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July 25, 2008 12:23:33 PM CDT



Obama, Wright Echo Early, Late MLK

Posted Apr 4, 08 2:08 PM CDT in Arts & Living US 

(Newser) – Barack Obama can easily be compared to the early Martin Luther King and his hopeful message of change prior to 1965, writes Michael Eric Dyson in the Los Angeles Times. But  it's Jeremiah Wright who most resembles King after that—when his message grew "angrier" and increasingly skeptical of white America and its capacity for change.

King considered the nation's progress in class and race “at best surface changes,” called the Vietnam War a “bitter, colossal contest for supremacy,” and said “the vast majority of white Americans are racist.” He—and later Wright—used such language mostly before black audiences in the tradition of preachers assailing the powerful. They are both “easily caricatured when snatched from their religious and racial context," Dyson says.

Source Los Angeles Times

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In this undated photo from Trinity United Church of Christ, Sen. Barack Obama poses with the Rev. Jeremiah Wright in Chicago, March 10, 2005.   (AP Photo/Trinity United Church of Christ)
President Johnson with Martin Luther King.   (Getty Images (by Event) Individuals)
US Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama.   (Getty Images (by Event) Individuals)
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., is seen in this undated file photo.   (AP Photo/file)
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