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Leaked Memo Suggests a Top U.S. Agency Will No Longer Recognize Pride, MLK Day, and Holocaust Remembrance
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Update 1/29/25 5 p.m. ET: In response to a request for comment, a spokesperson for the Defense Intelligence Agency told Them that the DIA is “working with the Department of Defense to fully implement all Executive Orders and Administration guidance in a timely manner.”
Original story 1/29/25: The U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) is reportedly canceling all future LGBTQ+ Pride observances, along with a host of other significant events for marginalized communities, according to a leaked internal memo obtained by independent journalist Ken Klippenstein.
Klippenstein, a former reporter for The Intercept (and sometime Twitter prankster), posted the memo on social media Wednesday, claiming that an intelligence official had leaked a photo of it directly to him. According to the document, which appears to have been stamped January 28 and bears a letterhead with DIA and Department of Defense seals, the agency is putting an indefinite “pause” on at least 11 “Special Observances” scheduled annually between January and November.
That list includes the entirety of Pride Month, federally observed in June since 1999. Other canceled observances include Black History Month in February, Women’s History Month in March, Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month in May, and Juneteenth on June 19. Women’s Equality Day on August 26, National Hispanic Heritage Month and Disability Employment Awareness Month in October, and National American Indian Heritage Month in November are also canceled, as well as Martin Luther King, Jr. Day and any Holocaust Remembrance Days, according to the leaked memo.
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Them attempted to contact the DIA’s Public Affairs office to confirm the leaked memo’s authenticity, but did not receive a reply at time of writing. The department forms the intelligence wing of the Department of Defense, and is the “primary manager and producer of foreign military intelligence” in the U.S. government, according to its website.
“DIA will pause all activities and events related to Special Emphasis Programs effective immediately and until further notice,” the memo reads. (“Special emphasis programs” are employment programs within the federal government that, as the name implies, place special emphasis on marginalized communities like people of color, disabled people, and LGBTQ+ people.) The DIA will also be pausing “Agency Resource Groups, Affinity Groups, and Employee Networking Groups, effective immediately” upon issuance of the memo.
Recently, a leaked memo from a top U.S. agency has caused shock and outrage as it suggests that the agency will no longer recognize important cultural and historical observances such as Pride Month, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, and Holocaust Remembrance Day.This memo has sparked concern among many who see these observances as important symbols of diversity, equality, and remembrance of past atrocities. The decision to no longer recognize these observances raises questions about the agency’s commitment to promoting inclusivity and acknowledging the struggles and triumphs of marginalized communities.
The potential erasure of Pride Month, MLK Day, and Holocaust Remembrance Day from the agency’s calendar is a troubling development that highlights the ongoing challenges faced by marginalized communities in the U.S. It is imperative that we continue to fight for equality, justice, and remembrance of the past to ensure that we do not repeat the mistakes of history.
As this story continues to unfold, it is important for us to stand in solidarity with those who are affected by these potential changes and to advocate for the recognition and celebration of these important observances. We must continue to push for a more inclusive and equitable society where all voices are heard and all histories are remembered.
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New JFK, RFK and MLK documents aren’t likely to contain any bombshells : NPR
President John F. Kennedy’s assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, during a news conference after his arrest in Dallas, on Nov. 22, 1963. Oswald was killed by Jack Ruby two days later, on the eve of Kennedy’s burial.
AFP/Getty Images
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AFP/Getty Images
President Trump’s order to release thousands of documents related to the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, his brother Robert F. Kennedy and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. could shed additional light on the events. However, few historians appear to be anticipating any narrative-shifting bombshells.
The National Archives records related to the assassinations in the 1960s were first set to be released in 2017, during Trump’s first term. Many were made public, but some remain under lock. Former President Joe Biden extended some of those exemptions during his term.
But in an executive order issued Thursday, days after his inauguration, Trump said continuing to redact and withhold information “is not consistent with the public interest and the release of these records is long overdue.”
It gives intelligence officials 15 days to present a plan for the release of documents related to President Kennedy’s assassination and 45 days for a similar plan pertaining to Robert F. Kennedy and King.
For decades, conspiracy theories about the assassinations — especially in the case of President Kennedy — have been fueled by the government’s withholding information from the public, citing national security concerns, historians say.
Documents might fill in a few missing pieces on JFK assassination
More than 300,000 pages making up the “vast majority of the material” related to President Kennedy’s assassination on Nov. 22, 1963, have already been released, notes Kevin Boyle, a professor of American history at Northwestern University.
Of the “fraction of material” remaining solely in the government’s possession, “my guess is that it’s not going to reveal … something new about John Kennedy’s assassination,” he says.
Fredrik Logevall, a biographer of President Kennedy, agrees that the new information will not “dramatically overturn our understanding of what happened on that terrible day in Dallas.”
“But even if they don’t alter our understanding in this deep way, I think there’s still useful information potentially in these materials,” he says.
Logevall thinks there could be something about shooter Lee Harvey Oswald’s travel to Mexico City in the lead-up to the assassination, such as “who he talked with when he was there and what the meaning of that trip was.” He also thinks there might be more to learn about “what the CIA either reported to the FBI about its knowledge of Oswald and his travels or what they didn’t record” prior to the assassination. “That’s really useful information, whatever it might reveal about the murder itself,” Logevall says.
Boyle thinks there could also be other information of interest that’s not directly related to the Kennedy assassination, such as some missing puzzle pieces when it comes to covert activity in Cuba. “There is a lot of information that’s already been revealed about the extent of the U.S. covert operation prior to John Kennedy’s assassination. And I think we could get interesting new revelations from that.”
