In
March 1968, President Johnson, who had successfully launched important voting
rights and anti-poverty initiatives, under pressure from the military, decided
to send additional troops to join the more than half a million already in
Vietnam to fight and eventually lose a war that cost the U.S. $100 billion.
That same month, the bi-partisan Kerner Commission, appointed by Johnson in
1967 in response to riots in dozens of American cities, concluded that a
massive national investment, estimated at $80 to $100 billion in employment,
education, welfare and housing was essential to prevent our Nation from
becoming “two societies, one black and one white – separate and unequal.” The
Commission briefly considered recommending reducing and reallocating resources
from the war in Vietnam but decided that would be too controversial.
Fearing
the political costs of losing the war in Vietnam and facing deepening racial
division and white backlash at home, Johnson ignored the Kerner Commission Report
and, in a televised address to the nation on March 31, announced he would not
seek a second term as President. Five
days later, on April 4, Martin Luther King, who praised the Kerner Report, was
assassinated in Memphis where he had come to support the struggle of striking
sanitation workers.
A year
earlier, in his famous Riverside Church sermon, “A Time to Break Silence,” on
April 4, 1967, King carefully, yet controversially, explained why he opposed
the Vietnam War, including how the U.S. supported France keeping Vietnam as a
colony. He spoke about the triple threats of racism, poverty and militarism. Reflecting
his view that the war threatened Johnson’s Great Society initiatives, King
declared, “There was hope for the poor – both black and white – through the
poverty program, then came the build-up in Vietnam.”
Had he
lived, there is little doubt that King would have opposed the U.S. wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq, not only based on his principled commitment to
nonviolence and against war, but because, like the Vietnam War, these wars
robbed our nation of essential human and economic resources, estimated so far
at more than $4 trillion - resources as desperately needed today as they were
fifty years ago to address problems of poverty, racism, and growing inequality.
On the
anniversary of the Kerner Commission Report, several articles appeared reporting
on some progress over fifty years but also cataloguing conditions that have remained
the same or gotten worse. Among the most revealing and troubling indicators is,
while the overall percentage of Americans living in poverty has remained about
the same since 1968, the percentage of American children living in poverty and the
percentage of people living in “deep poverty” (on incomes less than half the
poverty level have both increased. Shockingly, the United States has one of the
highest rates of child poverty of any developed country. While percentages of
Black and Hispanic children in poverty are higher than for whites, one-third of
all American children living in poverty are white.
Fred Harris, sole surviving member of the
Kerner Commission, and Alan Curtis, President and CEO of the Eisenhower
Foundation, have edited a new book, Healing Our Divided Society, an updated
review of the challenges our country faces and what can be done. The book includes
two dozen articles by prominent economists, educators, journalists,
sociologists and others, with recommendations for major national investments in
economic development, employment, education, healthcare, housing and
neighborhood investment. It also includes critical articles addressing crime
prevention and criminal justice policy, and the need for effective messaging to
engage the media, something the Kerner Commission failed to do fifty years ago.
Clearly, given the current context, substantial investments are also needed to address
the national opioid crisis and the challenge of global warming, and to rebuild
the country’s infrastructure. This Eisenhower Foundation book is even more convincing
and useful because it includes several evidence-based essays documenting what
federal programs actually have worked, what ones haven’t, and why.
Where this book and most of the articles
updating the Kerner Report fail is in not addressing our country’s
exceptionally high level of military spending (roughly half of the Federal
government’s discretionary spending) and factors in U.S. foreign policy that,
since the end of World War II, have gotten our country into wars we later
regret. Currently, U.S. military spending is higher than that of the next eight
countries combined. Ironically, the Eisenhower Foundation book totally ignores
President Eisenhower’s wise moral insight that, “Every gun that is made, every warship
launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those
who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and not clothed.” President
Trump and his new National Security Advisor John Bolton, who seems eager to get
us into more wars, want to increase military spending and decrease spending on
social needs.
There is no use pretending:
if we are serious about healing our divided society, as Martin Luther King prophetically
declared, we need a revolution in our cultural values and a radical shift in
our national priorities, away from violence and militarism to nonviolence and effective
policies and programs to meet people’s real needs for living wage employment,
housing, healthcare, and education. Recent mass marches led by women and young
people, combined with voter registration campaigns, offer hope that our country
can make the right critical choices
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