1 00:00:02,560 --> 00:00:05,040 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of I Heart Radio, 2 00:00:07,560 --> 00:00:12,039 Speaker 1: Hey brain Stuff Lauren bogebam here. Originally organized by Martin 3 00:00:12,119 --> 00:00:16,079 Speaker 1: Luther King, Jr. And the Southern Christian Leadership Conference or SCLC, 4 00:00:16,720 --> 00:00:19,479 Speaker 1: the Poor People's Campaign was born from a push for 5 00:00:19,520 --> 00:00:22,599 Speaker 1: economic justice in the Civil Rights era and is now 6 00:00:22,640 --> 00:00:26,440 Speaker 1: impacting policies and elections at every level of government. We 7 00:00:26,480 --> 00:00:29,640 Speaker 1: spoke by email Jonathan Wilson heart Grove, a Poor People's 8 00:00:29,680 --> 00:00:33,640 Speaker 1: Campaign steering committee member. He explained the original Poor People's 9 00:00:33,680 --> 00:00:36,880 Speaker 1: Campaign was a fusion movement for economic justice that grew 10 00:00:36,880 --> 00:00:40,320 Speaker 1: out of the Civil Rights movement. Natives Chicano's, poor whites 11 00:00:40,320 --> 00:00:44,000 Speaker 1: from Appalachia, and welfare rights organizations from northern cities joined 12 00:00:44,000 --> 00:00:46,320 Speaker 1: black folks from the South to demand an economy that 13 00:00:46,360 --> 00:00:49,920 Speaker 1: works for everyone. That coalition won some real gains with 14 00:00:49,960 --> 00:00:52,440 Speaker 1: the War on Poverty, the Fair Housing Act, and the 15 00:00:52,520 --> 00:00:56,680 Speaker 1: legislative advocacy of the Children's Defense Fund. President Lyndon Johnson 16 00:00:56,760 --> 00:01:00,240 Speaker 1: declared the War on Poverty in nineteen sixty four, year 17 00:01:00,280 --> 00:01:03,160 Speaker 1: in which nineteen percent of Americans about thirty five million 18 00:01:03,160 --> 00:01:06,200 Speaker 1: people at the time, lived below the poverty level. King 19 00:01:06,360 --> 00:01:09,319 Speaker 1: was motivated to call for representatives from various geographic and 20 00:01:09,400 --> 00:01:12,240 Speaker 1: racial groups to help gain federal funding for a number 21 00:01:12,240 --> 00:01:16,000 Speaker 1: of social programs, including a form of universal basic income, 22 00:01:16,319 --> 00:01:19,600 Speaker 1: plus housing for the poor, and other anti poverty programs. 23 00:01:20,160 --> 00:01:23,240 Speaker 1: In November of nineteen sixty seven, King and the staff 24 00:01:23,280 --> 00:01:26,240 Speaker 1: of the SCLC met and decided to launch the Poor 25 00:01:26,240 --> 00:01:29,520 Speaker 1: People's Campaign to highlight and find solutions to many of 26 00:01:29,560 --> 00:01:32,440 Speaker 1: the problems facing poverty stricken people in the United States. 27 00:01:32,959 --> 00:01:36,640 Speaker 1: The initial objective was to address rampant economic inequalities with 28 00:01:36,800 --> 00:01:40,200 Speaker 1: non violent direct action in a widespread form of civil 29 00:01:40,240 --> 00:01:44,120 Speaker 1: disobedience known as the Poor People's March. King, however, was 30 00:01:44,160 --> 00:01:47,560 Speaker 1: assassinated before the culmination of the organization's efforts took place. 