More might be learned about FBI surveillance of MLK
Previous document releases have shown that the FBI had King under extensive surveillance and made use of wiretaps to uncover information aimed at damaging the civil rights leader — particularly evidence of extramarital affairs.
Kathryn McGarr, a professor of history at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, says she doesn’t think there’s much more to learn. “We already know quite a bit about how much the government was surveilling and looking at [MLK] … and how many enemies he had within the government,” she says. “I don’t think that the narrative is going to significantly change, although of course, we could get some more details here and there.”
King’s death led to violence across the U.S., particularly in cities including Washington, D.C., and Chicago. Dozens were killed. Boyle says he’s interested in the federal government’s “reaction to the racial dynamic” that surrounded King and the response to his killing.
Firefighters tackle a blaze on H Street during the riots in Washington, D.C., that followed the assassination of civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr., in April 1968.
Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
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Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
John Stoner, a U.S. history professor at the University of Pittsburgh, thinks the fact that the federal government “worked so hard to isolate King, to investigate potential subversive connections of some of his advisers,” has added fuel to the conspiracy fire. King’s own family has said that James Earl Ray, the man convicted of firing the fatal shot in Memphis, Tenn., on April 4, 1968, was framed.
Stoner says he’s hopeful that new documents might “shed light on the degree to which there is any hint of a government conspiracy to have killed [King].”
Robert Kennedy’s assassination has similarly been the subject of speculation, including the claim that the gunman, Sirhan Sirhan, a Palestinian refugee and Jordanian national, had been hypnotized by a woman standing nearby the scene to carry out the killing. But of the three assassinations in question, his has attracted the fewest conspiracy theories, probably because “so much air is taken up by [the assassinations of] JFK and MLK,” Stoner says.
New York Democratic Sen. Robert F. Kennedy speaking to campaign workers, on June 5, 1968, at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. After making a short speech, Kennedy was fatally shot in an adjacent room.
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AP/AP
Sirhan, who remains in a San Diego prison, said after his arrest that the killing of Robert Kennedy was “for my country.” The June 5, 1968 assassination occurred on the first anniversary of the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, also known as the Six-Day War. Sirhan felt betrayed by Kennedy’s support for Israel, he said in a 1989 interview.
Stoner says he would be interested to learn whether the government “soft-pedalled political connections that Sirhan Sirhan might have had.”
Why has it taken so long to release the information?
Although national security is the often-cited reason for delaying the release of the assassination documents from the National Archives, McGarr from University of Wisconsin-Madison says it’s more likely that redactions are for “bureaucratic reasons.”
If her own archival work is any guide, she says, it’s most likely that information hasn’t been released because of embarrassment. “When there are certain documents that can’t be released till after someone has died, it’s often nothing more than a snide remark.”
Despite Trump’s quickly issued executive order, the documents still need to be reviewed and it could be some time before they see the light of public scrutiny, author Logevall says. “I could imagine a scenario in which … this is delayed and that there would be some redactions even in these final releases,” he says.
Northwestern’s Boyle says if the release follows the usual protocol, once it gets the official go-ahead, the National Archives will put the material online.
Typically, he says, it “doesn’t make for the most compelling reading,” he says. “You know, it’s bureaucratic material. It’s people files and personnel cases. … It’s not very exciting.”
Even if the documents don’t contain anything dramatic, they will still be of interest to people such as himself, he says. “As historians we never think that the story has been told. There is always the possibility of new information.”
In a recent article by NPR, it is suggested that the newly released documents relating to John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Martin Luther King Jr. are not likely to contain any bombshell revelations. While these historical figures have been the subject of much speculation and conspiracy theories over the years, experts believe that the newly revealed documents are unlikely to significantly alter our understanding of these iconic figures.The release of these documents has been highly anticipated by historians and conspiracy theorists alike, with hopes that they may shed new light on some of the most pivotal moments in American history. However, experts caution that the documents are likely to provide more context and background information rather than any earth-shattering revelations.
Despite this, the release of these documents is still a significant event in the realm of historical research, as it provides scholars with a more complete picture of the lives and legacies of these influential figures. While they may not contain any bombshells, the documents are sure to offer valuable insights into the lives of JFK, RFK, and MLK, and their impact on American history.
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JFK, RFK and MLK assassination files: Will new information reveal answers?
CNN
—
When President Donald Trump announced an executive order Thursday to release the remaining government files in three of the country’s most notorious assassinations, it immediately grabbed public attention and raised intrigue.
“And everything will be revealed,” Trump said as his Sharpie applied his famously angular signature.
The announcement was the fulfillment of a Trump campaign promise, giving the public access to all the federal government knows about the murders of President John F. Kennedy in 1963, as well as Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. But the new information may not satisfy people hoping to fully clear the veil of mystery that has surrounded the killings in one of America’s darkest times in history, spinning up decades of conspiracy theories.
“The records will not reveal any smoking gun,” Tom Samoluk told CNN affiliate WCVB Thursday.
Samoluk is one of the people to actually see the secret JFK files, having reviewed them in the 1990s as part of the government panel to see what could be released. He is now a board member of John F. Kennedy Library Foundation.
“There will be some puzzle pieces that will be put back in that will tell a more robust and rich story,” said Samoluk.
Here’s what we know so far:
The process of making the enormous mountain of federal investigative documentation on the John F. Kennedy assassination available to the public was put into motion in 1992, when Congress passed a law requiring release of the papers unless the president determined it would undermine national interests.
