Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s daughter sends open letter to Comcast to protect our civil rights

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Dr. Bernice A. King, daughter of civil rights icon Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., is calling on Comcast to not challenge the Civil Rights Act of 1866, in it’s Supreme Court case involving media mogul, Byron Allen.

In an open letter to Brian Roberts, CEO of Comcast, Dr. King lays out the “cataclysmic” consequences of the cable company’s attempts to change America’s original civil rights law.

“We are alarmed at the consequences of a Supreme Court ruling that could have cataclysmic results for people of color, who comprise a large segment of your customers,” Dr. King wrote.

King’s letter comes the same week as Congressman Bobby Rush (D-IL), issued a scathing critique of Comcast, and demanded the conglomerate be broken up.

Allen, who is Chairman and CEO of Entertainment Studios, sued Comcast and Charter Communications for 20 billion dollars, alleging racial discrimination in refusing to do business with him.

In pursuing a legal edge against Allen’s claims of racial discrimination, Comcast’s appeal to the Supreme Court rests on changing the essence of the Civil Rights Act of 1866. It would require people to prove race was the sole motivating factor for any discrimination claims, not a partial factor as was used in the past.
Martin Luther King III (L) and his sister Bernice King address the I AM 2018 “Mountaintop Speech” Commemoration at the Mason Temple Church of God in Christ, the same place their father, Martin Luther King, Jr., delivered his “Mountaintop” speech on the eve of his assassination, April 3, 2018 in Memphis, Tennessee. The city is commemorating the 50th anniversary of King’s assassination on April 4, 1968. (Photo: Tyrone P. Easley)

“To alter the Act to accommodate discrimination against people based on race would reverse precarious progress in the freedom struggle, which my father was assassinated for leading and which my mother continued to join others in leading until her death,” Dr. King writes.

“Knowing that the Civil Rights Act of 1866 was enacted to prohibit discrimination of any kind when making and enforcing contracts, why is Comcast relentlessly fighting for the right to avoid doing business with a person of color so long as her or his race is one of several factors for such refusal?”

BREAKING: Congressman Bobby Rush calls for break up of Comcast after threats to civil rights

King, who is the CEO of The Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change, is protective of her parents’ legacies– invoking their names on issues of the utmost importance.

Her two-page letter signals the seriousness of the moment for Black America and America as a whole.

Comcast will argue its case before the Supreme Court, Wednesday, November 13th, utilizing the legal support of President Donald Trump’s Department of Justice.

Read Dr. Bernice King’s entire message to Comcast below:

Editor’s note: theGrio is owned by Entertainment Studios.

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