31 00:01:48,120 --> 00:01:52,160 Speaker 1: Following his death, King's longtime friend Ralph Abernathy led the march, 32 00:01:52,400 --> 00:01:55,880 Speaker 1: which included an estimated fifty thou demonstrators walking from the 33 00:01:55,920 --> 00:01:59,200 Speaker 1: Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial, as well as speeches 34 00:01:59,240 --> 00:02:03,480 Speaker 1: from Abernathy, then Vice President Hubert Humphrey, Democratic presidential candidate 35 00:02:03,480 --> 00:02:07,640 Speaker 1: Eugene McCarthy, and King's widow, Coretta Scott King. While the 36 00:02:07,680 --> 00:02:10,760 Speaker 1: original movement led to some major societal wins, it was 37 00:02:10,800 --> 00:02:13,799 Speaker 1: also met with a fair amount of opposition. Five days 38 00:02:13,840 --> 00:02:17,200 Speaker 1: after the march, authorities closed the temporary camp the demonstrators 39 00:02:17,200 --> 00:02:20,120 Speaker 1: had erected, known as Resurrection City, that stood on the 40 00:02:20,200 --> 00:02:23,520 Speaker 1: National Mall near the Lincoln Memorial. Over a hundred residents 41 00:02:23,520 --> 00:02:25,640 Speaker 1: were arrested when they refused to leave the site, and 42 00:02:25,720 --> 00:02:29,160 Speaker 1: others like Abernathy, were arrested during a demonstration at the U. S. 43 00:02:29,200 --> 00:02:32,280 Speaker 1: Capital Building. Wilson Hartgrove says that the aftermath of the 44 00:02:32,320 --> 00:02:36,359 Speaker 1: initial event was disheartening. He said poor people's demands were 45 00:02:36,400 --> 00:02:40,200 Speaker 1: silenced by public narrative that blamed poor people for their problems. 46 00:02:40,880 --> 00:02:43,800 Speaker 1: While the blowback could have stopped the organizers in their tracks, 47 00:02:44,120 --> 00:02:47,280 Speaker 1: those at the core of the poor People's campaign were unfazed. 48 00:02:47,800 --> 00:02:51,440 Speaker 1: Wilson hart Grove said. Over the past decades, many grassroots 49 00:02:51,520 --> 00:02:55,280 Speaker 1: organizations have intensified their efforts to expose the fundamental lie 50 00:02:55,440 --> 00:02:58,280 Speaker 1: that the world's largest economy cannot afford to meet the 51 00:02:58,320 --> 00:03:00,960 Speaker 1: basic needs of all of its people. Several of those 52 00:03:00,960 --> 00:03:04,920 Speaker 1: efforts began to gain national attention in when Moral Mondays, 53 00:03:05,000 --> 00:03:08,280 Speaker 1: The Fight for Fifteen, and Black Lives Matter all emerged 54 00:03:08,400 --> 00:03:12,120 Speaker 1: during the same summer as grassroots coalitions of people taking 55 00:03:12,120 --> 00:03:15,560 Speaker 1: direct action to reclaim democracy for the common good. They 56 00:03:15,560 --> 00:03:18,560 Speaker 1: were challenging the same entrenched powers as movements that were 57 00:03:18,600 --> 00:03:23,680 Speaker 1: building to address immigrant justice, environmental justice, native land rights, homelessness, 58 00:03:23,800 --> 00:03:27,560 Speaker 1: and public education. Originally known as the Poor People's Campaign, 59 00:03:28,000 --> 00:03:30,720 Speaker 1: the modern incarnation of the movement is officially known as 60 00:03:30,800 --> 00:03:35,240 Speaker 1: Poor People's Campaign. A National Call for Moral Revival. Wilson 61 00:03:35,280 --> 00:03:39,240 Speaker 1: Heartgrove explains that the addendum is significant to today's continued 62 00:03:39,280 --> 00:03:43,000 Speaker 1: struggles for justice and equality. He said, revival is an 63 00:03:43,040 --> 00:03:46,200 Speaker 1: alternative to reform. One of the things that our current 64 00:03:46,200 --> 00:03:48,920 Speaker 1: moment has revealed is that various efforts to reform our 65 00:03:48,960 --> 00:03:52,720 Speaker 1: system haven't worked. It's still killing us. It's killed two 66 00:03:52,800 --> 00:03:55,960 Speaker 1: hundred and thirty eight thousand people through failed response to COVID. 