The original deadline to unseal the documents was in 2017 during Trump’s first term. At the time, he ordered a six-month review of the national security implications of a full release and then announced some documents would continue to be secret, citing national security, law enforcement and foreign affairs concerns.
Trump’s new executive order does not immediately release the files, but gives the director of national intelligence and attorney general 15 days to “present a plan to the President for the full and complete release of records relating to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.” A similar review for the MLK and RFK files is due within 45 days.
The official government investigation of the JFK assassination by the Warren Commission was intended to close the book on the murder that ended America’s Camelot presidency. But its conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone has never satisfied some Americans’ hunger for a more meaningful answer about his death.
Conspiracy theories have flourished in the six decades since President Kennedy’s murder, inspiring an Oscar-nominated film and countless books and websites. The percentage of Americans who believe others were involved in a conspiracy to kill the president has never dropped below 50%, according to Gallup polls taken through the years.
The assassination of three beloved public figures in five years shocked the nation, leading many to question how they could all be killed by a lone gunman. Alternative explanations had grown so fierce by 1976 that the House of Representatives formed its own committee to investigate the killings of JFK and King.
The committee’s final report, released in 1979, determined Kennedy was “probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy,” although the panel could not come up with any conspirators. A later analysis by the National Academy of Sciences disputed the acoustic evidence the committee used to draw their conclusion that there was a second gunman.
Journalist Gerald Posner, who formerly believed a JFK conspiracy theory but became a lone gunman theory defender after researching his book “Case Closed,” said he’s not expecting to have his mind changed a second time.
Posner believes the release will be more embarrassing than revealing for the government. Partially redacted documents suggest the Central Intelligence Agency had been monitoring Oswald when he visited the Cuban consulate in Mexico City several weeks before the assassination, he said.
“Did they know how unhinged and unstable he was?” Posner told CNN Friday. “Then the question becomes, ‘Hey, you guys knew he was a powder keg. Why didn’t you tell the FBI when he came back to the US?’”
Since 2017, more than 70,000 documents relating to the JFK assassination have been released and are posted on the National Archives website. In 2023, 99% of classified documents related to the JFK assassination had already been released, the White House said.
Posner doubts the lack of a smoking gun in the final documents would fully extinguish the other theories of how and why Kennedy was killed.
“I’ve talked enough to conspiracy theorists over the years to understand that they will say either it must have been destroyed or it’s somewhere else,” Posner said.
Exactly what will be released on the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy – which was not independently investigated by Congress – is much murkier.
In theory, all the RFK assassination documents were released from several local agencies and the FBI to the California State Archives in the late 1980s, said Tim Tate, a British author who cowrote a book on the assassination after investigating it for more than a quarter-century. “If there are remaining undisclosed documents, that represents enormous bad faith by whichever agency withheld them.”
The Los Angeles Police Department has acknowledged it destroyed some evidence that was not used at trial following the conviction of Sirhan Sirhan – who is still serving a life sentence in a San Diego prison – including a door frame and ceiling tiles that may have been damaged by bullets in the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, where Kennedy was fatally shot.
“The destruction of these relevant materials … reflects a serious lack of judgment by the authorities who destroyed such material,” a 1977 report by the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office said.
The only relevant agency that has not turned over documents on Robert F. Kennedy is the CIA, Tate said. “If these are indeed the documents Trump intends to declassify, they could prove revealing: there is ample evidence of both animus from the Agency towards RFK (and vice-versa) and of its alleged involvement in the assassination,” he told CNN via email.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the slain senator’s son and Trump’s current nominee to head the department of Health and Human Services, has said in multiple interviews he didn’t believe Sirhan killed his father, instead blaming one of his father’s security guards.
“Thank you, President Trump for trusting American citizens and for taking the first step down the road towards reversing this disastrous trajectory,” Kennedy said in a post on X Friday, a day after the announcement.
Sirhan, who initially confessed to shooting Kennedy before later saying he had no memory of what happened, was recommended for parole in 2021 after 15 denials, but Gov. Gavin Newsom denied it, saying, “He has failed to address the deficiencies that led him to assassinate Senator Kennedy.”
Publicly, the family of Martin Luther King Jr. released a statement Thursday saying it hopes to see the documents before they are released. “For us, the assassination of our father is a deeply personal family loss that we have endured over the last 56 years,” said a family statement. “We hope to be provided the opportunity to review the files as a family prior to its public release.”
But a source with knowledge of discussions to declassify documents related to King’s assassination tells CNN the family would prefer the government wait to release them. The source said the family wants to uphold a previous agreement with the government to keep them classified until a later date.
King’s younger son, Dexter King, announced in 1997 that he believed his father’s killer was not James Earl Ray, who was serving a 99-year prison sentence for King’s murder. In a prison face-to-face with Dexter King, Ray said he didn’t commit the murder, although he added, “Sometimes these questions have difficult answers.”
Ray – a drifter and recidivist felon – fled the country after King’s death and was captured in England. He entered a guilty plea to King’s murder in 1969 but recanted it almost immediately after his sentencing.
Ray died in Tennessee in 1998 while serving in prison. Dexter King died of cancer last year.
The House Select Committee on Assassination’s report also said there was “probably a conspiracy” in King’s death, without naming any other suspects. But the federal investigation was not satisfactory to many of King’s family members and associates, who knew of the FBI’s years-long investigation of the minister, and Director J. Edgar Hoover’s obsession with him as a potential communist influence.
