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Eknytz
07-16-2009, 06:59 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/07/14/billboard-claiming-martin-luther-king-republican-angers-activists-houston/



Billboard Claiming Martin Luther King Was Republican Angers Black Activists in Houston

A jumbo-sized road sign claiming that civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was a Republican has stirred a religious and political fight in Houston, where a church leader is trying to draw black voters into the GOP.

By Joseph Abrams
FOXNews.com
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
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http://www.foxnews.com/politics/img/story/071409_mlkbillboard.jpgA billboard that claims Martin Luther King Jr. was a Republican has stirred a political and religious fight in Houston. (MyFOXHouston)


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Who knew?
A billboard proclaiming that the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was a Republican has stirred a religious and political hornets' nest in Houston, where a church leader is trying to draw black voters into the Republican Party.
The jumbo-sized roadside ad made its contentious claim for about a week -- until a local black activist charged that the sign unjustly politicized King's legacy and was hurting his community by telling a "blatant lie."
"Martin Luther King may have very well believed in some of the Christian principles of the Republican Party, but Dr. Martin Luther King was not a Republican or a Democrat," said Quanell X, who heads the New Black Panther Party in Houston.
"Dr. King was bigger than a political party -- he was a humanitarian, and so to attach him exclusively to any party is to devalue his humanitarian global status," he said. "We were insulted ... by the billboard because it was a blatant lie."
King held great sway over black voters and carefully courted both Republicans and Democrats. He never officially endorsed a party or candidate.
But the founder of RagingElephants.org (http://www.ragingelephants.org/), the black conservative group that sponsored the sign, told FOXNews.com that the sign was designed to get blacks to rethink their political affiliation -- about 95 percent of blacks voted for Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential elections -- and that this is just the beginning. He said a radio campaign that focuses on "the destructive nature of liberalism" is forthcoming.
"We think it's imperative that [the GOP] try and attract more people from the communities of color to vote their values -- to vote conservative," said Claver Kamau-Imani, who heads the Corinthian Christian Empowerment Church, a small house church in Houston.
What's more, he said, the sign is accurate.
Kimau-Imani told FOXNews.com that King's niece, the Rev. Alveda King, has long argued that her uncle was a Republican, though he acknowledged there was no documentation or voting record to prove it.
Those claims enraged Quanell X, who held a press conference late last week to rally against the sign and ended up in a shouting match over the legacy of the murdered civil rights icon.
The billboard, which Kamau-Imani says cost $3,000 to display for a month, came down shortly after Friday's press conference -- about 20 days ahead of schedule, a move Kamau-Imani attributed to the "spineless" response of the billboard company, SignAd.
"The simple fact is that the leader of the Black Panther Party here in Houston called a news conference and they spooked," he said.
Representatives for SignAd did not return requests for comment.
Quanell X told FOXNews.com he was pleased that he had succeeded in getting the billboard removed. He added that King would never have embraced the present-day GOP, which he said had "racist elements."
"Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. would not be with the party of Newt Gingrich, he would not be with the party of Sarah Palin, he would not be with the party of Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage or Sean Hannity," he said.
Representatives for the King family did not return requests for comment.
What went little noticed in the fray was the subtext on the billboard, which said that the Raging Elephants are committed to "leading America's 2nd emancipation."
Kamau-Imani told FOXNews.com that black voters feel that "your blackness, your street cred is tied up with whether you are a Democrat or not" -- a notion he said amounted to a kind of mental slavery that keeps blacks from speaking freely.
The president of the Houston branch of the NAACP said that the civil rights group does not wade into partisan politics, but seemed pleased that the sign had come down.
"The community has prevailed," said Carol Galloway, president of the organization's Houston branch.
Despite losing some of his investment in the billboard, Kimau-Imani told FOXNews.com he was happy with the effect of the sign.
"The billboard was simply something to get a conversation started, to make people think about their political affiliations," he said. "It appears we have achieved our goal."
Click here for more on this story from MyFOXHouston. (http://www.myfoxhouston.com/dpp/news/politics/090710_mlk_republican_billboard)


Isn't that a breach of the 1st amendment or something?

