22: The Dream Maker - podcast episode cover

22: The Dream Maker

Jan 22, 20201 hr 39 min
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Moe Factz with Adam Curry for January 21st 2020, Episode number 22

The Dream Machine

Description

Adam and Moe deconstruct Martin Luther King Jr in a way you've never heard

Music in this episode

Intro: Christopher Williams - I'm Dreaming

Outro: New Birth - Dream Merchant

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Transcript

Moe Factz 22

We're back with Adam curry for January 21 2020. This is episode number 21. And it's Adam and Mo for all the ladies out there playing all the gems for you, which is a show another show. We got to do more. We got to do that together. Yes, we do. And it's show 22 Sorry, did I say 21? I'm sorry, show 22 Thank you an error in the system. You can't take one from me, man. I don't want to take anything from you. Now I have to apologize to everybody. And really, I feel like I've done

the show a disservice. I there was a prior engagement that I had put on the books before we shifted our recording time to Monday evenings. And I really didn't want to cancel that. But now just looking over, you know, what we might be talking about tonight. And fully well aware that yesterday we celebrated Dr. Martin Luther King, I feel like I am a trader. I've done the show a disservice. Well, no, I knew exactly where you were at. You were volunteering like everybody else.

Yes, I was. Yes. I was volunteering my time. Exactly. Right. I'm sure you were doing the same. No, I wasn't. Alright, everybody, we're gonna spin the big wheel. Let's find out what we'll be talking about tonight, which really should have been yesterday, an important day. And oh, our topic for today is Martin Luther King. The King, Martin Luther King, and who was that? Who was that? Who was Martin Luther King? We're talking about Dr. Martin Luther King. No, no, who

said that? Who said that on the clip? That was from coming to America. Yes, barbershop scene. Yes. That is one of my favorite movies. I liked it a lot. Even Arsenio Hall was good in that. Yes. That's saying a lot though. That in there. Yeah. Thank you. Very nice. Very nice. Okay. So yes, apologies. We should have had this out yesterday. But maybe yesterday, everyone had a chance to kind of soak in the mainstream media

version. Yeah, so you know what mainstream media gave you that I have a dream, I have a dream that one day will arrive. live out the true meaning of its creed. We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created in the form of slaves and the slaves will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood. I have a dream. My children one day live in a nation where they will not be deterred by the color of my skin but by the content of that character.

May I thank you for finding one of the better quality versions of that clip? I hear so many versions of it, which is old film optical sound. This is pretty decent. Yeah, I tried to pick the best quality clips. I even do a little producing to your musicologist. Yeah, yes, I am. So it's appreciated. It's noticed. So what we're not going to do is that. Oh, okay. I thought we could do more. Oh, all right. So we're not gonna do Okay, good, good. Good. MLK was a very special person he

had good and bad. That's what we're gonna do here. We're gonna talk about both the good and the bad. And what I really want to focus on is one, how he is used as a product now or an image is used as a product, one and then to the influences around him. Because what people don't really know is oh, well, it was let's just start with how he's used. This is a chronicle, chronicles of judo when our favorite YouTubers, and he talks about MLK the trigger.

The Caucasian liberals have a lot invested in the image of Martin Luther King. Martin Luther King is a trigger that they used to control American blacks. Remember, remember, whenever American blacks start to get out of control, they bring up more Out of the king, because that's how they rein you in. You got to be more like Dr. King, you have to follow his message. Right? You have to want to be with me you have to want

to hold my hand. Once again Martha King was a pawn of the globalists, they utilize him to bring you black people enter the fold of globalism, aka Luciferianism. The economic system of Luciferianism is communism. Ah mo you're talking my language with this one? I love it. Let me just get this straight it was YouTuber was chronicles of what? Up Judah? One four for incarcerated unit 144. Okay, I just want to make sure we have that in the show notes for

everybody. Okay, that was good. I liked that. That was that was good to listen to. So this is, Miss Wilde said, the real person Dr. Martin Luther King was a very complex person. As we talked about before we he went from nonviolent to me his life saying he ushered he thought he ushered his people into a burning house. So that shows complex but mainstream media wants you to have a dream may want to use that non violent pacifist ideology to shape the mind who black black people will quote

unquote, black people in America. So it's a control mechanism. But as we get into this, I just want to do a little background on Martin Luther King, a Christian crusader for liberation. Martin Luther King Jr. was a minister and leading activist during the 20th century civil rights movement. He was born Michael Luther King Jr. on January 15 1929, in Atlanta, and later changed his name to Martin King grew up steeped in religion and activism. His father was Reverend at Ebenezer Baptist

Church and a local NAACP later. At talented student, King skipped two grades in high school and entered Morehouse College at age 15. King was skeptical about Christianity as a warrior, but later embraced his faith and entered the seminary. Okay. So the reason why I rang the bell, age 15 Yeah, he was he was being groomed to be a protege ala Greta, many examples of that Dr. Wow. And who was doing the grooming his father, so he grew up in a pasture rich

family, his father married into a church family. So he married into his grandfather on his mother's side, ran the I think Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, right. Well, he was being groomed in the cloth. I mean, that that seems kind of logical. You parochial family like that. That's not you know, it's not necessarily Boulais. Illuminati yet. Well, it well, whoa, whoa. slam on the brakes. He Wait, pump the brakes. Yes, he's definitely a card carrying member of the Boulais.

He is. As we talked about before, with Margaret Sanger Right, right. Right. Right. Just have the reference. Yeah. Okay. Got it. The Reverend and a little known fact, he actually won the first Margaret Sanger award. We have to give a little background to Margaret Sanger just just a tad she she started the eugenics eugenics eugenics movement, which eventually became Planned Parenthood now, I don't need to talk about if they've changed since then or

not. But they was was totally like sterilizing black men. This is all total fact history and was accepted belief at the time. Yeah, I have no argument there. She definitely was targeting minorities poor quote, unquote, poor white trash. And people that have that ill. But I just want to make sure that we don't say that she only targeted it. Not No, not true, quote unquote, Mark. So I just wanted it. Yeah, he was um, yeah, he was awarded

the mark. I just want to point that out. It's just you're so you know, minor little detail that gets glossed over in the hagiography on Martin Luther King day itself. Yes. And the other thing in that clip there, I want to point out that he was reluctant to go into the church business or the faith, as they pointed out in that clip, but I rarely do this, but please forgive me. I'm going to use a robo voice because I couldn't find many clips on this next man, Martin Luther King senior one.

Martin Luther King, Sr, was a Baptist pastor missionary, and an early leader in the American Civil Rights Movement. He was also the father of Martin Luther King, Jr. Early life, King, Michael King, led the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia, and became a leader of the civil rights movement as the head of the NAACP chapter in Atlanta and of the civic and political League. He encouraged his son to become active in the

movement. He also changed his name from Michael King to Martin Luther King after becoming inspired during a trip to Germany by the life of Martin Luther, the German theologian who initiated the Protestant Reformation. Now it was that the CPA the Communist Party of America. Well, you're getting ahead of yourself. So I need you put you put, I'm sorry, I'm sorry. All right. Now, that was that was a that was easy connection. So I won't get on you too much. But

you know, you are from the future. So we need you to put those goggles on. But what was strange was Martin Luther King senior, and Martin Luther King, Jr. were originally Michael King singer, and Michael King, Jr. But Michael King singer makes his trip to Nazi Germany and 1933. And he comes back and changes his name and his son's name to Martin Luther King.