67 00:03:56,400 --> 00:03:59,440 Speaker 1: It's killing more African Americans through police murders than were 68 00:03:59,520 --> 00:04:02,320 Speaker 1: lynched the height of Jim Crow's terrorism in the South, 69 00:04:02,960 --> 00:04:06,360 Speaker 1: and it's killing still more people from poverty. For too long, 70 00:04:06,480 --> 00:04:09,480 Speaker 1: America has been comfortable with this level of death, and 71 00:04:09,560 --> 00:04:12,200 Speaker 1: it has killed something inside of us. It has hardened 72 00:04:12,240 --> 00:04:15,240 Speaker 1: our collective heart. Our call for revival is a call 73 00:04:15,320 --> 00:04:17,920 Speaker 1: to choose life, to refuse to be comfortable with the 74 00:04:18,040 --> 00:04:21,120 Speaker 1: level of death our current system tolerates. It's a call 75 00:04:21,240 --> 00:04:24,160 Speaker 1: to reconstruct the system, to remake the world we are 76 00:04:24,200 --> 00:04:28,520 Speaker 1: living in to reflect love, justice and mercy. Several modern 77 00:04:28,600 --> 00:04:30,920 Speaker 1: leaders have been credited with the continuation of the efforts 78 00:04:30,920 --> 00:04:34,400 Speaker 1: put forth by the Poor People's Campaign, including Reverend William J. 79 00:04:34,520 --> 00:04:37,800 Speaker 1: Barber the Second and Reverend Doctor Liz the o'haris, who 80 00:04:37,839 --> 00:04:40,960 Speaker 1: serve as co chairs for the Poor People's Campaign. Wilson 81 00:04:41,000 --> 00:04:43,440 Speaker 1: hart Grove says that the organization began to invite the 82 00:04:43,440 --> 00:04:48,000 Speaker 1: emerging grassroots movements into a quote national moral Fusion coalition 83 00:04:48,120 --> 00:04:50,120 Speaker 1: to connect the visionary work of our elders in the 84 00:04:50,200 --> 00:04:53,960 Speaker 1: nineteen sixties with the leaderful moments of today. The overarching 85 00:04:54,000 --> 00:04:56,599 Speaker 1: goal of the organization, he says, has always been to 86 00:04:56,640 --> 00:04:59,880 Speaker 1: win justice for poor people by shifting quote the more 87 00:05:00,000 --> 00:05:02,320 Speaker 1: a narrative in the country from the distortions of the 88 00:05:02,360 --> 00:05:05,240 Speaker 1: culture War and the politics of left versus right to 89 00:05:05,320 --> 00:05:08,720 Speaker 1: the moral fundamental question of whether we are living up 90 00:05:08,880 --> 00:05:13,840 Speaker 1: toward deepest constitutional and moral commitments. In Sparked by the 91 00:05:13,920 --> 00:05:16,279 Speaker 1: murders of black men and women like George Floyd and 92 00:05:16,320 --> 00:05:20,640 Speaker 1: Brianna Taylor, the Black Lives Matter movement has gained massive momentum, 93 00:05:20,680 --> 00:05:23,920 Speaker 1: a phenomenon that Wilson Heartgrove explains ties directly to the 94 00:05:23,960 --> 00:05:28,000 Speaker 1: Poor People's Campaign. He said, people who have witnessed police 95 00:05:28,000 --> 00:05:32,719 Speaker 1: brutality and amass incarcerations disproportionate impact on African Americans cry 96 00:05:32,880 --> 00:05:36,360 Speaker 1: Black Lives Matter as a way of naming systemic racism 97 00:05:36,400 --> 00:05:40,200 Speaker 1: as a dehumanizing reality. They're organizing to demand change in 98 00:05:40,279 --> 00:05:43,600 Speaker 1: places like Ferguson has been exceptional and many people from 99 00:05:43,640 --> 00:05:46,039 Speaker 1: those grassroots movements have been part of the Poor People 100 00:05:46,040 --> 00:05:49,680 Speaker 1: Campaign's coalition buildings since we officially relaunched the campaign in 101 00:05:51,080 --> 00:05:54,200 Speaker 1: It's important to remember that Rosa Parks was organizing against 102 00:05:54,279 --> 