Hoover called King “the most notorious liar in the country,” and documents later declassified showed Hoover had authorized the wiretapping of King’s home and office, including “efforts to intimidate him, to break up his marriage, and the explicit and implicit efforts to blackmail him.”
Ironically, some of the wiretaps of King were approved by Robert F. Kennedy himself when he was serving as attorney general, something Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has since defended.
Former UN Ambassador Andrew Young, one of King’s closest associates, told CNN in 2008 he believed a government conspiracy was at the heart of the assassination, whether Ray pulled the trigger or not.
“I think that there was a determination in very high places that our movement had to be stopped,” said Young. “It certainly went as far as the FBI.”
Whether the last stack of documents on the killings of King and the Kennedys shows new evidence of a conspiracy – or only more mystery – is a question whose answer now appears to be only weeks away.
CNN’s Nick Valencia contributed to this report.
The recent release of long-classified files related to the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Martin Luther King Jr. has sparked renewed interest and speculation about these historic events. Will the new information contained in these files finally reveal answers to the questions that have lingered for decades?Conspiracy theories have long surrounded the assassinations of these three iconic figures, with many believing that there was more to the stories than what was officially reported. The release of these files has raised hopes that there may be some long-awaited clarity on what really happened on those fateful days.
Will we finally learn the truth about who was behind these assassinations? Will we uncover any new evidence that may point to a conspiracy or a cover-up? And perhaps most importantly, will the families and loved ones of JFK, RFK, and MLK finally find some closure?
As researchers and historians dig through these newly released files, the world waits with bated breath for any revelations that may come to light. The answers may be buried deep within the documents, waiting to be discovered and shed light on some of the darkest moments in American history. Stay tuned as the investigation unfolds and we continue to search for the truth behind these tragic events.
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#JFK #RFK #MLK #assassination #files #information #reveal #answersCivil rights activist Ruby Bridges speaking in Spartanburg at MLK event
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (FOX Carolina) – Ruby Bridges, a civil rights activist, will be speaking in Spartanburg at the annual MLK Community Celebration.
Bridges was the first Black student to integrate an all-white elementary school alone in Louisiana at the age of six. Her walk to the front door of William Frantz Elementary School was commemorated in in Norman Rockwell’s painting The Problem We All Live With, in Robert Coles’ book The Story of Ruby Bridges, and in the Disney movie Ruby Bridges.
Bridges later established the Ruby Bridges Foundation which provides leadership training programs that inspire youth and community leaders to embrace and value the richness of diversity.
She is a published author of works including, Through My Eyes, This Is Your Time, I Am Ruby Bridges and Dear Ruby, Hear Our Hearts.
She has won the NAACP Martin Luther King Award and the Presidential Citizens Medal and was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame last year.
Bridges will be speaking at the MLK Community Celebration on Sunday at 3 p.m. at the Spartanburg Memorial Auditorium.
The event is not ticketed and doors open at 1:30 p.m.
MORE NEWS: Upstate events to celebrate life, legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
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Join us in Spartanburg for a special event featuring civil rights activist Ruby Bridges, known for being the first African American child to desegregate an all-white school in Louisiana in 1960. Bridges will be speaking at a Martin Luther King Jr. Day event, sharing her experiences and insights on the continuing fight for equality and justice in our society.Don’t miss this unique opportunity to hear from a living legend and champion of civil rights. The event will take place at [venue] on [date] at [time]. Admission is free and open to the public. Let’s honor the legacy of Dr. King and continue the work for a more just and equitable world. See you there! #MLKDay #CivilRights #RubyBridges #Spartanburg
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Daughter of Malcolm X speaks at MLK Breakfast
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. may have used different methods to achieve a similar civil rights goal in the 1960s, but following their assassinations their families grew close to each other through the efforts of the widows, Betty Shabazz and Coretta Scott King.
That was one of several aspects revealed by Malcolm X’s daughter, Ilyasah Shabazz, at the 18th annual Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast at Texas A&M University on Thursday.
“I had five sisters, and the Kings had four children, and we were very close,” Shabazz said. “Our mothers were very close. People are often surprised when I reference Aunt Coretta because we called her Aunt Coretta, and they called my mother Aunt Betty. We are always super grateful that each of our mothers had this opportunity to have this sense of sisterhood and sense of trust and reliance and that they could come together and counsel one another.”
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Ilyasah Shabazz, daughter of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz, gives the keynote conversation during the annual Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast on Thursday at Texas A&M.
Shabazz was the honored guest at this year’s breakfast and spoke before a full room in the Memorial Student Center’s Bethancourt Ballroom. The Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast is put on each year by the MSC Carter G. Woodson Black Awareness Committee (MSC WBAC).
Two years ago, the breakfast’s guest of honor was King’s daughter, Bernice King. On Thursday, Shabazz spoke on how the King children were helpful many years ago when Shabazz was trying to start a foundation to honor her parents, similar to the King Center in Atlanta that had been founded by King’s widow not long after his assassination in 1968.
“I was particularly close with Yolanda and with Bernice but when I was curious as to how to build a center, I went to go see [Martin’s son] Dexter King who at the time was head of the King Center,” Shabazz said. “I would say that the Shabazz Center is somewhat based on a similarity with the King Center.”
Ilyasah Shabazz, daughter of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz, gives the keynote conversation during the annual Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast on Thursday at Texas A&M.
The Shabazz Center in New York is the site where Shabazz’s father was assassinated in 1965. It has become part memorial to his legacy but also a memorial to the legacy of Betty Shabazz.
