This past October, at the dedication of the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Memorial on the Washington Mall, two of King’s children gave shout-outs to Occupy Wall Street, now spreading around the country and the world. His daughter Bernice spoke of it as “a freedom explosion,” and his son Martin eloquently hailed “the young people of the Occupy movement all over this country and throughout the world [who] are seeking justice… for working-class people barely making it, justice for middle-class folk unable to pay their mortgages… justice for the young people who graduate from college and are unemployed and burdened by student loans they cannot repay, justice for everyone who is simply asking the wealthy and corporations to pay their fair share.”
When President Obama gave his speech about Dr. King, he referred to the Occupy movement only once and obliquely. “If [King] were alive today,” he said, “I believe he would remind us that the unemployed worker can rightly challenge the excesses of Wall Street without demonizing all who work there…”
Amid the list of King’s accomplishments, he conspicuously did not mention that his last act before being assassinated was to organize the Poor People’s Campaign, including “Resurrection City,” a shantytown built on that same mall to reveal the existence of the poor to the nation.
Daniel Levine, a twenty-year-old college student manning the Occupy Wall Street information table in New York City’s Zuccotti Park, responded to President Obama’s “demonizing” remark: “He’s trying to make excuses for the rich people who donate to his campaign. The rich demonized themselves the second they decided they were going to make fraudulent derivative swaps, the minute they decided to evict people from homes they didn’t even own.”
While Obama once referred to Wall Street denizens as “fat cats,” The Washington Post reported that his 2012 election campaign raised more money from the financial and banking sector than Mitt Romney or any other Republican presidential candidate. Meanwhile, in New York City, Mayor Michael Bloomberg tried and failed to evict the occupiers of Zuccotti Park, claiming that “the Constitution doesn’t protect tents, it protects speech and assembly.”