Because what you're doing now, Germany, yeah, because the Nazi tie with the Nazi visit was or the German visit was problematic, or could be seen as problematic, I guess. Yeah. What were you doing? That was just I can't find too much information on what they were. I mean, it was a group of pastors ministers that went over there was a black man doing in Nazi Germany in 1933, chillin, Netflix and running track a boxing. I mean, no, you're right. That's a throwback to,

you know, other shows that we had. But yeah, that was the only two people that I know. So it was a strange you come back, you change your name. So. So for a little bit more background. Let's get into crusaders for liberation to King was now the national face of the Civil Rights cause he was jailed over 20 times, was one stabbed in the chest. His house was bombed. And he suffered relentless personal attacks on himself and his family.

One day, I was crying profusely. And mom picked us up from school and asked me, Well, what was wrong? And I said, well, the kids did Daddy's a jailbird. And she explained to me why he was going to jail that he was really going to jail to make this world a better place for all of God's children. Well, the next day, I came back to school with almost a new attitude, being proud of what my father was doing. So had you ever heard of Martin Luther King being stabbed? No.

I've heard none of this. Where did you dig this up? This was on biography actually. Um, so it's not I mean, there's not like a, like a hidden secret but hidden secret, but I'll give you a little background on it. Maybe that's why you didn't hear about it. On September 20 of 1958. I Zola where curry, a poor and demented warmups from Georgia became a footnote in history. Just a literal sneeze away from being a major figure.

It says that day, they sometimes hire a housekeeper in short order cook Porter, ivory handle, seven inch letter holder, excuse me punch a seven inch letter holder into the chest of Martin Luther King Jr. Wow. He was in Harlem for a book signing. She wanted to kill kings. Um, she said because she believed he was a communist, and was spying on her. Wow. And such shame. Lady such shame brought to the curry name I'm trying to make trying to make amends. Wow. You know, I

really don't think I've heard that story in a seven inch. I mean, did it go? What happened? I mean, clearly he survived it where they had to remove the blade. I guess it but I guess it broke off in them because they actually had to remove the blade and the talking point was he was a sneeze away from dying. If he didn't sneeze he died. That's the story. Wow. The fact that she believed he was a commie In his way back in 1958, which arguably he came from his dad was communist.

Yeah, he was surrounded by a lot of common and we're gonna get into that more. Yeah. Wow. The more the more you learn the more you know. Yeah so we I gave him the info and the info and more the mainstream media for the people that don't know what and follow me and follow Him is we're not going to give you the mainstream media story here we're gonna get into the nooks and crannies of his life this beautiful people that surrounded him beautiful. I'm very excited. I like this a lot.

So let's get back to his father, Martin Luther King Martin Luther King singer to in October 1960. When Martin Luther King, Jr. was arrested at a peaceful sit in an Atlanta Robert Kennedy telephoned the judge and helped secure kings release. Although King Sr. had previously opposed Kennedy because he was a Catholic. He expressed his appreciation for these calls and switched his support to Kennedy. At this time, King, Sr. had been a lifelong registered Republican and had endorsed Republican

Richard Nixon. His son, Martin Luther King, Jr. soon became a popular civil rights activist. Taking inspiration from Mohandas Gandhi of India, he led nonviolent protests in order to give African Americans greater rights. Wow. Mind blown, King was was a Republican until the JFK popped him out of jail, then he switched. So let me give you the background story, because this is what I have to credit. My black history professor, Dr.

Mosley, all right. Because when he dropped on me, this is what started me really Antun questioning what the narrative is, oh, this is a nice because I have one of these moments too. Yeah, that's beautiful. When you remember the moment when you're your brain that's like your awakening. You're like, hold on a second. This media is crap. Yeah. And the story is in 1960, he was arrested for some kind of license violation in Georgia, and his father, daddy King.

That's what he was known as, was afraid that he was going to be lynched in jail. So he gets on the phone with his good friend, Nixon, and with the Kennedy people, and they would like some kind of broker who can get my son out of the jail. Wait a minute, with the Nixon, Nixon and the Kennedy people? Yes, that's fantastic. They both will say both married people. They, they Yes. They both wanted to get the black support. They were fighting for it. Oh my god, this is boiling oil. Nice.

Thank you. So who, who was Kennedy was the one that made the wheels turn and got King out of there. And at a show of gratitude, daddy King went on to sway his congregation and all his influence to Kennedy. And the next clue, tonics and turns back on the King Jr.

and it was devastating. The most devastating thing of all for Nixon, by the way, it was it was an act of cowardice when doctors productive King was arrested on a totally trumped up charge, and put in a paddy wagon and in chains to be taken to Roseville prison in Georgia. Coretta Scott King called both campaigns, the Kennedy campaign or Nixon campaign. So would you please help get him out? There was the violence against African Americans in the South in Georgia that time was horrible,

and she really thought he was going to be killed. And Kennedy was the Kennedy people stepped up and Nixon's Nixon told his advisers that I would just be grandstanding to interfere with the legal process and King, that was it. King later said that he had, you know, we were in touch we were I thought we were friends. And he was it showed a real moral real moral lapse.

And, and if and if Nixon had done it, it Kennedy was sitting down with the candidate to send out a campaign flyer that said, no comment Nixon versus the candidate with a heart and that and if if Nixon had carried the black vote, and he finally he still got 32% of the black vote, unlike today, when they when they when Republicans get like 2% of the black vote, but he would have won, he would have won probably would have won at least at least two more states and everything would have changed.

Wow. Wow. That was cool. And this is where history kind of shifted at this point. Yeah. In the time machine that you just put us in. Wow. Martin Luther King, became a huge civil rights leader. Daddy King swayed everybody within his influence to vote for Kennedy. Nixon last and that That's what that's that's where we're hanging out. I got to thank you right here. We're only 2020 Some minutes into the show. You've already given me a history

lesson, which I was completely unaware of. And it's so obvious, you know, like, where do you actually come from? And all you really see all the imagery you get is I have a dream. And he shot. That's pretty much it. I mean, to be honest about it. There's more, but that's what your brain my brain remembers. So this is this is

fantastic. And these are not ordinary people. These people were elite and and in a way, in a way they handful me and I've sat with them, and they wouldn't like hugely rich people know what their influence and influence is like one of the greatest things ever. He was like the OH is the OG Instagram influencer? Yes. Okay. And that's why that's why I lit up the show by calling him Greta away, because yes, it was 15 years. He was 15 years

old. When he was being shaped and groomed, wow. And his father saw a great opportunity by him getting arrested and basically saying, which cuckoo has that kind of power to call bow presidential campaign and say, Hey, which one of you guys can get my son out of jail? Yeah, I'm holding a contest. Want to see how you're doing? Wow, that's, that's maybe some Margaret Sanger juice. So who knows where that came from? But definitely in the in the mill year, as we would say?

