• "Dr." Martin Luther King, Jr. exposed as a fraud!

    From Ronny Koch@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 16 11:08:00 2024
    XPost: alt.politics.conservative, alt.politics.democrats, alt.business
    XPost: dc.politics

    Excerpt from Martin Luther King, Jr. (& L.H De Wolff)

    Allegations: Plagiarism in college and graduate school papers,
    including his doctoral dissertation on "A Comparison of the
    Conceptions of God in the Thinking of Paul Tillich and Henry
    Nelson Wieman"; Verbatim thefts also discovered in political
    speeches including the famous "I Have a Dream" speech (see
    Pappas' Plagiarism and the Culture War, Hallberg revised and
    expanded version, p. 133)

    ...

    It was the British press which first broke the news with regard
    to King's plagiarism, an indication of just how sensitive an
    issue this was for American newspapers. An article in the
    December 3rd (1989) edition of the Sunday Telegraph by Frank
    Johnson asked, "Martin Luther King--Was He a Plagiarist?"

    But it was not until November 9, 1990 that a major U.S. media
    outlet released the story on King's plagiarism--even though this
    story had been known for over a year in the newsrooms of major
    newspapers. In the U.S., The Wall Street Journal was the first
    to go public with a front page article entitled, "To Their
    Dismay, King Scholars Find a Troubling Pattern--Civil Rights
    Leader was Lax in Attributing Some Parts of His Academic Papers".

    This story was definitely a hot potato--too hot to handle for
    the same institutions which had "lionized" and deified a mere
    mortal.

    The response of academia was particularly appalling:

    "They lied, they told half-truths, they made up fables, they did
    everything they could but address facts. In the face of their
    own university's rules against plagiarism, Boston University's
    academic authorities and professors somehow found excuses for
    King's plagiarism. They found extenuating circumstances . . .
    they compromised their own university's integrity . . . [and]
    called into question the very standing of the university as a
    place where cheating is penalized and misrepresentation
    condemned" (Jacob Neusner, in the Foreward to Theodore Pappas'
    The Martin Luther King, Jr., Plagiarism Story).

    There were scores of responses written after these discoveries
    of verbatim theft by King, basically in defense of plagiarism.
    As Neusner notes, "To defend King's plagiarism, plagiarism finds
    itself cleaned up and made a virtue of blacks". Authors such as
    Keith Miller used the black preaching tradition and "oral
    culture" as an excuse for King's somehow having been held to a
    lower academic standard than what might have been expected of
    whites at a place such as Boston University in the 1950s.

    Critics such as Barry Gross delivered a scathing indictment of
    the scholarly incompetence at Boston University which led to
    King's receiving a PhD awarded for a dissertation containing
    extensive amounts of plagiarism. Compounding the incompetence,
    the plagiarism in King's dissertation on "A Comparison of the
    Conceptions of God in the Thinking of Paul Tillich and Henry
    Nelson Wieman" was from another theology student (Jack Boozer)
    who had had the same advisor as King just three years
    previously, namely Professor L. Harald De Wolff.

    Gross delivers some pretty damning speculations as to why De
    Wolff never noticed or responded to King's plagiarism of Boozer:

    "So how did King's plagiarism get by? Well, there are three
    possibilities: Professor De Wolff neglected to read either or
    both theses, in which case he was incompetent, or Professor De
    Wolff read them both and failed to notice the plagiarism, in
    which case, also, he was incompetent, or Professor De Wolff
    noticed the plagiarism but did not think it serious enough to
    mention, in which case, too, he was incompetent. There is a
    fourth hypothesis that is possibly even more damning: that
    Professor De Wolff noticed the plagiarism but did not think it
    mattered for a black man destined to be a preacher to be held to
    a rigorous scholarly standard" (From Gross's review of The
    Martin Luther King, Jr. Plagiarism Story).

    The final hypothesis mentioned by Gross seems to be quite
    plausible since Theodore Pappas alludes in his work to rumours
    suggesting that King had, in fact, been advised by his
    dissertation committee to cite his sources according to academic
    convention. Quite unfortunately, he did not do this, and his
    dissertation committee never followed up to see if their advice
    had been heeded, if, in fact, such advice had ever been given.

    Shortly after the stonewalling and coverup attempted by those
    overseeing the King Papers Project (Clayborne Carson of Stanford
    University, and Ralph Luker of Emory University), two important
    books were published by Theodore Pappas: The Martin Luther King,
    Jr. Plagiarism Story and Plagiarism and the Culture War. In the
    years since the discovery of King's plagiaries, a number of
    other excellent research projects have resulted in dissertations
    and reports on different aspects of the plagiaries of Martin
    Luther King, Jr.

    What this ongoing research seems to most clearly portray is not
    just the shortcomings of Martin Luther King, Jr. himself, but
    the failures of academia in confronting intellectual fraud and
    in holding scholars to high standards of academic integrity
    whatever their racial, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds.

    Click here to continue

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    All the more reason to question: Martin Luther King Day?


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