Havoc345
07-16-2009, 07:17 PM
from the article " your blackness, your street cred is tied up with whether you are a Democrat or not" -- a notion he said amounted to a kind of mental slavery that keeps blacks from speaking freely. "


spot on

Laworkerbee
07-16-2009, 08:13 PM
Quanell X is a douchebag, always has been and always will be.

Mu-Meson
07-16-2009, 08:28 PM
LAWB, I think we can all reach that conclusion just from his name.

AZZenny
07-16-2009, 08:32 PM
Claver Kamau-Imani

How seriously can you take a preacher named after a line in a sci-fi flick?


Mr. X may be a douchebag, but he is correct about Rev. Klaatu Barada-Niktu mis-stating MLK's affiliation in such a crassly opportunistic manner.

brainplay
07-16-2009, 08:44 PM
How seriously can you take a preacher named after a line in a sci-fi flick?


Mr. X may be a douchebag, but he is correct about Rev. Klaatu Barada-Niktu mis-stating MLK's affiliation in such a crassly opportunistic manner.


Didn't catch the sci-fi reference. Maybe its an age thing?

Its ironic in that Mr. X, who I've had the displeasure to meet, vehemently supports the notion that MLK would be a solid left wing supporter.

Panchito12
07-16-2009, 10:25 PM
Black Panther Party roflrofl

These silly fools still around?? Man when it comes to pure stupid entertainment value, the "Black Panther Party" (less panther more p***y) sure gives the Nation of Islam's security force - the Fruit of Islam (aka the Fruits) a run for its money.

And the names! The names!! Who comes up with those ridiculous names?? Quanell X? Claver Kamau-Imani?roflroflrofl

KB
07-16-2009, 10:39 PM
Both Sr. and Jr were Republicans. Being a black Democrat in the South in the 1950s would have been foolhardy, given the conditions blacks were forced to endure under Jim Crow.

That changed after the Civil Rights Movement and Jim Crow Democrats became Republicans.

Hollis
07-16-2009, 10:48 PM
Both Sr. and Jr were Republicans. Being a black Democrat in the South in the 1950s would have been foolhardy, given the conditions blacks were forced to endure under Jim Crow.

That changed after the Civil Rights Movement and Jim Crow Democrats became Republicans.



Dixiecrats........... The only reasonable alternative was the R's. I can understand the Black Activist feelings but, IMHO, Dr. King was for all the people not just one segment of the population.

LaoSexMachine
07-16-2009, 10:53 PM
Quanell X= King Douche. I met some of his supporters. Mostly the "World is conspiring against Da Black man!" type.

Hollis
07-16-2009, 10:55 PM
Quanell X= King Douche. I met some of his supporters. Mostly the "World is conspiring against Da Black man!" type.


It is how he makes his living, there are a few others doing the same.

MaverickCowboy
07-16-2009, 11:10 PM
he WAS republican.

didnt he turn the shoulder on Nelson Mandela?

Panchito12
07-17-2009, 01:40 AM
Quanell X= King Douche. I met some of his supporters. Mostly the "World is conspiring against Da Black man!" type.

Dude needs to look at the White House. HE IS DA MAN!!!

budgie
07-17-2009, 08:50 PM
Despite Dr. King being a member of the Republican party times were different then. He would find very little common ground on social and international issues with the likes of Bush and Cheney. Though modern Republicans and 'conservatives' like to truck out MLK as an example of Republicans and racial harmony, the fact is the Democratic party has since held far more appeal for minorities. The party of Rush Limbaugh, O'Reilly and the Fox goons would be unrecognizable to Dr. King if he were alive today.

Laworkerbee
07-17-2009, 09:02 PM
Despite Dr. King being a member of the Republican party times were different then. He would find very little common ground on social and international issues with the likes of Bush and Cheney. Though modern Republicans and 'conservatives' like to truck out MLK as an example of Republicans and racial harmony, the fact is the Democratic party has since held far more appeal for minorities. The party of Rush Limbaugh, O'Reilly and the Fox goons would be unrecognizable to Dr. King if he were alive today.

I'm not so sure he would be comfortable around the quacks from either party, you're a sensible man, why can't you hate them all like myself p-)