Yes. So the Nixon and daddy King connection was so strong, that he really didn't even have hard feelings. Towards daddy King. As we'll hear on this next clip, Nixon visited visited Mars, Martin Luther King, Jr. On arriving at Martin Luther King, seniors home, there was a wake light atmosphere in taking place. There must have been 50 or 60 people there, enjoying food and talking with the King family and trying to help them cope with what had happened to

their son. Mr. Nixon walked in, walked up immediately up to Dr. King senior. And when Dr. King senior saw Mr. Nixon, the two embraced I remember being kind of behind Mr. Nixon and seeing Dr. King senior patting Mr. Nixon's back. I assume Mr. Nixon was doing the same with Dr. King senior. He talked with the family there with Mrs. King with a number of their friends. And then we got back into the car, and we headed to the airport. Wow, shame. Just no shame. I'm gonna go work to go work the

crowd during the week. Let's clean Clintons do that very well. Now, actually. And just for context, that was post the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. I just want to make sure people understood that. Yeah. So we have to do a little throwback clip. And just remind people, maybe for the new listeners may not have heard this, about the relationship between the media MLK and the civil rights movement. As a story, the Civil Rights Movement had it all. Good versus

drama, social upheaval. But at first America's major media ignored it, especially in the South. It was our responsibility to find a way to dramatize the issue was Congressman John Lewis says that the movements leaders realized to bring change, they needed to reach white Americans. How did you do that? As a movement? We literally put our bodies on the line, Jennifer Lawrence on the Civil Rights coverage, Hank klibanoff co wrote the race beat a book about the media and

the movement. Well, race was a big story in the south beginning in the 40s and 50s. It's just that no one knew about it. Finally, by 1957 Major northern newspapers discover the drama and the story. How do you feel about integrated passengers that television networks followed, even major southern media paid attention to the open hatred, you got to kick the white in the black set and the violent response to peaceful protest?

If you're gonna beat us, beat us in the light of day. Beat us for the cameras on on job this was Selma, Alabama, 1960 Pa. Among the bloodied John Lewis, American people could not stand it to see young children and all women been knocked down by fire hoses and chased by police stole. Wow, another interesting piece of the puzzle Of course, John Lewis, and you just die he's, I think, yeah, he's dead. And Elijah Cummings is sick, because sometimes I get mixed up myself. Right. It's terrible. But

now maybe it's the other way around. And now I know I feel bad about it. I do too. Sorry about that. But I just wanted to make the point that John Lewis, John Lewis is sick. He's coming to West away. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. So they were putting on a production. I mean, no kidding. I mean, that's the total show. And this is the tactic they use to draw attention to the, to the movement. Right. The movement as we heard it basically already been co opted by

politics. By politics and other influence influences. Yes. So there's multiple people. He, Martin Luther King, is probably has one of the greatest voices ever. What is called the Southern Baptists voice that politicians use when they go down south. You heard Hillary Clinton use it. It's really the Martin Luther King voice. Oh, totally. Obama uses it. I mean,

this just, this is not who we are. Right. So that just his voice alone, made people want to co opt him and steer him in different directions. It was an incredible brand, I mean, an all round multimedia brand with with the iconic voice in the and his speech pattern. Everything's total total brand, and a very young man. So we can't forget this. He is a very young man. I mean, he was born in 1929. So in the 60s, he

was only 31 years old. And 50. You know, I mean, so we're talking about just on the cusp of life, just understanding and before that, in the 50s man, he was being shaped one by his father, and next by this next man. We talked about him on previous shows Mr. bayaud Reston. MLK is organized. August 28 1963, a quarter of a million Americans gathered in Washington, demanding that Congress put an end to officially sanctioned racism. With our bed rest and as the organizer, the March on

Washington would have been like a bird without wings. It was a sea of humanity. You had the ability to pull people together, he was able to reach out to hundreds and 1000s of people all across America, everybody, from the NAACP to the Protestant Catholic Jews. He brought us all together, live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of that character. That afternoon, in the shadow of the Lincoln Memorial, a parade

of speakers offered words of inspiration to the crowd. Those spoken by Martin Luther King would be heard over and over again for decades to come. Byard Rustin would be all but forgotten. Right I do remember this guy so they aren't resting was a openly gay right now that that okay, I remember now. Yeah. So put that in context. You have a deep southern pastor, pastor from a family of pastors dealing with and being steered by br

rusting. But that wasn't a real issue that had to be on the issue to have a backyard with his his opening dealings with Communists of factions. And Ambay art was one of the ones that pushed MLK to really go nonviolent because there was it was captured in a scene in a movie called boycott, and is well documented as well, where Bay art came to visit. MLK, at MLK had armed guards around the house. And Bay art was like, how can you preach nonviolence but you have armed guards around

your house? Which I have no problem. You can be navall and still be about self defense. I mean, those two things are okay. It makes use of Yeah, exactly. Right. But he pushed him to be a passive is really like no guns, no guns. So but they aren't had a checkered past himself and we'll get into that a little later. But let's let's listen to a little bit more on his background civil rights pioneer fired was at heart a militant and revolutionary in the fight for civil rights

Byard. Rustin served as a trusted adviser to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. during the Montgomery Bus Boycott, but he's better known for organizing the iconic 1963 March on Washington. Then one man in America who could do it did it and that's why it happened. It had an architect his name was via Drosten. But in a time when intolerance ran high Rustin stood out for more than just his work on civil rights. It was just one of these facts of life. Why is gay he doesn't

hide it. I said to somebody wants that he never knew there was a closet to go into by had been attacked both first homosexuality, and as always his political views. Strom Thurman did it on the floor of the United States Senate, Thurman reference Ruskin's 1953 arrests on a public sex charge. The senator is interested in attacking me because he is interested in destroying the movement. He will not get away with this.

And start Strom Thurmond was a nice character to this is yeah, he was he's a piece of work. So heat, so Bayard Rustin, was really kind of the Steve Bannon architect in the background of Martin Luther King, Jr. Yeah, yes. And to give credit, he was the architect of the 63. March on Washington right up the bar. He was had a huge role in boycott the bus boycotts. But he didn't have that charisma that

Cain had, right. And that's what they said a couple clips ago, everybody spoken to Marshall and Washington, but MLK set it on fire. Right. And that's something that they are didn't have. And they want to play up this thing about they are being gay, you know, and it was a reason why him it. No, it was his political affiliations. But just for a little background, we're gonna get into Baos arrest.

Though I was extremely fond of him, like, I knew that he was interested in meeting lots of other people and occasionally they turned up to in my bed when I wasn't expecting. FBI field reports. On January 21 1953, Rusten, was arrested by the police department in Pasadena, California, as a suspected sexual pervert. He was charged with lewd vagrancy and sentenced to 60 days in the county jail. That was pretty fast news for the past this community that

Byard had been arrested in Pasadena. All the other arrests he had were on grounds of principle. But this was an arrest where he knew he was wrong. I don't mean morally wrong, because it was a sexual encounter. I mean, it was stupid to get arrested on the backseat of a car with two guys in a public place. And he knew this. Way, man, this is why Jeffrey Epstein had so much power is that in America, in particular, not even Europe so much. But in

America, it's always the SEC stuff that brings you down. I don't care if you're CEO, I don't care if you're, you know, if you're Martin Luther King, or if you're his, his mentor, or if you're the president. The SEC stuff always brings people down in America. And masks the point why I'm bringing this up because it didn't bring him down. Right. They knew it. They knew they knew what was going on. Yeah, they Southern Baptist preacher.

I think they were Baptist. Quote 99.9% Sure. Southern Baptist preachers knew who they are was, but he has so much juice and was such a great organizer. They looked the other way. But that is still the Achilles heel. For like a Strom Thurmond to bring that up. It doesn't help with a that's not what drove the wedge between MLK No, no, I gotcha. I understand that. I understand that as this next clip. That really did it.

