Article 3E8EA MLK's Radical Final Years: Civil Rights Leader Was Isolated After Taking On Capitalism & Vietnam War

MLK's Radical Final Years: Civil Rights Leader Was Isolated After Taking On Capitalism & Vietnam War

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mail@democracynow.org (Democracy Now!)
from Democracy Now! on (#3E8EA)
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Fifty years ago this April, Rev. Martin Luther King was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. He was just 39 years old. Today we look back at the last three years of King's life, beginning after President Lyndon Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Despite passage of the monumental legislation, King set his eyes on new battles by launching a Poor People's Campaign and campaigning to stop the Vietnam War. King's decision to publicly oppose the war isolated him from many of his closest supporters. We feature clips from a new HBO documentary about King's last years, titled "King in the Wilderness," and speak with Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Taylor Branch, who wrote the "America in the King Years" trilogy and is featured in the film, as well as the film's director Peter Kunhardt and writer Trey Ellis.

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