Another of Shabazz’s daughters, Qubilah, Ilyasah’s sister, accepted a plea agreement in the mid-1990s for trying to hire a hitman to kill Louis Farrakhan, whom members of the Shabazz family believed responsible for Malcolm X’s murder. Under the terms of the agreement, Qubilah was required to undergo psychological counseling and treatment for drug and alcohol abuse for a two-year period during which her son, Malcolm — Ilyasah’s nephew — stayed with Betty Shabazz. Malcolm Shabazz, age 12 at the time in 1997, set a fire in his grandmother’s apartment and she died several weeks later from third-degree burns suffered in the arson.
“My mother looked at the glass half full. Her motto was find the good and praise it,” Shabazz said. “When I think about her life, my mother witnessed the firebombing of her home and a week later the assassination of her husband. When I think about myself if I witnessed this, the death of my husband, you know the challenge it would be let alone trying to raise six girls, but my mother was this ray of light. Lots of joy, lots of love, lots of humor.”
Voices of Praise performs “Lift Every Voice & Sing” during the annual Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast on Thursday at Texas A&M.
The breakfast opened with Voices of Praise singing “Lift Every Voice and Sing” before Mariot Valcin Jr., a Texas A&M Class of 2028 Ph.D student and the special projects director at MSC WBAC, gave the welcoming remarks. Valcin was followed by Col. (Ret.) Kenneth Allison, the associate director in the office of the commandant for the Corps of Cadets.
Allison spoke on what the legacy of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who was noted for nonviolent approaches toward protesting for civil rights as opposed to Malcolm X’s calls for violence, and the tradition of the breakfast at Texas A&M meant to him. Allison says work still needs to be done.
“I’m truly excited this morning,” Allison said. “As an Aggie I truly enjoy the traditions that we hold so dear. If we do it more than once it becomes a tradition. I don’t know how many of these breakfasts we’ve had but I know I’ve been to a few of them. So let’s rejoice in this Aggie tradition. I have seen progress at Texas A&M, however I have seen things that concern me. We have work to do. Our train is on the right track but it is not moving fast enough.”
Makayla Caesar, a member of the MSC WBAC and Texas A&M Class of 2027, introduced Texas A&M professor Amir Jaima as the facilitator of the conversation with Ilyasah Shabazz. Jaima introduced Shabazz and then the two spoke on Shabazz’s life, her memoir, “Growing Up X,” published in 2002 and learning about her father’s legacy.
Amir Jaima, associate professor of philosophy, and Ilyasah Shabazz, daughter of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz, give the keynote conversation during the annual Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast on Thursday at Texas A&M.
One thing Shabazz learned in writing the book is a greater appreciation for her mother Betty, who raised six daughters as a widow but who instilled valuable beliefs in all of them.
“She never saw herself as a victim or gave into despair,” Shabazz said. “She never accepted no or I can’t as an answer for herself. She protected us in a bubble of love. She raised us so that we could have this sense of self-love. It was so we’d grow up with a good sense of our identity and wouldn’t rely on others to determine our self-worth.”
Shabazz also spoke of what it was like to go to college and learn more about her father whom she had not really known because his death happened when she was 2 years old.
“There is this misconception of who Malcolm is but the reality is Malcolm challenged a government that was historically unjust to its own people,” Shabazz said. “He put a mirror up and said we want liberty and justice for all of our citizens, we want an opportunity for all of our citizens to love one another, to cohabitate, especially in America where we have a representation of every nationality on this earth living together. What a beautiful opportunity for us to learn from one another rather than to push against one another.”
The daughter of civil rights icon Malcolm X, Ilyasah Shabazz, recently spoke at the annual MLK Breakfast in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Shabazz shared powerful words of unity, justice, and the ongoing fight for equality in America. Her message resonated with the audience, reminding everyone of the importance of continuing the work started by her father and Dr. King. Shabazz’s presence at the event served as a powerful reminder of the interconnected legacies of these two influential figures in the civil rights movement. Her words inspired all in attendance to continue the fight for justice and equality for all.
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Action is key to activism, MLK Symposium speaker says
The keynote speaker at the University of Michigan’s 2025 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Symposium had a clear message for modern activists seeking to sustain King’s fight against systemic inequities.
“Get on with it. Don’t overthink it,” said Erika Alexander, actress, director, producer — and an activist herself. “And young activists, do you know what? Suck it up, man. Life is disappointing, but don’t get discouraged. And don’t stop just because you did one thing.”
The MLK Symposium kicked off Jan. 20 with the keynote lecture, a conversation between Alexander and Daphne C. Watkins, a University Diversity and Social Transformation Professor, and the Letha A. Chadiha Collegiate Professor of Social Work and professor of social work in the School of Social Work.
Erika Alexander (left) speaks with Daphne C. Watkins, the Letha A. Chadiha Collegiate Professor of Social Work, during her keynote conversation for the 2025 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Symposium. (Photo by Dieu-Nalio Chery, Michigan Photography) The opening event took place at Hill Auditorium and was livestreamed.
Now in its 39th year, U-M’s MLK Symposium celebrates King’s life and legacy. In addition to the keynote discussion, this year’s theme, “Restless Dissatisfaction: An Urgent Call for the Pursuit of Justice and Equality,” will be explored by departments and units across campus in more than 25 events and activities.
The symposium’s call to action was inspired by King’s remarks while accepting the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964 and in his “Where Do We Go from Here” speech delivered at the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in 1967.