Some of you may have heard on your news, and I know I heard it on the news this morning on PBS, the public radio that Bayard Rustin has been awarded the President's freedom medal. Bayard Rustin is well known amongst individuals who've watched the Marxist movement in this country for years, Bayard Rustin, is a black individual, joined the Communist Party, Young Communist League specifically, and cooperated

with a communist into his adult life. Then he became a socialist, ultimately becoming the leader of the Socialist Party in the United States. After that, he went to work with Martin Luther King to form organizations and became a very big leader in the civil rights movement. He actually was the primary organizer of the 1963. March on Washington. Wow, cool. It was the fact that he was a communist, because we got to put this in perspective. Yeah, the 50s 60s. We're going back to the

40s. Being a communist or socialist at that time was, that was the worst thing ever. It was the worst thing ever, especially with Mr. J. Edgar Hoover. breathing down your neck. Yeah. And that's why they were like, We don't need that kind of attention. They are right. You know, what you do in park cars went to men in broad daylight. That's one thing, but to be open and communist? No, that's no deal. But the influence, I would presume, had definitely rubbed off on King to some degree it must

have. And not only king. Okay, so let me just set up this next clip. This is from Mr. Danny Rubin. He was the national US Secretary of the Communist Party, a civil rights activist and once called the most dangerous man in America, in America to America you buy J. Edgar Hoover. He's gonna speak. Yeah, that's right there. He's gonna speak on Rosa Park and the bus movement. So then, you know, a couple of years later, we went to them and ask them to help finance these buses of young people to use

march in support of the Supreme Court decision. They did it they know. And that's a towel. We were able to bring 2000 young people to see see. What else? Oh, so I'm so I'm giving a picture. This is this is the stuff closest to 60 that led up to it. And of course, there was Rosa Parks and, and the Montgomery bus boycott and the Montgomery. I forget what they call it Association, something Association. And we had a role in those things. Rosa Parks was was active in the southern

neighbor, Youth Congress. People know her. She was not a party member. But after she became a heroine, she was, you know, friendly. Well, that maybe this is a good point for you to mention the Highlander Folk School. Maybe that's a good time for you to mention the Highlander Folk School. Yeah, I intend to let me just finish this. Huh. Now's not a good time to mention that Highlander Folk

School, but we'll get there. So a little background on Rosa Park, because what we're doing is all the people surrounded and kings in his orbit sphere in his orbit. Yeah, yeah. And in his orbit, so. Miss Rosa Parks. She was friends and occasional seamstress for Mr. Clifford and Virginia. Dirt D you are Have you ever heard of him? No. Okay, I'm going to enlighten you on me. Yes. Yes. First of all, he's a Rhodes Scholar. So get out there. Okay. Gotcha. Okay. And this is this is what I dug up on

them. It says Miss Parks was also friends and Kayla seamstress for Mr. Clifford in Virginia under White Upper Crust New Deal progressives who had been active in civil rights efforts. He was a lawyer. He he he as a lawyer, and she as a volunteer, Mrs. There encouraged and put money up for Mrs. Parks to attend a 10 day interracial workshop during the summer of 1955 at the Highlander Folk School.

Wait a minute, wait a minute, though this doesn't work. Rosa Parks was just a woman who was tired of sitting in the back of the bus You can't tell me she went to training. The narrative goes some training camp all of a sudden. Oh my god, what are you doing? It gets it gets juicy. are you ripping the universe apart? A training center for union and civil rights activists in rural

Tennessee. It says Dirk, let me see. He says he engraved prepared an appeal conviction for Claudette Colvin, a 15 year old African American woman for violating Montgomery's Buster gation laws and march 1955 right she was she was there is no Rosa Park Rosa Parks. But it says here I'm continuing to read it says activist decided that hers was not the case the to challenge that not to use to challenge the law. Doesn't that sound familiar to Brown versus Board of Education? How they

pick which case they were going to use course. Okay, I can tell you what, hold on was called that not look right. For the part. You know what it was she was dark skin. It was rumored that she was pregnant at 15 years old. So she didn't pass the paper bag test so to speak. And she didn't pass the communist test. Right. I said well was that there was therefore ready in my in December 1955 When a police went police arrested Rosa Parks for refusing to give her seat to a white man. So the lawyer for

Kotick Coven is best friends and cool with Rosa Parks. They put Claudette Colvin to the side, and Rosa Parks end up on top, my feet hurt, I'm gonna sit down on his bus. And then they ended up taking the lawyer gray took the federal court took the federal court litigation took on the federal court litigation challenging the constitutionality of the ordinance. So that's how it happened. Wow. So now tell me what you just heard God. No, I said a lot.

Well, what so what I just heard is that a lot of these, there's there was just a lot of connection between communism between elitist politicians, etc. Right down to Rosa Parks not being the story that we've I think we've all been told, regardless of color, I would hope that you know, you can get some special deal on that. Where it really you know, she was a trained activist, and they took an existing story and existing case and recreated it, maybe even with more people being

complicit. The thing, of course, that that I know they're going to lead to this, I think it's ultimately a lot of what happened with King brought an incredible awareness and goodness, to America through violence and through other not necessarily by King, but there was just a lot of shit going on. The question is, was it always politically motivated? That's the mind boggling part. I believe not to him, I think in his heart. And that's why I want

to make this clear to the people. I think he came from an honest place of wanting to do something for his people. But the and that's why I'm focusing not only I have you noticed,

I've really haven't talked much about him. Right. I'm talking about the people around outside influences that are trying to steer him where the is by proxy, because Mr. Durg, I'm sure said, Wow, that King Guy, Rosa, you know, you need to latch on to him, you know, we're going to, we're going to pay for you to go to this Highlander Folk School, which you don't get to that in a minute. But yeah, they paid for her to go there. And she just

did the exact exact same thing. They called it COVID Did, who they're represented. But they said now I caught it. You're not right for the role. And go back to what we said about the civil rights movement being a production, a TV production, right. I said, right, I said, right. I'm sorry. Right. All right. All right. So I actually dug up a clip. I'll miss caught it. COVID speaking.

That day, when the bus driver asked me to get up, I had this feeling come over me it felt like Harriet Tubman was holding me down hands were holding me down on one shoulder. And so John a true hands are holding me down on another show. And I was glued to the seat and I could hear the white passion is saying she got it that's loud. Should data move? And I fell. This is my time to take a stand for justice

My name is Claudia COVID. And in 1955 I refuse to give up my seat to a white passenger on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama, nine months before Rosa was 15 years old. Okay. Acting as the casting director for the bus scene of the movie. We're sorry, Mr. Claw that your voice is just not going to cut it. We need someone to be upstanding and sound the part you'll have to go that's exactly what it was. Was cast any top. Yeah, you top that on with being allegedly pregnant. That wasn't gonna fly.

We're not helpful. We are not going to be empathetic to her. We can try and cover it up with some CGI. Oh, wait, we didn't have that. Now, where are we at? Okay, now we can get back to the Highlander. Highlander school. Yeah, I want to hear about this. But this is why J. Edgar Hoover stayed on Martin Luther King so hard because he knew that he was a communist. He was he was you

know, he was a pawn of many different factions. And as I've stated previously, Martha King and attended a school known as the Highlander Folk School, him Rob Abernathy. And that lesbian Rosa Parks, they used she remember the secretary SCLC was really a young sister named Claudette Colvin, who resisted getting up out of her seat on the bus. But they knew that they really couldn't use her because she was a 14 year old girl who was pregnant. So they decided to use Rosa Parks. I

like how he says that lesbian. Oh, I can, I can validate that, but I wasn't going to clip it out for just a sec. I use clips as they are I don't dink around with them to church. Anyway, and if we do then we let you know something was edited. Of course. Yes. But yes, but I just left it in there. As he said the Highlander school was known for his communist ties. One, Mr. Myles Horton. He was America educator, socialist, co founder

of the Highlander school Folk School. Let's go down to Yeah, he says the term of Reagan for wiki wiki here is that the term communist was applied to Horace teachings and Highlander school. But of course, the school's philosophy of bringing whites and blacks together in violation of segregation laws. No, no, not because you're bringing whites and blacks together because of your affiliations with actual non communist and another man named Mr. Stanley Leveson. Now Mr. Stanley Levinson was really

close to Martin Luther King. He was even considered a ghostwriter for Martin Luther King, and they said, although no evidence of Levison having further ties to the CP, USA, Communist Party, USA, the FBI used earlier communist history to justify wiretaps and bugs in his office, and offices and hotel rooms of Martin Luther King, Martin Luther King. They said FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover had long associated the civil rights movement with communism, so that just let you

know of who they're dealing with. Now, so that we know about the Highlander school and its rural school in Tennessee, we're not talking about the internet age. So to find out about some school, in the middle of rural Tennessee that's pushing communist ideologies. You had to know somebody knew somebody you want to say, of course. But one of the little things, little known facts that I even found out myself while doing this show, and I always loved doing that. When I found out something

