... I could hear people shouting all over that vast audience, "Freedom, Freedom!" before I knew it, I started weeping. I was crying for joy.... And I could hear that old Negro spiritual once more crying out: 'Free at last, free at last, Great God Almighty, I'm free at last (Carson).'" Finally, Dr. King pointed out that," "The thing that impressed me more than anything else that night was when Nkrumah and his other ministers who had been in prison with him walked in. They didn't come in with the crowns and all of the garments of kings. They walked in with prison caps....Often the path to freedom will carry you through prison (Carson)."
Beginning in 1965 King started expressing his doubts over America's war in Vietnam. On April 4, 1967 King vocally expressed his doubts about the war when he stated that the America was trying to turn Vietnam into an American colony and was the leading cause of violence in the world. His position over the Vietnam War, however, was not received well by the U.S. media who up until then had supported him vigorously during his struggle for civil rights.
In 1968 King led and organized the Poor People's Campaign, which was another Washington, DC march devoted towards calling for economic aid to America's poorest communities. This campaign reflected King's later ideological views; he began calling for more fundamental changes to take place within the country's political and economic framework. This meant that King's views on capitalism were slowly changing in favor of those regarding democratic socialism.
King's assassination on April 4, 1968 took place in Memphis, Tennessee at the Lorraine Motel. King had arrived there in order to support the city's predominantly black sanitation workers' strike. King's murder was blamed on James Earl Ray, a white supremacist and segregationist, who later confessed to doing the deed. Nationwide riots occurred shortly after King's death and many attended the funeral.
Many believe a conspiracy was involved in covering up who King's real killers were; such a conspiracy meant that Ray was not alone in plotting to kill the civil rights leader. King's bitter relationship with the Federal Bureau of Investigation's head J. Edgar Hoover had led many to believe the FBI was somehow involved in the assassination. In 1976 a task force was created to find out how the FBI handled Dr. King's security and murder investigation. After an extensive look at the evidence, the task force did not find any proof that either the FBI or the Memphis Police Department was involved in Dr. King's murder.
The task force did find, however, that the FBI's extensive surveillance of Dr. King's activities beginning in 1962 was largely unwarranted. The original intention of the surveillance was to discover whether Dr. King had any affiliation with the Communist Party USA, since it was earlier found that one of his advisors was once a member of that party. The FBI conducted electronic surveillance of King's activities, which included wire tapping his phones and bugging his hotel rooms. However, findings later indicated that the civil rights leader had never openly professed towards supporting the Communist Party.
The task force also found that the FBI engaged in illegal activities in order to harm the reputation of King, his family and friends, and his movement. This included the propagation of damaging information about King and his associates to the public, in order to embarrass them. Such damaging was even conducted after King's death, when the FBI tried to convince Congress that King's legacy was not worthy of being celebrated as a national holiday. The purpose of this damaging was to prevent the civil rights movement from becoming popular and to bring forth a new black leader who would be acquiescent of the government's demands. Such extreme measures by the FBI reveal how much of a struggle King was engaged in during his fight for civil rights.
King was instrumental in bringing civil rights issues to the nation's attention at a time when blacks and other minorities faced insurmountable obstacles in their pursuit of the American Dream. King and the SCLC helped to bring several pressing issues to the fore including, desegregation, fair hiring practices, and the right to vote, among others. Throughout his campaign King advocated the use of non-violence to achieve his goals.
He had been highly influenced by Ghandi's use of non-violence to achieve independence for India. In a speech to the SCLC on August 16, 1967, King...
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