commondreams | After the FBI took to Twitter Monday with a message that allegedly
aimed to honor "the life and work" of Martin Luther King Jr., a chorus
of critics promptly urged the bureau to "sit this one out," pointing to its history of spying on King and trying to convince the civil rights leader to kill himself.
Each year on the national holiday dedicated to King, progressives criticize and work to counter
the whitewashed public narrative of a man who, particularly in the
years leading up to his April 1968 assassination, passionately condemned
the "evils" of capitalism, militarism, and racism.
The FBI, during both the Obama and Trump administrations, has
provoked a wave of criticism for posting shoutouts to King on social
media, given the bureau's past treatment of him. Monday was no
different.
Some critics expressed anger and disbelief. Rewire.News senior legal analyst Imani Gandy wrote in response to the FBI, "You've got to be fucking kidding me."
Journalist David Corn posed "a sincere question," asking:
"Has the FBI ever apologized to King's family for wiretapping King,
blackmailing him, and trying to get him to commit suicide?"
Crawford also noted that "the FBI's surveillance of black Americans
isn't just history. [In 2018], we learned the FBI has been spying on
black activists, labeling them 'Black Identity Extremists.' The feds also use powers obtained through national security laws like the Patriot Act to target people in the racially biased drug war."
"More disturbing: The FBI that spied on King and today classifies
Black civil rights activists as 'extremists,'" Crockford continued, "is
now partnering with Big Tech to amass unprecedented surveillance powers
that history has taught us will be used to target communities of color,
religious minorities, dissidents, and immigrants."
FBI director Christopher Wray testified
before Congress in July 2019 that the bureau has stopped using the term
"black identity extremism." However, some groups and individuals on
Monday shared critiques of the FBI's current practices alongside
denunciations of the bureau's past behavior.
The London-based advocacy group CAGE, which works to empower communities impacted by the War on Terror, tweeted
Monday that the FBI still tries "to suppress dissent" and uses "dirty
tactics that would make Edgar Hoover proud. But [is] happy now to co-opt
MLK to try to cover up the above."
0 comments:
Post a Comment