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Dr. Martin Luther King: A
domestic terrorist?
Asks Ira Chernus If Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., were alive
today, he might well be leading acts of civil disobedience
against the war in Afghanistan and Iraq. And he would probably
be charged with domestic terrorism, under the new anti-terrorism
act. Anyone who has any links to his organization, or
contributed money to it, could be charged too.
According to Section 803 of the act, it takes three things to
make you a domestic terrorist. You have to break a law (federal
or state). Your lawbreaking has to involve "acts dangerous to
human life." And it must "appear to be intended to intimidate or
coerce" a civilian population and/or the government.
Suppose Dr. King and a bunch of others sat down in a highway in
front of a truck carrying cluster bombs on their way to Iraq.
This one should be an easy shot for a prosecutor who wants to
charge him with terrorism. He definitely broke the law. "Acts
dangerous to human life"? You betcha, the prosecutor tells the
jury.
The crowd could easily get out of hand, spill into the oncoming
lane, and cause a car to swerve dangerously. The truck carrying
the bombs might get tipped over. An ambulance with a mortally
ill person might not be able to get through. If one protestor
forgot about the little penknife in her pocket, the prosecutor's
case would be made: armed with deadly weapons.
And surely the protest appears to be an effort to intimidate or
coerce the government.For the defense, I can hardly hope to find
words as eloquent as Dr. King's would have been. But I can guess
the gist of it. Yes, we broke the law, King would admit. And we
are prepared to take the punishment prescribed for blocking a
public thoroughfare. But terrorism? No way. We are a
disciplined, well-trained group of protestors. We took great
care to make sure nothing that we did would harm anyone.
If an ambulance came by, we'd move immediately. Otherwise, the
only danger was from the police, who might not be as careful as
we were. And that woman had no idea the little knife was in her
pocket; no intent there.
But even if you find us dangerous to human life, you still have
to prove that we were trying to intimidate or coerce the
government. I follow the teachings of the great Gandhi, says
King.
The essence of non-violence is that we never intend to
intimidate or coerce anyone. We only show people their choices.
The driver of the bomb truck did not have to stop, just because
we were sitting in the road. We were prepared to suffer injury
or even to die, though never to kill, in the service of peace.
The driver simply had to make a choice: Will I continue on in a
path that is bound to bring injury to others, or will I turn
around? We intended only to dramatize the choice that the
driver, and the government that hired him, and the taxpayers who
pay him, are making at every moment: either go on killing or
turn around which is the literal meaning of the word
"repentance."
You, Mr. Prosecutor, say that it appears that we intended to
coerce. Coercion is in the eye of the beholder. Do you think the
truck driver must give in to overwhelming force? Then you
believe that physical power always prevails, that the stronger
force always wins the day.
That is precisely why you and people like you go off to war. We
refuse to make war because, we do not share your belief that
physical power always prevails. We do not practice violence
because we put our faith in a different kind of power - not
physical power over others, but the power of the moral
conscience. We know that everyone, at every moment, is free to
choose good or evil. No one can make that choice for anyone
else. No one can control anyone's choices, any more than we
could control the truck driver's choice. All we can do is follow
our own conscience and then let others follow theirs.
Hogwash, says the prosecutor. You sat in the road to force the
driver to stop, to prevent needed weapons from reaching our
troops, who are fighting to defend our freedom on foreign
shores. That certainly appears to have been your intention. And
it is intimidation and coercion.
Ladies and Gentlemen of the Jury, having heard the evidence,
what say you? Is the defendant, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
guilty or not guilty of the crime of domestic terrorism?
Ira Chernus is a Professor of Religious Studies at the
University of Colorado at Boulder.
Source: IslamiCity.com
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