Tabbye Chavous, chief diversity officer and vice provost for equity and inclusion, welcomed the audience the 2025 MLK Symposium. (Photo by Leisa Thompson, Michigan Photography) In the former, King implored people to sustain a feeling of “divine discontent” that prohibits them from settling for unmet goals. In the latter, he tasked Americans with embracing “divine dissatisfaction” until inequity among people has ceased.
The keynote was co-sponsored by Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives under the Office of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion and the Stephen M. Ross School of Business, with support from the William K. McInally Memorial Lecture Fund.
“Dr. King’s words compel us to confront injustice in all its forms — racial, economic and social — and to bridge the gap between the world as it is and the world as it should be,” Tabbye Chavous, chief diversity officer and vice provost for equity and inclusion, said in her welcoming remarks.
“Progress, he reminds us, requires continuous effort, courage and vigilance. Your presence this morning in person or virtually is an act of this commitment and reaffirms shared dedication to advancing justice, equity and inclusion.”
Laurie McCauley, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs, also urged attendees to maintain King’s restless spirit.
“Our country has made great strides from the time when young Black students were met with violence for simply trying to attend school with their white peers. And yet we have ample daily reminders that racism and inequality still infect our society,” McCauley said.
“From prejudicial attitudes to systems that continue to injure people of color and people who are perceived as different. The struggle for the harmonious civilization Dr. King envisioned must continue.”
Watch a video of the full MLK Symposium keynote ceremony. Alexander has appeared in numerous films and television series, including as Maxine Shaw in “Living Single,” which earned her two NAACP Image Awards; as Detective Latoya in the movie “Get Out”; and as Meredith Lockhart in “Swimming with Sharks.”
She also co-directed the film “The Big Payback,” which premiered on PBS on Martin Luther King Jr. Day in 2023, and she co-produced the Emmy-nominated documentary “John Lewis: Good Trouble.”
Alexander is a board member for the nonprofit group One Fair Wage and is involved with social and racial justice organizations, including The Poor People’s Campaign, Color of Change, the NAACP and the United Negro College Fund.
Alexander and Watkins discussed the importance of community, how marginalized people cope when faced with opposition, and the power of storytelling to drive social change.
In reflecting on how a strong community positively affected her as a young Black woman, Alexander shared that she’d spent most of her childhood in Flagstaff, Arizona, where she and her siblings relied heavily on their community for support, especially when their mother and father, who was a preacher, traveled for work.
“I spent my whole life living what Tennessee Williams calls … ‘by the kindness of strangers,’” Alexander said.
Donovan Rogers (left), a U-M graduate who opened the MLK Symposium by singing The Black National Anthem, and Victoria Wilson, an LSA undergraduate student, add liquid to a bowl of sand as part of a performance by writer and artist Cherise Morris. (Photo by Leisa Thompson, Michigan Photography) Her family leaned on a range of diverse neighbors who lived nearby, including members of the Navajo and Hopi tribes and Mexican and German Lutheran communities.
“Growing up, I thought of all of them as my community,” Alexander said. “And that is not just my story. It’s not unique to me. It’s a very Black American story to feel like you … maybe don’t have consistent family to depend on. … But if it were not for that beloved community, then I don’t think I would be where I am right now.”
Discussing her own coping strategy when faced with obstacles, Alexander said that, as a woman of color, she’s learned to adapt and develop a wide range of skills.
“I’m a shape shifter, and if you are a marginalized person you’d better become one. You have to learn a lot of skill sets to get the things you want done. I’m not an anomaly. That is just what it is,” she said.
Finally, to illustrate the power of storytelling, Alexander pointed to what she called the “Maxine Shaw effect,” a reference to the enduring influence of Maxine Shaw, a strong, independent character Alexander portrayed on the television show “Living Single” in the 1990s.
Although the show ended nearly 30 years ago, syndication has kept Maxine alive, and Alexander said she has been told repeatedly that Maxine, who was a lawyer on the show, helped inspire young women and men of color to pursue law school or other higher education.
As a result, Alexander, in partnership with corporate and nonprofit partners, has created an educational curriculum that she hopes will build upon the appeal of Maxine and motivate a new generation of leaders.
The symposium concluded with Cherise Morris, a writer, interdisciplinary artist and ritualist, who performed, along with three collaborators, an interpretation of writings from her forthcoming book, “the cosmic matter of Black lives.”
Writer and artist Cherise Morris (in the foreground), along with an artist who goes by Kesswa, perform a live interpretation of writings from Morris’ forthcoming book. (Photo by Dieu-Nalio Chery, Michigan Photography)
“Action is key to activism,” MLK Symposium speaker emphasizesIn a powerful and inspiring speech at the annual MLK Symposium, the keynote speaker stressed the importance of taking action in order to create meaningful change in our society. Drawing upon the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the speaker reminded the audience that activism is not just about words or intentions, but about actively working towards justice and equality for all.
The speaker highlighted the need for individuals to engage in direct action, whether it be through peaceful protests, community organizing, or advocacy work. They emphasized that in order to truly make a difference, we must be willing to step outside of our comfort zones and challenge the status quo.
Furthermore, the speaker urged the audience to be persistent and resilient in their activism, as social change is often a long and difficult process. They emphasized the importance of staying dedicated to the cause, even in the face of adversity or setbacks.
Overall, the message was clear: action is key to activism. It is not enough to simply talk about change or hope for a better future – we must actively work towards it. As we reflect on the legacy of Dr. King and the civil rights movement, let us be inspired to take meaningful action in our own communities and strive towards a more just and equitable society.