I didn't know. I like to share with other people. That Highlander school song, it was in the civil rights struggle that Highlander became most famous and famous for a song. How that happened is a textbook example of Highlander working exactly the way it was designed. From the start, the Civil Rights Movement had songs, lots of songs, but it didn't have a song, one unifying and irresistible anthem that not only said who they were, but that musically expressed all their hope, determination and

spirit. Septima Clark, Pete Seeger and a new young staffer named Guy Carolann began adapting an old hymn turned labor song that sylphy love to sing. The word will was changed to shall some verses were fitted to the new movements goals, and the tempo was change so people could march to it better. It became, we shall overcome. We shall overcome. Deep in my heart I do believe we shall overcome.

Wow. So were those basically the lyrics to the song before they actually put the song together because it was not shared his will. He said we are we will overcome. So they slowed it down. And we spoke on previous shows how this is a mean, actually, it's a trigger when they play a song because we had three different clips, using the same song and mainstream media to really trigger you and take you back to a certain place

right. Interestingly, came out of this little school in Tennessee, interesting land school, two white guys who put it together and released it just saying, right. So yeah, so I thought I was like, wow, cool. That's very cool. Anyway, so Napster now you understand that? Of course, in you have to put it in context of as you said, of the, the communism, we had the, you know, there was rumor of communists in Hollywood, it was just, it was

people getting blackballed. It wasn't just, you know, poor people trying to organize the communist and the Communist Party was a problem in the United States of America to enter FBI, and J. Edgar Hoover, who was a total whack job, and and had his own political ambitions and motivations and friends and foes, so this of course, could only lead to nastiness. So we have the protagonist in the story. Now we need the antagonist in the story, which is one Mr. J. Edgar Hoover.

Well, I'm the narrative is J. Edgar and A J. Edgar Hoover was this angry white man that wanted to take this successful young black man down? Well, not so fast. Tony brown journal, was J. Edgar Hoover black, one of the most disliked white men in the black community, allegedly was black himself. That rumor doesn't surprise those who observe some of those blacks who pass over and become white bigots to cover their tracks. Or perhaps they just suffer from

self hatred. But it's Millie McGee back to her family tree in McComb, Mississippi, to see if the man who became synonymous with the FBI and hatred of Martin Luther King Jr. was himself her cousin, who had gone through the special Underground Railroad built from the South to Washington DC for blacks who looked white enough to live as white people. Thank you very much for being with me. Thank you for having me. Your book. Secrets uncovered. J Edgar Hoover passing for White. And as

a passing for white because there's a question mark. Why the title passing for white question marks. All right. So J. Edgar Hoover. Not only was he a secret crossdresser he was also black. Yes. Figure that that was not in my textbook. Of course not. But it doesn't work to the narrative of anything, anything. Nothing. Nothing works with that with that story. This is all good, less like Tony Brockington. You think this when we first when I first started writing the book, I did

not realize that jayega Hooper was actually in my lineage. And I was told it was rumors in the family that he was, and just rumors. So I knew that I had to put question mark until I get some research and make out for sure that he was a part of the family. This is a pretty serious charge. And not because there's anything wrong with being black, but because of the other implications. Do you feel comfortable making this charge that J. Edgar Hoover. Are

you saying in effect, he was black? Is that what you're saying? I'm saying and in fact that I'm a black woman and he is in my family lineage. He is a part of my family. I don't necessarily like it. I didn't even know it when I started it. But when I found it out, I was looking for my great great grandmother who

was Emily Allen, who had babies by his ancestors. And after doing my research after two and a half years of research, I have without a shadow of a doubt in my heart and the document showing that he is part of our lineage. Oh, man. So Jay Hoover was a DDOS yes nice. He was a self loathing seems like a self loathing black man. Oh no Did he ever hatred but was he known racist or is he is there examples of your came up don't have a stroke on me I'm just asking a question

that was a couple of data points. Okay. He hated MLK. He hated Marcus Garvey oh yeah that was one that was the one there he really marked dark Yes. So he made that that member they called him the tiger so yeah, oh, if people want to go back and listen to the oh the archives you know you pick up on that but it's it's funny thing that J Edgar Hoover was the original uncle raucous give boy cotton baboon das a goddamn talking cheek mocking Rakesh, what's wrong with you now now to fail. Rob?

Hold on a second. I triggered that clip. Why do I not know what this is? Uncle ruckus? You don't know uncle ruckus? No. And remember I lived in in Europe during a number of formative years but Oh, Uncle ruckus was dying this is new uncle ruckus is from the shell bone dots. And he is the most self hating black man. known to man even though it's animation he is known for his self loathing so much so he said he has reverted LIGO boy and the white man I don't know what he was what it what is

this? Aaron what? What channel is this on? Comedy? You can catch it on I mean YouTube, YouTube Hulu everything but it's comedy Comedy Central show. Okay, yes compensator show I'm gonna start the clip over this is good god damn talking cheek mock a raucous What the hell is wrong with you now Nana fell out but that had between me and my Luther. So call Kang Kang. I know it ever Fred got arrested? Oh, you don't remember me. But I've been throwing bricks at Joe March and nasa 1959.

So brothers and sisters, you know, shut the hell up your black man, by Brown with job. Thank God for the white man. And for them. My snare. My Lofa came up to me. I'd unleashed the Hound and tying it in a puppet towel. I would happen at the back of the bus. You have to go mess with the Nakhodka thanks. I had a shock to myself. And I realized why a man got better and stop acting crazy. Man. This shows not nuts. Yeah. So that that, that puts me in the mind of what J Edgar

Hoover was like so got it. Just got it. Okay. All right. So moving forward. I thought I'll add it in there. Thank you. Just to show you a hold on. I gotta set my VCR now and make sure I can. Yeah. So just to show you how sinister J. Edgar Hoover was. Let's listen to the US National Archives. Well, maybe.

Among the treasure trove of CIA and FBI files released by America's National Archive last week, were documents relating to the assassinated civil rights leader Martin Luther King, the FBI director at the time, Edgar Hoover detested Qing and suspected him as being a communist is spies discovered evidence to support that, but far more explosive for a man of God was kings that sexual behavior, which the FBI discovered was promiscuous, and even divided some of his

followers. It included an affair with at least one celebrity, the folk singer and former girlfriend of Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, the Reverend King would never see some of his dreams realized, as he was shot dead just weeks after the FBI report was made in April 1968 is unclear why the archives released the king documents as they were not included in President Trump's order to publish files relating to the Kennedy assassination. Oh, this was recent. Hmm.

So some Kennedy papers came out. And in the Kennedy file was this Martin Luther King? Couple briefs interesting. So Martin Luther King, J. Edgar Hoover will call Coretta Scott King and play tapes, not him personally, but every hour call and play tape some Martin Luther King philandering? Yes, right. And I don't you know, what, if you're effective, you're 65 doesn't really sway me one way or the other. That's why I really didn't get America. I told you this. It's always the same stuff.

