The Trifecta of Evils
"The people of the world think the U.S. is the most significant
threat to peace.” - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
By Glen Ford
Information Clearing House
January 23, 2014
When Dr. Martin Luther King died at the age of 39, he was quite
clear about who and what was at the root of human suffering.
He believed that “racism, militarism and extreme materialism”
were the “giant triplets“ of “interrelated” evil that had to be
overcome if society was to be transformed.
Dr. King said the United States was host to all three resident evils,
and that America reigned as “the greatest purveyor of violence in
the world, today.”
Forty-six years later, the United States clearly leads the world in
all three of Dr. King’s categories of evil. And, we can prove it by
the numbers.
It is true that racism is hard to measure, but the effects of racism
can be quantified.
If a racist government is defined as one that consistently uses its
powers in ways that harm a particular racial group, then the U.S. is
indisputably the most racist major state in the world.
The U.S. prison population is by far the largest on the planet, in
sheer numbers and in the proportion of Americans locked up.
No other country comes close, which makes the United States the superpower of mass incarceration.
America’s police and prison custodial forces dwarf the militaries of most countries, which tells us that militarism is now so deeply embedded in U.S. domestic structures that you can’t tell where the military ends and the police begin.
Nearly half of U.S. prisoners are African American, although Blacks
are only one-eighth of the total U.S. population.
Since Americans make up fully one-quarter of the world’s prison
inmates, that means one out of every eight prisoners on the planet
is an African American.
This could only occur in a thoroughly racist state, whose institutions work overtime to produce the biggest and most racially unbalanced incarceration numbers on Earth.
Clearly, America has racism, triple evil number one, covered.
“The United States is the superpower of mass incarceration.”
Number two is militarism.
The U.S. military budget is almost as large as the military
spending of all the world’s other nations, combined.
Together, the U.S. and its NATO allies account for more
than 70 percent of global weapons spending.
At last count, the U.S. spent six times more on war than China,
and 11 times more than Russia.
In fact, if you count up the U.S. and all of its allies, they are
probably responsible for about 90 percent of total moneys
spent on war.
Therefore, today, 46 years after Dr. King’s death, the United States
is not just the greatest purveyor of violence in the world, it is right
at the center of just about the totality of militarized violence in
the world, today.
Which is why a recent international poll shows that the people of
the world think the U.S. is the most significant threat to peace.
Finally, the third of the triple evils: Extreme Materialism.
By that, Dr. King meant great disparities in wealth and income.
According to the Suisse Global Wealth Databook, wealth is so
unevenly distributed in the United States, it no longer resembles
a First World country.
Of all the rich nations, the U.S. is dead last in terms of material
equality.
So, by Dr. Martin Luther King’s measurements, America is in bad
shape, more bedeviled by the triple evils than back in his day.
In fact, things are much, much worse because...it’s the silence
that kills you.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article37454.htm
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