00:05:57,520 Speaker 1: police brutality in Detroit, Michigan in nineteen sixty eight when 103 00:05:57,520 --> 00:06:00,400 Speaker 1: the original Poor People's Campaign came to Washington, so a 104 00:06:00,520 --> 00:06:03,200 Speaker 1: challenge to racist policing has always been a part of 105 00:06:03,200 --> 00:06:06,840 Speaker 1: this movement. While anti racism has historically been at the 106 00:06:06,920 --> 00:06:10,720 Speaker 1: root of the organization's mission, the magnitude of recent protests 107 00:06:10,760 --> 00:06:15,200 Speaker 1: indicates an unprecedented wake up call to many. Wilson Heartgrove said. 108 00:06:15,600 --> 00:06:19,520 Speaker 1: The protests have shown the effectiveness of mass, nonviolent demonstrations 109 00:06:19,560 --> 00:06:22,240 Speaker 1: to shift public opinion, and they have led many people 110 00:06:22,240 --> 00:06:25,640 Speaker 1: who have marched to ask the next question what changes 111 00:06:25,680 --> 00:06:29,480 Speaker 1: are needed in our public life to address systemic racism. 112 00:06:29,480 --> 00:06:31,680 Speaker 1: We have said all along that we can't address systemic 113 00:06:31,800 --> 00:06:36,400 Speaker 1: racism apart from poverty, environmental degradation, militarism, and the distorted 114 00:06:36,440 --> 00:06:40,080 Speaker 1: moral narrative of religious nationalism. So a lot of people 115 00:06:40,120 --> 00:06:42,839 Speaker 1: have come into the coalition grateful for an analysis that 116 00:06:42,920 --> 00:06:46,120 Speaker 1: can make the connections between issues, an agenda that makes 117 00:06:46,160 --> 00:06:48,560 Speaker 1: clear what's needed, and a budget that shows how we 118 00:06:48,600 --> 00:06:50,800 Speaker 1: could do it now if we had the political will. 119 00:06:51,560 --> 00:06:54,919 Speaker 1: During the election season, the organizers ramped up efforts to 120 00:06:54,960 --> 00:06:57,240 Speaker 1: inform the public about their right to vote and to 121 00:06:57,360 --> 00:07:00,440 Speaker 1: engage politicians at both the national and state level about 122 00:07:00,440 --> 00:07:03,920 Speaker 1: their campaign's issues. Wilson heart Grow said, We've done the 123 00:07:03,960 --> 00:07:07,359 Speaker 1: research and know that nationwide, poor and low income people 124 00:07:07,480 --> 00:07:10,560 Speaker 1: vote at rates much lower than high income groups. But 125 00:07:10,640 --> 00:07:12,640 Speaker 1: we also know of places where just a five to 126 00:07:12,680 --> 00:07:15,240 Speaker 1: ten percent increase in low income voters could shift the 127 00:07:15,280 --> 00:07:18,800 Speaker 1: political landscape, forcing politicians to listen to the needs of 128 00:07:18,840 --> 00:07:22,360 Speaker 1: everyday Americans. So we are inviting people to do that 129 00:07:22,400 --> 00:07:25,560 Speaker 1: work of educating and mobilizing their neighbors, and folks can 130 00:07:25,600 --> 00:07:33,800 Speaker 1: sign up to do that wherever they are. Today's episode 131 00:07:33,800 --> 00:07:36,720 Speaker 1: was written by Michelle Coknstantinovski and produced by Tyler Flang. 132 00:07:36,960 --> 00:07:38,960 Speaker 1: For more and that's in lots of other curious topics, 133 00:07:39,040 --> 00:07:41,720 Speaker 1: visit how stuff works dot com. Brain Stuff is production 134 00:07:41,760 --> 00:07:44,239 Speaker 1: of iHeart Radio. Or more podcasts from my heart Radio, 135 00:07:44,400 --> 00:07:47,080 Speaker 1: visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or where every 136 00:07:47,160 --> 00:07:48,400 Speaker 1: listen to your favorite shows