Right? You got to pay your pants. Right? So they tried to write this letter to King telling him to kill himself, because they were gonna expose him and brother. Yeah, yeah. So that's how sinister J. Edgar Hoover was. So, but when Martin Luther King really got himself into trouble, it wasn't a civil rights movement. It wasn't any of that. And I want to read one

quote, that he was going to use. At the March on Washington, it says King had planned to cap his speech by exhorting people to go back to our communities as members of the International Association for Advancement of creative dissatisfaction International. So he was on the globalist tip back then, clearly. But he made a misstep. And that's when he started talking to against the Vietnam War, to guarantee liberties in Southeast Asia, which they had not found in

southwest Georgia and he's taller. So we have been repeatedly faced with a cruel irony of watching the growing white boys on TV screens as they kill and die together for a nation that has been unable to seep them together in the same school room. So we watched him in brutal solidarity, burning the trucks of a poor village. But we realized that they would

have to live on the same block in Chicago Atlanta. As I have walked among the desperate, rejected and angry young men, I have told them that Molotov cocktails and rifles would not solve that problem. But they ask and rightly so what about Vietnam? They asked if our own nation wasn't using massive doses of violence to solve its problem. And I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to

the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today. My own government. Yep, yeah. Now this to me shows that he was indeed very sincere. Because he saw He saw the hypocrisy, spoke out about it, but underestimated a number of things, including the military industrial complex and just a hawk. I mean, we could do a whole nother show on that alone. But yes, that's, that's clearly the it's like what Okay, King. Now, you've pushed us too far.

And let's put it into context. He's saying nice things about sending his people into a burning house. You have, at this time, black people are becoming more they're we're getting tired of the nonviolent resistance and leaning more toward if nothing else, self defense of the Malcolm X mindset. So there were like, if King starts to assault, self defense and right war. Because he is effective, he's an effective speaker and motivator.

But he didn't stop there. King continues on about the Vietnam War. America and most of its newspapers, applauded me in montgomery. I stood before a 1000s of Negroes getting ready to riot when my home was bombed. Sad, we can do it this way. They applauded us in the citizen movement. We non violently decided to sit in at lunch column. They applauded us on the

Freedom Rides when we accepted blows without retaliation. Oh, the press was so noble in its appalling and so noble in its praise when I was saying be non violent toward Bull Connor. There's something strangely inconsistent about a nation and a press. That will praise you when you say be non violent toward Jim Clark, but will cursing Damn you when you say be non violent third, little brown Vietnamese children. got something wrong with that?

Yeah. Yeah, he touched that third rail and the fact that he beat the hand that had been friendly to him in the media, because he came in depressing that they met the clip we just pray. And the context of that is the Vietnam War was the first media war. It was mainly photojournalism. But there was also a lot of film coming in. And that's when Americans first really saw the ugliness of war as it was being reported. But I'm sure what's good for the writings for the media? Well,

that's an important moment in television history. Yes, very good for the media. People are glued to it. We love war. So he had got to a point where he was like, Okay, let me let me know you back up a little bit. So at this point, JFK has stepped in and Robert Kennedy has stepped in like King, we

know who you're associated with. You got to cut those people off because of the communist ties, and right after that, JFK was assassinated, and MLK gives his views on JFK MLK, the most devastating thing in Martin's life was the assassination of President Kennedy. He saw it as his own assassination. And he said, If they can't protect the President, our days are numbered. Yeah, right. Oh, yeah. I said it again. Yes. Yeah.

Yeah, can I understand? Yeah, he was exactly right. The king assassinated eyewitnesses to the assassination say that Dr. King left his room 306 at the Lorraine hotel just before dinner to get some hair. He walked over to the railing at the spot, and noticing some friends below. He leaned over and began to speak with them. Police say 205 feet away in a window in a flophouse the assassin waited. He waited police believe in a bathroom down the hall from the room he

rented but four hours earlier. To get a clear shot of his victim. The assassin apparently had to stand in the bathtub, leaning forward to brace his arms on the window ledge to study his rifle. And this was the view he got. He fired a single shot hitting his target squarely and then he ran out of the bathroom and along the decrepit hallway turning he raced down the rickety wood stairs and out. One policeman said he simply faded. Like Pappa, CBS News, Memphis and he was dead. Yeah.

So but the story doesn't end there. Because then the narrative was lone shooter. Racist guy, Earl ray. Yeah, it was really it was James Earl, right three, nine renames. We're always looking for three names. That's that's your three first. It's your right. It's a trifecta. That's really a good one. It is your ultimate white supremacist Nazi hate guy has three first names. James Gray. Yeah, let me guess it wouldn't him. Not according to Judge Joe Brown.

Did he in fact assassinate Dr. Martin Luther King and had he not died and his local attorney not died in close succession. It would have been my finding that he was not the gunman. That Remington 760 Game Master they've gotten the Civil Rights Museum is not the murder weapon. It's not even close. Look at and it was a two man hit team that killed him from the fire station dormitory. It wasn't the flophouse and it wasn't in those

bushes. So yeah, I got into the deep details of Dr. King. And that three or four year period that case was kicking around in front of me. Wow. Okay, two person hit job is a very, very, very different story. Mm hmm. There was a thing called Operation letter spike and operation chaos. Ah, so this is from the Cynthia McKinney's 2002 Martin Luther King Jr. Record Collection Act, which I love Cynthia McKinney. I think she does great work when she was actually into politics. Yeah, yes. I

remember she was fantastic. She kind of she herself got threatened I believe and she Yeah, cuz she left Brownsville she was she had rooms filled about what was the little kids I think was the UN or somebody I digress but she she questioned a lot of powerful people. Oh about the about the babies and incubators. That was one of the ones which was a total dead daughter of Hill and Knowlton, PR. Vice President. It was a total setup job just to get us into Iraq.

Yeah, yeah, that was exactly it. Yeah. So in this in this act, she said describing her reasons for drafting the bill McKinney stated that true for MLK assassination, which has never been totally revealed the FBI program COINTELPRO the CIA, CIA project, Operation chaos, an army intelligence, Operation letters by all work together to prevent the rise of a black Messiah and replace Martin King Jr. With a clean negro. Well, we're gonna get back to the clean negro. No, okay. All right, or

Yeah, we're gonna get back there. But let's continue on with Judge Joe Brown. He didn't kill him. is interesting. The homicide file for the Memphis Police Department reaches the same conclusion back in 1968. They entered their file in protest to the DHS office. Their conclusion was his Re is not the gunman. He was not even in Memphis that day. We know conclusively where he was. So why do you think he got convicted for the

murder? Well, he didn't get convicted. He pled guilty. You have to understand though, the news media puts it out as he was the self confessed killer of King that's not true. All through the transcripts, the entirety of the record, he never confessed. And often he said, I never said I killed King. I didn't kill him. I'm pleading cause of Al Ford. That's a DLL

for D It's a moderately old US Supreme Court case. And it says even if you are not actually guilty, and you are pristinely innocent you make plead guilty to the charge if you think that doing so is in your best interest. Wow, that's like the reverse of the system amendment. I'm gonna take the charge. That's, yeah, I'm gonna I'm gonna I'll jump on the grenade basically. And I know people make some people maybe rolling their eyes like calm amo. Here you go. What your conspiracies but not yet.

