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The contemporary tendency in our society is to base our distribution on scarcity, which has vanished, and to compress our abundance into the overfed mouths of the middle and upper classes until they gag with superfluity. If democracy is to have breadth of meaning, it is necessary to adjust this inequity. It is not only moral, but it is also intelligent. We are wasting and degrading human life by clinging to archaic thinking.

The curse of poverty has no justification in our age. It is socially as cruel and blind as the practice of cannibalism at the dawn of civilization, when men ate each other because they had not yet learned to take food from the soil or to consume the abundant animal life around them. The time has come for us to civilize ourselves by the total, direct and immediate abolition of poverty.

Though it’s often glossed over, particularly by those on the right who want to appropriate him for their cause, towards the end of his life Martin Luther King Jr became convinced that economic justice was key to building a good and just society.

Today, as Anna Holmes notes, is the 43rd anniversary of his assassination.

(Via.)

This has become such a forgotten part of his legacy it’s as much a comment on our current society and the way we view the working or middle class than anything else.