In about three weeks we'll all be celebrating the January 15 anniversary of 
 Dr. Martin Luther King's birth. Many have remarked on the great distance 
between  the actual life and work of Dr. King and the empty plaster saint of 
nonviolence  that some have turned him into. The truth is that the living 
Marin Luther King  was a fearless opponent of injustice, a man unafraid of 
endorsing unpopular  causes, so long as these causes were just. If Dr. King 
were alive today he would  wrap his arms around the cause of Georgia's and this 
nation's prisoners. Work  without wages is indeed close to slavery. Even if 
the 13th Amendment permits  “involuntary servitude” of those convicted of 
crimes Dr. King might rightly  observe, that this was passed almost a 
century and a half ago, and that many  things “legal” are neither moral nor 
advisable. 
 
The U.S. has four and half percent of the world's population and nearly  
twenty five percent of its prisoners. Georgia leads the nation with an  
astounding one in thirteen of its adult citizens in prisons and jails, or under 
 
court and correctional supervision, thanks to innovations like the 
privatization  of misdemeanor probations. When advocating ever-longer sentences 
becomes a  standard campaign tactic for ambitious politicians, when fortunes 
are 
made  overcharging inmate families for phone calls and raking off ten percent 
and more  of paltry funds families send their loved ones, when prisons 
become growth  industries with their own lobbyists, punishment has become a 
crime. 
 
Any holiday celebration, any dinner, parade, or commemoration of Dr. King's 
 life and work that does not embrace the cause of Georgia's and the 
nation's  prisoners, that does not critically examine the facts America's 
current 
policy  of mass incarceration is an empty one, a hollow mockery of the man 
King was and  the movement he stood for. More than twenty thousand in Atlanta 
march in  observance of Dr. King's life and work every year. The shiny new 
sanctuary of  Ebeneezer Baptist Church is always filled with dignitaries on 
that day. Let's  see how many signs there are outside the church supporting 
the prisoners on  King's day in Atlanta and around the country. And let's see 
if the dignitaries  inside Ebeneezer can even bring themselves to mention 
the people behind the  walls, the locked down and and the left out, who are 
truly Dr. King's people.  And ours
 
full: 
_http://blackagendareport.com/?q=content/community-coalition-meets-ga-corrections-officials-visits-first-prison-what-would-dr-king-sa_
 
(http://blackagendareport.com/?q=content/community-coalition-meets-ga-correcti
ons-officials-visits-first-prison-what-would-dr-king-sa) 
 

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