progressive approach to COVID-19 with the traditionalist approach:

Progressive: Force everyone to be vaccinated with an experimental drug and with no exemptions.

Traditionalist: Freedom of choice whether to be vaccinated or not.


Progressive: Favors vaccine passports.

Traditional: Opposes vaccine passports.


Progressive: Force everyone to wear a mask.

Traditionalist: Allow each person to decide whether to wear a mask.


Progressive: Make vaccination a requirement for a job.

Traditionalist: Opposes discriminating against the unvaccinated.


Progressive: Require vaccination to enter a restaurant, theater, sports arena, school, etc.

Traditionalist: Opposes discriminating against the unvaccinated.


Progressive: Favors lockdowns.

Traditionalist: Opposes lockdowns.


Progressive: Favors closing down churches.

Traditionalist: Favors leaving churches open.


Progressive: Favors imprisoning people in their houses and not letting them leave without governmental permission.

Traditionalist: Favors allowing people to leave their houses as they desire and without governmental permission.


Progressive: Only allow vaccinated people to travel.

Traditionalist: Favors freedom of travel for all.


Progressive: Favor denying medical treatment to the unvaccinated.

Traditionalist: Opposes discrimination against the unvaccinated.


Progressive: Charge the unvaccinated more for medical treatment and insurance.

Traditionalist: Opposes discrimination against the unvaccinated.


Progressive: Favors censoring information that contradicts the official story.

Traditionalist: Favors allowing open, rational, civil discussion of pros and cons.

Thus, the progressive approach to COVID-19 is highly controlled and highly restricted. Politicians and bureaucrats (self-appointed “experts”) should boss the people and force them to do whatever the politicians and bureaucrats want them to do. Contrariwise, the traditionalist approach is one of freedom and nondiscrimination. Traditionalists trust the people to do the right thing. Unlike the traditionalists, progressives do not trust the people especially themselves; instead, they trust politicians and bureaucrats.


Copyright © 2023 by Thomas Coley Allen.

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Saturday, June 10, 2023

Is Jesus Impeccable?

 Is Jesus Impeccable?

Thomas Allen


In “Why Is Christ’s Impeccability Essential?” (Grace in Focus Magazine, January/February 2023, pages 36-38), Anneka Muller argues that Jesus not only did not sin, but he also was incapable of sinning. The foundation of her argument is the Trinity Doctrine: Jesus is God the Son. Since God cannot sin, Jesus, who is God, cannot sin. Moreover, his impeccability is essential for the assurance of salvation.

Muller briefly discusses Hebrews 4:15 (“For we have not a high priest that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities; but one that hath been in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin.”) People who believe that Jesus could sin, but did not, cite this verse to support their claim that Jesus was capable of sinning. She refutes this claim by arguing that whether or not Jesus “was capable of sinning has no effect on His ability to be tempted and to sympathize with us in our temptation” (p. 38).

True, the ability of Jesus to be tempted is independent of whether he could sin (is peccable) or could not sin (impeccable). However, Hebrews 4:15 goes beyond this. It says that Jesus was tempted as we are tempted. If sinning were impossible for him, he could not have been tempted as we are because we can sin. He had to be able to sin if he were tempted as we are.

According to the Christology of the Trinity Doctrine, Jesus is 100 percent God and 100 percent man. As stated by Muller, the Deity part of Jesus makes him impeccable. Thus, if Jesus’ Deity affected his experience of temptation and prevented him from sinning, he could not be tempted as we are. Based on James 1:13 (“Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God; for God cannot be tempted with evil, and he himself tempteth no man:”), God cannot be tempted. (Muller uses this verse as proof that Jesus cannot sin because he is God.) Consequently, being God, Jesus could not be tempted and, therefore, could not have given in to temptation and sin. Accordingly, his temptations were not a genuine test of character. Being God, not only could Jesus not be tempted as we are, but he also could not have been tempted at all because God cannot be tempted.

Hebrews 4:15 argues against the Christology of the Trinity Doctrine and the deity of Christ. If Jesus were God, he could not have been tempted and could not have sinned. However, this verse claims that he was tempted in every way that we are, which means that he could have succumbed to temptation and sin. Only if Jesus were not God and could have succumbed to temptation and sin, could he have been tempted as we are. (Unitarians use this verse as a proof text against Trinitarians [Jesus is God the Son] and Modalists [Jesus is God]. If Jesus were God as the Trinitarians and Modalists claim, he could not be tempted as we are because God cannot be tempted. Since he was tempted as we are, he is, therefore, not God.)

Furthermore, Muller asserts that because Jesus was God and could not succumb to temptation and sin, the temptations that he endured were far worse than the temptations that we can endure because we can succumb to temptation and sin. In effect, what she is saying is that for a person to resist temptation and not sin is worse than succumbing to temptation and sinning. Nevertheless, for someone who is impeccable, temptation is meaningless.

If Muller’s premise that Jesus is God is true, then her conclusion that Jesus is impeccable is true. However, if her premise is false, then her conclusion is false; Jesus is peccable.

Is Jesus impeccable? If one believes in the man-derived Trinity Doctrine and its Christology of the dual nature of Christ, the answer is “yes.” However, if one believes in the God-inspired Hebrew 4:15 as it is written, the answer is “no.”


Copyright © 2023 by Thomas Coley Allen.

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