jobs  and  union  wages,  
 who should have been advancing  
 themselves,” he  
 added. “Instead, factories  
 were shutting down. Jobs  
 were  being  shipped  overseas. 
  The urban areas  
 were being stripped of all  
 economic activities.  
 “It  was  like  stranding  
 the millions of people  
 who’d migrated to the cities  
 for jobs,” Honey continued. 
  “So, without an  
 economic program—yes,  
 that’s what he was saying— 
 the civil rights we’ve  
 gained won’t be meaningful  
 for most people.” 
 Fassler noted that  
 King was working on an  
 “important Poor People’s  
 Campaign” in New York  
 City  in  early  1968,  when  
 he left for Memphis. 
 At that time, Honey  
 said  the  sanitation  strike  
 was reaching a crucial  
 point,  where  the  workers  
 could possibly lose.  
 “They’d been holding  
 mass meetings every day  
 for over a month in different  
 churches around  
 the city,” he said. “They’d  
 been having picket lines  
 two times a day. Marches  
 downtown, every day;  
 1,200  workers  on  strike,  
 for well over a month.  
 They were running out  
 of  food. They were  losing  
 their  homes,  their  automobiles.” 
   
 Honey said the black  
 community was in strong  
 support of the strike, as  
 well as the labor union,  
 AFL-CIO. 
 But he said that “they  
 had a totally intransigent  
 mayor,  a  fi scal  conservative  
 who was totally  
 against unions.  
 “He wanted the city to  
 spend less, and he wanted  
 to  take  that  out  of  the  
 backs of workers,” Honey  
 said. “So, you had this  
 confrontation between labor  
 and civil rights on the  
 one hand, and fi scal  conservatism  
 and anti-unionism  
 on the other.  
 “The  strikers  felt  they  
 weren’t getting any attention, 
  and that it was a really  
 important battle; and  
 that’s  why  they  brought  
 King  in,” he added. “How  
 could he not go to Memphis? 
   
 TIMESLEDGER   |20        QNS.COM   |   JAN. 31-FEB. 6, 2020 
 “Here was a good example  
 of local people organizing  
 around  the  
 very issues he was trying  
 to mobilize the country  
 around,” Honey continued. 
   “So,  his  staff  told  
 him he shouldn’t go, but  
 he went against their advice.” 
 In the “Mountaintop”  
 speech, the speech given  
 in  Memphis,  Fassler  said  
 King seemed aware of the  
 imminent  threat  of  violence  
 against his person,  
 saying, that while “longevity  
 has its place,” he would  
 prefer to pursue his work  
 than be assured safety.  
 Fassler said the whole  
 coda  of  the  speech  was  a  
 meditation on danger and  
 the transience of life.  
 When  King  fl ew  to  
 Memphis  the  day  before  
 he  gave  that  speech,  
 Honey  said  there  was  
 a  bomb  threat  and  that  
 King  had  told  his  family  
 before  he  left Atlanta  
 that  someone  was  trying  
 to kill him, “and that they  
 should be ready.”  
 “We know from the  
 House Committee on Assassination  
 that there was  
 a  reward  of  $50,000  put  
 up by some businessmen  
 in St. Louis for somebody  
 to kill him,” Honey said.  
 “He defi nitely had premonitions  
 that it could very  
 well happen at any time.  
 He  was  always  being  attacked  
 by the right wing,  
 neo-Nazis and segregationists. 
   
 “But  when  he  came  
 out  against  the  war,  the  
 opposition  to  him  went  
 right up the ranks to the  
 President  of  the  United  
 States,  and certainly  the  
 FBI—which  had  been  
 trying  to  destroy  his  career  
 since 1963, at least,”  
 he  added  “The  whole  atmosphere  
 around  King  
 was  tainted  by  real  hostility  
 to what he was saying  
 and doing.” 
 Of  all  the  speeches  in  
 the  book,  Honey  said  he  
 liked  the  one  the  book  
 is  named  for:  “All  Labor  
 Has Dignity,” a speech to  
 the  Memphis  sanitation  
 workers.  
 “It’s not a scripted  
 speech—and  it’s  marked  
 by  constant  cheers  and  
 uproarious approval, and  
 chanting,” he said. “He’s  
 talking  straight  from  the  
 heart; it’s King at his best.  
 He talks about the problem  
 of two Americas,  one  
 poor and one rich. The  
 gulf between people with  
 inordinate, superfl uous  
 wealth and the people suffering  
 in  abject,  deadening  
 poverty.  
 “He  talks  about  the  
 working poor—people  
 who work what he calls  
 ‘full-time  jobs  at  parttime  
 wages,’”  Honey  
 added.  “He  talks  about  
 hospital workers being  
 as  important  as  the  physician, 
   and  sanitation  
 workers  being  as  important  
 as  the  doctor.  How  
 labor  is  not  menial  until  
 you’re  not  getting  adequate  
 wages—all jobs are  
 important.  
 “The question is do you  
 have  dignity,  and  respect  
 and a decent livelihood,  
 based on what you do?” he  
 continued.  “I  just  think  
 it’s a marvelous speech,  
 and  it  deals  with  a  lot  of  
 the issues we’re still dealing  
 with today.” 
 September 17, 2020 
 New York City 
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