I thought it was kind of put that term in our eyes, though, maybe a little bit later. But the US government found responsible for MLK, but only 15 years ago, something else happened something that changed everything we knew about Martin Luther King's death, and yet most people still don't know about it. 15 years ago, the only trial ever held concerning the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. was concluded. And no, it wasn't done in someone's basement under

the cover of tinfoil hats. There wasn't anyone with the word Illuminati carved in their forehead and know the jury wasn't made up of beavers wearing bow ties. Because if it were I would have been there. This was a real live trial between the King family and the conspirators who killed Martin Luther King. All right, this was real. In a civil trial in 1999.

A jury found US government agencies along with others guilty of assassinating MLK in Memphis in 1968 After hearing from 70 witnesses, including Lloyd Jowers, who assisted the sniper and opened a Jim's grill from which the shot was fired. The jury took less than an hour to decide that one multiple government agencies were responsible for the murder to James Earl Ray the man we've always been told pulled the

trigger had nothing to do with it. And three, the mainstream media is a stain on the soul of this country. Was that like his rap? That was our it was the guys I'm sorry. Oh, I know the guy. Is that the Russian dark hair? Yeah. Your hair goatee. Yeah, he kind of hates America, but he doesn't in a funny way. Yeah, but he brings up a good point. No, no mainstream media. No disagreement there. But this is kind of like the OJ trial with the civil trial. You know where he's, he's, he's convicted

in a civil trial. So the King family I, again, this is why this show exists. I didn't know this. So there was an actual guilty verdict that two government agencies were involved. Let me guess. Multiple not to multiple be more than two. And well, let me go back to my notes. Could it be the FBI and COINTELPRO this Yeah, A military and intelligence operation Leonard spike, maybe possible news? Yeah. And if that's true if they took out the black Messiah, who was the claim negro. So, um,

we're gonna figure that out. The reason why you've heard none of this, and I'm not saying this to toot my own horn, but we put a lot of work into putting the show together to have this conversation weekly. And we do get value for value. And I think that we don't thank people that really, you know, show us appreciation. So me and Adam, been having conversations about

how we should thank people. And I think we'll do something similar to no agenda and thank people within the show, somewhere around this time point in the show, what do you think out? I think it's a great idea. And I think this is a good spot to do it as well, because I was I was actually extremely excited. I'm like, Okay, now we're gonna, this is gonna be, you know, like the the crescendo, the climax, yes, before we get to that value for value is the name of the game, we don't charge you.

There's no corporate interest. Obviously, corporate interests, would not appreciate perhaps the controversial topics that are discussed here, are being called a stain. That's a perfect example. You know, it would be tough to play that clip that way. So we just consider this to be a valuable program. It's valuable series, that it has a very long shelf

life, which is, which I'm very pleased about. So if you're in the future, and we're old men, and you're listening to this, hopefully pay pal still works, or who knows who owns it by then Amazon probably bought, we'd appreciate you determining how much value this was to you. In fact, this particular show, I think it would be a value to your children if you don't already have him listening, just to give them a little alternative history. It's just a different perspective on what

they're being taught in school. And I guarantee you it's not this. To do that to support the show, go to mo facts.com. Or you can go directly to the donation page at mo fund me.com mov FUNDM

II e.com. And on the next show will be thanking people who send in some value for value All right, so back to the claim Negro Jesse Jackson FBI evolved at MLK is murder merciless some of the same get low get low because we were was desperate to put sprayed bullets of all of us in the courtyard there's a picture of Andy Young and somebody we put on that

picture is was saying the police coming to drone guns. The gods came met with goo goo when the sun came from for the pigeonhole about hey the repleted woman died so young such moral authority Thank you segment it talks about what do you remember thinking at the time as all of this is going on? I remember saying that we cannot let one blue color movement we want on the Washington can we do it

now? I gotta be honest with you mo it was difficult for me to understand everything he was saying the middle part I got the beginning was very it was he was you show talking about the picture of when MLK got shot. Well, the reason why I played this clip was his account. He's out there pointing in the wrong direction from where the trowel that we just spoke about said the shot actually came from Oh, it didn't come from that window y'all reporting that you know the iconic picture with Yeah, and

yes, yes, yes. Yes. That was bullshit. Excuse my language. I hardly ever used that. That was complete. Bull cocky. Right What are you pointing at Jesse? So the bonus didn't come from that you use that you were there and you heard the shots come? Okay, you hear shots come from somewhere you point in the wrong wrong direction. And everybody's pointing in the wrong direction. That's bull crap. Bull crap. And that's why I play that to catch

him up in his own words now Theramin Yes, sir. Now we're gonna get to allegedly, allegedly kill Martin Luther King by none other than Mr. Steve Coakley factor is the one who was picked to replace Martin King. But Jesse is the one he trained. If you would spend all this time on putting him in place, and you ain't got nobody else around Martin Andy was supposed to be shot with Martin. But Andy wasn't on the balcony. He was on the floor. So he didn't get it.

Ralph was inside, so we didn't get it. He point if you spent all that time Martin's about to say you are ancient. Do you understand that you got to go on the assassination? Because now Martin is so continuously condemning you, you got wiretaps everywhere. And we know what he said about Jesse in front of everybody. But who knows what he said when it was just him in route? How much more severe was his accusations? Wait a minute. Is this is this Martin Luther King discovering

that Jesse Jackson was an infiltrator? Did I understand that? Yes, that's exactly what you asked. Oh. And that's for a one. Mr. Steve, calculate the same one that broke us to the Boulais. Right on previous shows. And he fingered Martin Luther King as a Boulais. member. So it's not like he's team king. You know, I know it's not out of the realm for his overall overall thinking.

Yeah. So and a little tidbit of information. The story is all the people that were in on it. didn't wear neckties that day. I've heard this. I have heard this one. And I think that might have been put in a movie somewhere. Yes. And another little tidbit. There's a story there's an argument, did Martin Luther King even die at the scene of the assassination? Or was he killed in the hospital? Yeah, this is this is an ongoing argument that was actually going on yesterday.

And I found it quite entertaining. That maybe he was and I didn't put that in the show. But that is a conversation as well, because he actually made some people say he actually didn't succumb to his gunshot wounds on the kid in Washington, DC. Has anyone has anyone really documented this story? The way you've been unfolding it? So far, is this in any movie? Who's gonna fund it? I'm not gonna I'm not being facetious. I'm just saying that. What am I thinking? At the top

of the show? What is Martin Luther King? He's been triggered to keep black people in control. If you let these little nuances in. We can't have humanistic properties of him. No, we can't. The burning house. Yeah, not not no. That will ruin the effect of the trigger is I have a I have a dream be nonviolent, you know, every time you know, play along. Yeah. Anytime people start getting riled up. It's it's combat now. But let's let Steve Coakley continue on.

Now what's happening? NBC Meet the Press, the most watched Sunday news program goes back to this moment that we're out teaching is a point of distrust an evidence of Martin's dislike to Jesse, they go right back to that spot. Put him right on Rockefellers, NBC. toss that ball right up and say, Jesse, now when I've tossed this ball up, I want you to stuff at home.

So he puts a circle around Jesse's head and a circle while Mark said calls it close and says you will want to Mark's closest associates What did Martin King say to you tonight before he died? Ah, man. So the media was complicit in cuz actually Ralph Abernathy was one of the kings right hand man and he was he was picked to be next in line but he had tax problems. He even had Jesse Jackson even had bigger tax problems for him but

I was gonna say you get the you don't have tax problems. The IRS creates your tax problems and for some people they don't create the tax problems. And the story is that Jesse Jackson old multiples of what Ralph Abernathy owed but he wasn't bothered so let's continue on with this conspiracy theory. I'm had to say it like that, and this is all allege but did Jesse Jackson set up MLK. Despite his official inclusion on King staff, King soon found

himself unimpressed with aspects of Jackson's personality. He was especially troubled with Jackson's reflective ability to escalate encounters with government affairs. shows, police departments and innocent bystanders. Now as King lay dying on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel, Jackson claims and has claimed since 1968 that he was the last to speak to King

and cradle kings head as he died. Jackson did appeared on Chicago television the next day, wearing a bloody turtleneck that he said, was stained with the blood of the Fallen civil rights leader. King associates have always challenged Jackson's self described role on that day as fabricated and distasteful.