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Trump signs order to declassify files on JFK, MLK assassinations
President Trump on Thursday signed an executive order to declassify files on the assassinations of former President John F. Kennedy, and civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr.
Trump had promised to declassify the previously-classified documents during his 2024 campaign.
“Everything will be revealed,” Trump told reporters as he signed the order in the Oval Office of the White House.
During his first administration, Trump had promised to release all the files related to John F. Kennedy, but an undisclosed amount of material remains under wraps more than six decades after Kennedy was killed Nov. 22, 1963, in Dallas, Texas.
President John F. Kennedy (Getty)
After appeals from the CIA and FBI, Trump blocked the release of hundreds of records. Trump said at the time the potential harm to U.S. national security, law enforcement or foreign affairs is “of such gravity that it outweighs the public interest in immediate disclosure.”
Trump’s promise to also release outstanding documents related to King and former U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy leaves questions as to how the president-elect will speed up the releases.
Under the Martin Luther King Jr. Records Collection Act, the remaining files pertaining to King are not due for release until 2027.
On this day, President Donald Trump has made a historic decision to sign an executive order to declassify files related to the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.These two tragic events have long been shrouded in mystery and conspiracy theories, leaving many questions unanswered and fueling speculation about possible government involvement.
By declassifying these files, President Trump is taking a bold step towards transparency and accountability, allowing the American people to finally have access to the truth behind these pivotal moments in our nation’s history.
It remains to be seen what revelations may come to light from these declassified files, but one thing is certain – this is a significant moment in the quest for justice and closure for the families of JFK and MLK, as well as for the American public as a whole. Let us hope that this decision brings us closer to understanding the full truth behind these tragic events.
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Trump orders release of long-secret final files on JFK, RFK, MLK assassinations
WASHINGTON — President Trump on Thursday ordered the declassification and release of long-secret files on the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, his brother Robert F. Kennedy and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
Trump, 78, announced the actions in the Oval Office — after decades of speculation and conspiracy theories about each of the slayings.
President Kennedy was assassinated in November 1963 in Dallas — with Lee Harvey Oswald, the primary suspect, himself being shot dead two days later by Jack Ruby, spurring lasting debate about a possible conspiracy.
RFK was shot dead by Sirhan Sirhan, a Palestinian Christian, in June 1968 — shortly after winning California’s Democratic presidential contest.
King was fatally shot in April 1968 by James Earl Ray after federal authorities worked to undermine his anti-racial discrimination advocacy.
This is a developing story. Please check back for more updates.
In a stunning move, President Donald Trump has ordered the release of long-secret final files on the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Martin Luther King Jr. These files have been shrouded in mystery and conspiracy theories for decades, and their release could potentially shed new light on some of the most pivotal moments in American history.The decision to release these files comes after years of pressure from historians, researchers, and the public to uncover the truth behind these tragic events. Many believe that these files could hold key information that has been kept hidden from the public for far too long.
The release of these files is sure to spark intense debate and speculation about what really happened on that fateful day in Dallas, Los Angeles, and Memphis. It could potentially confirm or dispel long-standing theories about government involvement, cover-ups, and conspiracies surrounding these assassinations.
Regardless of what the files reveal, one thing is for certain: the release of these long-secret final files will mark a significant moment in American history and could potentially change the way we view these tragic events forever. Stay tuned for updates as more information becomes available.
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Hawks unable to limit turnovers in MLK Day loss to Knicks
The Atlanta Hawks were in action on the road on MLK Day against the New York Knicks but couldn’t extend their winning streak as they fell to the Knicks 119-110 on Monday afternoon.
Trae Young led the Hawks with 27 points, while De’Andre Hunter added 22 points off the bench. For the Knicks, Jalen Brunson poured in 34 points with Mikal Bridges adding 26 points for the hosts.
Heading into the game, the Hawks were still without Zaccharie Risacher due to injury, but another tweak to the starting lineup was made instead — one that has been subject to much discourse online — as Onyeka Okongwu started at center ahead of Clint Capela.
The Hawks began the game well, quickly opening up a 10-point lead behind strong shooting and a positive start for Okongwu at center. However, the first timeout of the game marked a turning point in the first half, after which the Hawks began to slow offensively, and the Knicks clamped down on defense causing the Hawks to commit more turnovers.
The Knicks overturned the deficit, and by the beginning of the second quarter the momentum was very much on their side.
The Hawks began to rally and took an eight-point lead into the third quarter but failed to start the second half in the manner they would have wanted, and it was New York who came out the more aggressive side and quickly wiped out the Atlanta lead. Behind strong third quarters from Brunson (12 points) and Bridges (14 points), the Knicks pushed their lead to eight points, and while the Hawks would wipe this lead by the early fourth quarter it would only prove temporary.
The Hawks’ fourth quarter offense struggled to make an impression, and it was this stretch after tying the game at 94 apiece that would define the game.
The Hawks made costly miscues, with a turnover from Hunter on this play, as he and Bogdan Bogdanovic don’t quite see eye-to-eye, and Hunter’s pass to Bogdanovic sails out of bounds:
Hunter is caught ball watching on the next defensive play as Precious Achiuwa cuts behind Hunter, receives the pass and finishes at the rim. Hunter then immediately commits another turnover as his inbounds pass ends up out of bounds:
Miles McBride would hit a high arcing shot to give the Knicks a five point lead, while the Hawks’ next offensive possession can only lead to a Okongwu three-point attempt in the corner:
Okongwu has shown he can hit that shot at times this season, but the Knicks will be more than happy to let him have it in the fourth quarter.
