his daddy wasn't shyt either.............MLK ain't even trust his ass
"You know Jesse had MLK set up....." - Mike Epps
it must be known that Dr. King and Jesse did not have a good relationship, as the mainstream media would like for us to believe. Dr. King didn’t trust Jesse. Dr. King was able to convince William Rutherford, a businessman from Chicago, to serve as executive director of SCLC for one-year. One of the first tasks Dr. King gave to William was to find out if Jesse was sincerely interested being involved with SCLC [emphasis in bold by Marcus 3X]:[8]
King’s other mission for Rutherford involved a third staff member about whom King was concerned. “He said, ‘The second thing I want you to do is, Jesse Jackson’s so independent, I either want him in SCLC or out---you go whichever way you want to, but one way or the other, he’s a part of SCLC or he’s not a part of SCLC.’”
…Although part of the tension was rooted in the Atlanta staffers’ desire to keep a tight rein on Chicago-based programs, much of the trouble stemmed from a distrust of Jackson’s personal motives. “Jesse was really an outsider in a way, striving very hard to get in, to be accepted, to be respected,” recalled Calvin Morris, who became associate director of Breadbasket during that winter. “The doubt about Jesse is what it is for, is it for Jesse or for the movement?” Stanley Levison said to Coretta King six months later. “I know on this Martin had many deep doubts.” [James] Bevel often defended Jackson, telling King, “He’s just crude ‘cause he’s young.” King disagreed, saying, “No, he’s ambitious,” and voiced his unease to close friends. “Jesse had irritating ways,” King’s Chicago confidant Chauncey Eskridge explained. “I don’t think we cared much for him.”
…Rutherford appreciated that King’s unhappiness with Jackson went beyond spirit and ideology. “He didn’t trust Jesse, he didn’t even like Jesse…If you ask me if there was any suspicion about Jesse motives and even devotion to the movement, I would say categorically yes, there was---considerable. And we talked about it.”
The Saturday before Dr. King’s assassination Dr. King yelled at Jesse Jackson after leaving a meeting disgruntled. According to Andrew Young he never witnessed Dr. King yell at anyone publicly like he did towards Jesse. This incident shows how Dr. King felt about Jesse [emphasis in bold by Marcus 3X]:[9]
At that meeting, in a study at Ebenzer church, King “just jumped on everybody,” says Young. “He said we’d let him down. That we all had our own agendas and constantly left everything up to him. He said, ‘I can’t take all of this on by myself. I need you to take your share of the load.’” Finally came his outburst of exasperation, far more widely retold, with Jackson, who had kept pressing for alterations of the Poor People’s Campaign: King had fumed out of the room, with Jackson trailing after him, along with Young. Jackson called from the top of the stairs as King and Abernathy were turning on the landing below, “Doc?Doc?” Young recalls, “Jesse tried to encourage him, but it was sort of a glib thing, you know, ‘Don’t worry, everything’s going to be all right.’” At that, King wheeled and pointed a finger up at Jackson: “Jesse, everything’s not going to be all right. If things keep going the way they’re going now, it’s not SCLC but the whole country that’s in trouble. I’m not asking, Support me. I don’t need this. But if you’re so interested in doing your own thing, that you can’t do what this organization’s structured to do, if you want to carve out your own niche in society, go ahead. But for God’s sake don’t bother me!”
LIBRadio.net The Martin King Assassination Coverup