Jackson in reality was in the parking lot below. Critics also claimed that Jackson went so far as to wipe King's blood on his shirt for the sole purpose of going on television to build his own legend. Oh, man, he pulled a jackieo to enlighten me, Jacqueline Onassis wife of John F. Kennedy had allegedly parts of his brains on her dress, and she appeared in so I think that several photographs

are really I didn't know this. Yeah, yeah, he did pull a jackieo because the word was nobody taught in the media know why that was what was going around. He puts blood on his shirt rolls right out there. Yeah, I'm the right hand man to Martin Luther King and history goes on. I mean, even if, if it did happen if he had that was the turtleneck. It's the next day and he's wearing it. See awareness. highly inappropriate. That that is the ultimate cloud chase of modern term.

I mean, that's, I mean, there's there's biblical comparisons for what he did with that. Yeah. But the sad thing is, the deaths didn't stop for the King family. And the king and the Kennedy families have so much in common and it's kind of sad. Adam, these next few clips did just the quiz you did you know they assassinated MLK case. A mysterious drowning left a family in shock and a King's legacy lost in the shadows was his death and accident or

murder. Alfred Daniel king must be expanded not only to our obvious enemies, but those within ourselves. The younger brother of Martin Luther King, Jr. was set to continue his brother's legacy. But just 15 months after Martin was assassinated, sad news for all of our fellow citizens, and people who love peace all over the world. And that is that Martin Luther King was shot and was killed tonight. At

DS life was cut short. In this groundbreaking television event, we reveal the story of ad King. His legacy, his leadership, his death. I met Gordon will tackle that question on the 50th anniversary of the King assassination with new details on the death of ADK. Unsolved history life of a Wow, no, no,

no, I didn't know that. What I do know is that we need to have some kind of music, you know, some kind of scary music or something to really draw you in otherwise you don't understand the directness of the situation. So on on July 21 1969, nine days before his 39th birthday, Alfred Daniel William King, the king's brother was found dead in his swimming pool at his home. I said the cause of death was listed as accidental. But people don't see it that way.

I can understand and you're right. The parallels with the Kennedys is crazy. But it doesn't stop there. Did you know they assassinated Martin Luther King's Well, I was sitting in the back and look at him. He was shooting it was such a shock. I was standing I couldn't believe I thought it was some like you know a tarragon with blinks in

the front or in the middle of a shot. You know, I've seen some people fall and then I knew then I knew after a year he shoots really you know, then this gentleman says fall to the floor. Everyone's gonna fall in. Located on the right side of the pulpit? No, he stood up Just thought she was down here. That's right. He just stood up thought she did shoot up toward the choir. She never when he she liked that she liked that. Okay, who was that?

On June 30 1974. Alberta King was the king's mother was assassinated inside a church by Marcus Wang Chanel, a 23 year old black man from Ohio, who had adopted an extremist version of the theology, Black Hebrew Israelites. Hmm. And that's comes forward. Fast forward to now. With that, we heard that group in the news Yes, yeah, go ahead. Go ahead. Go ahead.

Because it's the kids the kids with the Magga hats who were at the pro life rally and they were being a yelled at by the black Israelites and I believe the shooting of a Jewish deli or store in New Jersey. Yeah, and the rabbi killing then the rabbi killing right. Yeah. But hold on Barrowman. Oh, hold on. I just put it in the case man. Here it is.

Mr. Wang? Yes, was a little person. But not only that, it was allegedly part of a group of black assassins called the truth the truth was ran out of rights Wright Patterson Air Force Base, and his name our codename was little professor. They targeted they were they were targeted for assassination. Most of most American leading black religious and spiritual leaders straight out of COINTELPRO and project chaos wow

that's pretty mind blowing. Oh, man. I love to heard of these two family members being killed. No. Well, why not? Maybe well, why not as obvious because what was the quote about the M five M? You know? The stain Exactly. His mom being killed in a church vaguely vaguely vaguely but not as an assassination never characterized as such. Never thought and you I don't know if there was ever any trials or

none of that. No, absolutely not. Which is of course why I show up every week is despite compete schooled. You would think that the women's rights movement will latch on to her as a no not only Big King die, you know his mom, you know, you know how they do exploit it. There was sporting in some kind of way, you know, it's not been exploited ever though, to my knowledge. Whenever I see that. Yeah, that's when they don't exploit

something that is a that's a tell huge red flag to me. is same as the one with the guy asked brought his name or I mean, brought him early, but not by name. The kid in DC got killed by the work for the DNC. Seth Rich. Stafford I always forget his name. The fact when they didn't use him as a example of gun violence was pretty telling what was also the wrong gun. It wasn't some scary looking ar 15 It was a 22 pistol. But yeah, your point is,

right, but it was in Washington DC a gun free zone. And it was a White House. And it was a white guy. I mean, obviously, you know, Oh, yes. Your white guy gets gunned down needs some news attention. But one of your own one of your DC APMC workers so I mean, it just drunk. Man. We don't care. Now, no tragedy goes on. exploited? Yes, correct. So I know this has been a rough ride. No, it's been a beautiful ride. It's been it's been the roller coaster of my life.

But I found this quirky little clip. And I thought it was a good way to end it because it was just no, this has been like a I don't know a very sad show in a way but very enlightening. Formative, enlightening and informative as well. Ah, accidentally honored on MLK Day. Tonight factor fiction is brought to you by America's finest carpet. And tonight's factor fiction we're looking into a story

involving a stunning Martin Luther King Day mistake. As the story goes a plaque made for a 2002 MLK Day celebration Florida gave thanks to Dr. King's assassin James Earl Ray. And amazingly, this one is true for their annual MLK Day celebration. The people of Lauderhill Florida, invited after J James Earl Jones to be their featured speaker. In appreciation, they ordered a plaque and were horrified when it came with an inscription thanking James Earl Ray for

keeping the dream alive. Ad pro company that made the plaque claim the error was an innocent albeit stupid mistake. The plaque was corrected in time for the celebration. Man that's horrible. What was right for keeping the dream alive? Hey, James Earl Ray do the CNN voice man Well, Mo, man, this was this was great. And yes, it is. In a way it's sad, but no, not really. Because look at where we are. And because what's taking place right now, none of this conversation might have

ever happened without MLK. Without me correct. Obviously, events unfold and they have to unfold in a certain way for the future and the current to take place at all. But it's it's great because we get to learn from this story. And hopefully look at lots of people with fresh eyes. Jesse Jackson for sure.

Now that was the goal is to give you information that the mainstream media just refuses to let out even though it's well documented is court cases is not a you know, tinfoil hat you know Dorito dust thing you know that you know that meme or tropes they put out there for conspiracy theories. These are

real facts. There are some dots to connect but as always say pay attention to everything and the truth will reveal itself and we will return in a week's time remember us at mo funmi.com See you next week everybody bye bye you come when I say goodbye to my didn't realize about NASA back would you please please do me a favor if you should happen to see my baby somewhere please tell them when to please make my dreams come true Mr Tree

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