APRIL 4, the anniversary of Martin Luther King’s assassination. Everyone excited about JFK files finally coming to light & confirming what we all already knew, no real surprises about CIA inside job. BUT THE REAL SHOCKER WILL BE THE MLK FILES!
It’s common knowledge that MLK, along with other Civil Rights leaders, were assassinated by our own government in concert with the FBI. But what people are not aware of is the exact reason why MLK was assassinated. I’m telling you it has nothing to do with Black vs White. MLK knew about the Deep State in the 1960’s, as did other Civil Rights luminaries. Most white people were oblivious to what was going on around them because white privilege lulled them into complacency, through generations of indoctrination being schooled through the prism of white supremacy, what it did was program whites to be increasingly obedient and trusting of their government. Blacks & Native Americans on the other hand have an inherent mistrust of govt.

MLK wasn’t fighting for equal rights; if that’s all he was fighting for then the FBI would not have assassinated him. In his speeches MLK divulged something much bigger, a plot of divide and conquer to enslave not Blacks, but to enslave the whole of Humanity.
MLK became public enemy number 1, not to the white populace as much as to powerful corporate interests. That legacy of opposition persists today in the operations of global giants like Google, Microsoft, Amazon, HSBC, and JPMorgan, whose influence mirrors the imperial structure of the British East India Company (EIC) of 400 years ago.
The British Raj began as a corporate takeover of India. The EIC, based in a private enclave of London known as the City of London, operated beyond the reach of British law—much like the Vatican exists outside the jurisdiction of Rome. Its shareholders remain largely unknown. So Brits who are proud of UK’s imperial past should know that their forebears were mere cogs in the colonial machine as well. The plunderous extraction of resources from Colonies created a whole new white slave class in Britain. Peasants were displaced from their Lordship’s farms that they once tended in rural England and pushed into grim factories during the Industrial Revolution, all to fuel the same imperial engine.
Today’s multinational corporations maintain powerful armies and wield influence over governments in much the same way the EIC once did. Major General Smedley Butler, one of the most decorated soldiers in U.S. history, famously declared that “war is a racket,” exposing how American military power has long been leveraged to serve corporate interests—toppling democracies and installing puppet regimes favorable to multinational profit. Just as the EIC thrived by sowing division, corporations during MLK’s time continued to exploit racial and social fractures.
The EIC is considered in some circles to be the first real capitalist enterprise. And with it, capitalism became associated with exploitation. Even Adam Smith, widely regarded as the father of capitalism, warned of its dangers when concentrated in the wrong hands, recognizing the potential for immense harm if left unchecked. In stark contrast, some of the most genuine and empowering expressions of capitalism emerged in Black American communities during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Cities like Tulsa, Oklahoma (famously known as Black Wall Street), Durham, North Carolina, and Richmond, Virginia, to name a few, fostered thriving, self-sufficient economies built through entrepreneurship, cooperation, and resilience. These were not just economic hubs—they were powerful symbols of what equitable capitalism could look like. Tragically, many of these communities were violently targeted and destroyed by white terrorist mobs, erasing generations of Black wealth and autonomy.
Dr. King understood that state sovereignty was, in practice, an illusion and that nationalism often serves as a veil for manipulation—and that those most fervent in waving the flag are often those least inclined to question the structures that govern them. From King’s I’ve Been to the Mountain Top speech he stated “I know, somehow, that only when it is dark enough can you see the stars.” Here he is referencing a vast governing body in the shadows, and alluding to the moon as an artificial satellite, a kind of cosmic control center from which not only the tides were manipulated, but human emotions were amplified and directed.
As a Baptist minister, teaching and moral clarity were central to King’s mission. In one of his sermons during the Birmingham bus boycott, he declared to Black Americans that it wasn’t “their right” to sit beside the white man on the bus, but rather, it was their “duty” to do so. Not for the sake of equality but to offer the possibility of moral redemption. In Dr King’s view, Black people were not to strive for parity as their goal; they were reaching across the divide to offer salvation to the White man.
While it stands to reason that Jesus Christ was a swarthy Middle Easterner, I would say He was more likely Nubian or Abyssinian. Ethiopia, after all, stands as the earliest bastion of Christianity — a land where the faith took root long before it reached the West. Remarkably, the most complete and unexpurgated version of the Holy Scriptures resides within an Ethiopian church, untouched by the centuries of REDACTION and OMISSION that have shaped the canonical Bible as it is known today. The version embraced by much of the world is but a curated fragment of a far older and richer spiritual tradition.
The whitewashing of Christ began during the Renaissance when Da Vinci & Michelangelo were commissioned by the Roman Church to model Jesus after an Italian mobster called Cesare Borgia. Jesus later went blond and blue-eyed in the 1940’s when a major global advertising firm re-invented Him as their chief mascot for the branding of new consumer products coming down the pipeline, with Jesus’ new makeover gracing an array of household appliances from vacuum cleaners to toasters.
Now why did the Religious Right of the Bible Belt hang Black people from trees? I would argue that this was a ritual act. What were called lynchings were effectively religious reenactments—grotesque echoes of the Crucifixion itself. White Christians in the South lived in a state of profound spiritual denial. These God-fearing people, those motivated through fear and not by love, the moral majority as it were, gripped by mob mentality and marinating in their own hypocrisy, turned terror into theater. This is why Crosses were set on fire by Christian fanatics all over the South, and done in tandem with the ritualized Crucifixion of Black men. In this twisted theology, the Cross became interchangeable with the Noose, and the Black body a tragic Christ figure. The lynching tree was an altar from which the holy Black body was suspended in the form of a religious idol. This horrifying spectacle was indeed a perverse form of worship for Whites.
Which begs the question: how did these white religious extremists become so enthralled by violence? Dr. King’s words about the moon and space resonate here, pointing to forces of an extraterrestrial nature. Consider the time period too, the so-called “Good Ole Days” when the traditional white American family was portrayed as living the American Dream. Watch any footage from the 1950’s, and it becomes hauntingly clear: these were times marked by profound vacancy. It’s as if the nation was under mass hypnosis, a collective mind control cloaked in empty eyes, hollow smiles and suburban bliss, a nation sleepwalking through a dream. Yeah the Singularity was already underway, transforming humans into docile consumerist robots.
If you delve into the speeches of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.—as I have, alongside the works of James Baldwin, Malcolm X, Marcus Garvey, and Frantz Fanon, you have to read between the lines. These revolutionaries wrote in poetic code. Dr. King in particular used layered language rich in metaphor. His veiled words, rich with awakening, were equally shrouded in secrecy. After all, he had to live his life with a moving target on his back. The Black Panthers too, who though falsely portrayed by the media as radicals and terrorists, were in fact running one of the most successful community programs of the era – providing nutritious meals to underprivileged children, both Black and White. The government deemed this to be subversive to their agenda and top Panther leaders were assassinated by the FBI.
Dr King saw white Americans not simply as oppressors, but as spiritually imprisoned—enslaved by the narrow confines of their own ignorance and fear. He warned that if they failed to awaken and stand in solidarity with Black people, they too will be targeted with lobotomizing VACCINATIONS just like Blacks and Native Americans were decades earlier and fall victim to the very systems of marginalization they once endorsed. But people to this day did not heed the prophetic warnings of Dr King.
If you want more, I wrote an in-depth article about this subject that was published in Fractyll Magazine back in 2020: https://fractyll.com/mlk-beyond-the-pale/