A missed layup from Karl-Anthony Towns is not punished by the visitors, who have several bites of the cherry — inside and outside — between Young’s three, Okongwu’s follow inside, and Bogdanovic’s three, all missed:
The Hawks are given with another offensive possession after a foul, but Young loses grip of the ball at the sideline, resulting in a turnover:
The Knicks punish another Atlanta turnover, as Cam Payne hits a three-pointer and draws a foul from Young to give the Knicks a four-point play:
A technical foul Payne sandwiches the play, but when Payne completes the four-point play the Knicks now hold and eight point lead. The Hawks kept pace for the rest of the quarter, but could never bring the lead below five points. The Knicks would extend the lead to their game-high of 10 points.
The Hawks were unable to overturn the lead and lose by nine points in a tightly contested, heavily officiated affair.
“We had good stretches, particularly when we pushed the ball and moved the ball,” said Hawks head coach Snyder postgame. “We got stagnant at times. They have a lot of length with Bridges and OG and guys on the perimeter that make it hard on you, particularly if you allow them to be shifted. We’ve got to do a better job taking care of the ball. Defensively too in the third quarter, that was the problem. There were stretches in the game where we didn’t do the things we have to do from an execution standpoint to play at the level we need against a really good team.”
The Hawks’ turnovers in particular were extremely costly: 23 Atlanta turnovers leading to 29 New York points. In a game where no team led by more than 10 points, this had a profound impact on the game and had the Hawks been able to limit these turnovers they would have had a good opportunity to win this game.
Let’s take a look at some of these turnovers.
The Hawks certainly had their fair share of poor passes that lead to turnovers, such as this pass from Jalen Johnson intended for Okongwu:
Off the screen from Capela, Young is doubled but is able to pivot into space, however, his pass inside to Capela is ill-advised and results in a turnover:
Bogdanovic’s attempted wrapped pass escapes the wrong-footed Garrison Mathews, resulting in another turnover:
Young’s attempted pass forward is easily telegraphed by Payne, who pulls up for a made three:
Young racked up nine turnovers in the game, including this looping pass to an unsuspecting Hunter bounces out of bounds:
Finally, not a pass this time, but Bogdanovic plows through Bridges after the handoff for another turnover:
The Knicks deserve some credit for their efforts in helping create a number of Atlanta turnovers.
The rotation from Town behind the line forces Bogdanovic to make the quick pass to Capela, who can’t handle the pass and the turnover is committed:
On the dig, Josh Hart disrupts the drive from Young, off of whom the ball last touches out of bounds, resulting in a turnover (following a coach’s challenge from the Knicks):
More firm resistance from Towns in the paint on Capela helps force a turnover, and the Knicks push in transition to score:
Capela has his pocket picked from Hart, the Knicks lead the push in transition, and great resistance from Dyson Daniels isn’t rewarded as Capela loses the rebound, leading to a New York basket:
Finally, in the fourth quarter, Jalen Johnson’s alley-oop attempt to Capela is broken up by McBride, resulting in a turnover:
A combination of Atlanta mistakes and some firm New York defense contributed to these costly 23 turnovers — always difficult to win NBA games committing 23 turnovers, and the Hawks, arguably, did well to remain so close in the game for so long despite these turnovers.
It’s a shame, really, because the Hawks generally played well on the night, shooting strong percentages (even if they only attempted five free throws in the second half compared to 17 in the first half) across the board: 47% from the field, 43% from three, and 77% from the line. However, it just wasn’t as strong as the Knicks, who shot 52% from the field and possessed a notable advantage in points off of turnovers.
The Knicks are one of the better teams in the Eastern Conference and will likely have home court advantage. The Hawks can be satisfied with their performance (aside from the turnovers) in that they went toe-to-toe in a scrappy, poorly officiated game on the road and despite 23 turnovers — also featuring big games from Brunson and Bridges.
“It’s tough to beat the Knicks on the road, no matter what,” said Snyder. “They played well tonight. They shot well, Brunson and Bridges in particular. Jalen (Brunson), he’s a hell of a player, that’s going to happen. He got in foul trouble, Dyson got in foul trouble, it was a choppy game early. He’s capable of making tough, contested shots and he did that tonight.”
The major talking point for the Hawks going forward, however, will likely center (no pun intended) around Okongwu starting over Capela. Okongwu was a positive on the game in the starting lineup (14 points on 7-of-10 shooting), and Capela initially played very well off the bench but had his difficult moments finishing near the rim.
Snyder was not asked about Okongwu stepping into the lineup postgame, so the thoughts of Snyder and whether he was satisfied with what Okongwu brought to the starting lineup is unknown for now, and if it will continue going forward.
The Hawks (22-20) are back in action on Wednesday as they begin a three game home-stand, beginning against the Detroit Pistons (22-21).
Until next time!
The Atlanta Hawks struggled to take care of the ball in their MLK Day matchup against the New York Knicks, ultimately falling 108-94. The Hawks committed a season-high 23 turnovers, which proved to be costly in the loss.Despite a strong performance from Trae Young, who finished with 31 points and 14 assists, the Hawks were unable to overcome their turnover woes. The Knicks were able to capitalize on Atlanta’s mistakes, converting them into 24 points off turnovers.
The Hawks will need to address their turnover issues if they hope to bounce back in their next game. Limiting mistakes and taking care of the ball will be crucial moving forward for Atlanta to find success on the court.
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