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The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rev. Ralph Abernathy, right, lead a march on behalf of striking sanitation workers in Memphis, Tenn., on March 28, 1968. King was assassinated a week later in Memphis.
Sam Melhorn, The Commercial Appeal via AP
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rev. Ralph Abernathy, right, lead a march on behalf of striking sanitation workers in Memphis, Tenn., on March 28, 1968. King was assassinated a week later in Memphis.

On April 4, 1968, was assassinated in Memphis, Tenn., while assisting striking sanitation workers.

That was almost 50 years ago. Back then, the wholesale racial integration required by the was just beginning to chip away at discrimination in education, jobs and public facilities. Black voters had only obtained two years earlier, and the was about to become law.

African-Americans were only beginning to move into neighborhoods, colleges and careers once reserved for whites only.

I’m too young to remember those days. But hearing my parents talk about the late 1960s, it sounds in some ways like another world. Numerous African-Americans now hold positions of power, from mayor to governor to corporate chief executive — and, yes, once upon a time, . The U.S. is a very different place than it was 50 years ago.

Or is it? As a scholar of minority politics, I know that while some things have improved markedly for black Americans since 1968, today we are still fighting many of the same battles as Dr. King did in his day.

That was then

The 1960s were tumultuous years indeed. During the summers from 1965 to 1968, American cities saw approximately . The protests were a sign of profound citizen anger about a nation that was, according to the , “moving toward two societies, one black, one white — separate and unequal.”

Economically, that was certainly true. In 1968, just 10 percent of whites lived below the poverty level, while nearly . Likewise, just 2.6 percent of white job seekers were unemployed, compared to .

A year before his death, Dr. King and others began organizing a to “dramatize the plight of America’s poor of all races and make very clear that they are sick and tired of waiting for a better life.”

On May 28, 1968, one month after King’s assassination, the . Individuals from across the nation erected a tent city on the National Mall, in Washington, calling it Resurrection City. The aim was to .

Ralph Abernathy, an African-American minister, led the way in his fallen friend’s place.

“We come with an appeal to open the doors of America to the almost 50 million Americans who have not been given a fair share of America’s wealth and opportunity,” Abernathy said, “and we will stay until we get it.”

This is now

So, how far have black people progressed since 1968? Have we gotten our fair share yet? Those questions have been on my mind a lot this month.

In some ways, we’ve barely budged as a people. Poverty is still too common in the U.S. In 1968, 25 million Americans — roughly 13 percent of the population — . In 2016, .

Today’s black poverty rate of . Compared to the 1968 rate of , there’s not been a huge improvement.

Financial security, too, . Black households earn $57.30 for every $100 in income earned by white families. And for every $100 in white family wealth, black families hold just $5.04.

Another troubling aspect about black social progress — or should I say the lack thereof — is how many black families are headed by single women. In the 1960s, unmarried women were the main breadwinners for . In recent years, the percentage has .

This is important, but not because of some outmoded sexist ideal of the family. In the U.S., , there’s a powerful connection between .

Black Americans today are also more dependent on government aid than they were in 1968. Currently, almost 40 percent of African-Americans are poor enough to qualify for that offer modest support to families living under the poverty line.

ճ󲹳’s . Just are on welfare.

Finding the bright spots

There are, of course, positive trends. Today, far more African-Americans graduate from college — 38 percent — .

Our incomes are also way up. Black adults experienced a more significant income increase from 1980 to 2016 —  — than any other U.S. demographic group. This, in part, is why .

Legally, African-Americans may live in any community they want — and from Beverly Hills to the Upper East Side, .

But why aren’t those gains deeper and more widespread?

Some prominent thinkers — including the award-winning writer Ta-Nehisi Coates and author Michelle Alexander — put the onus on institutional racism. Coates argues, among other things, that racism has so held back African-Americans throughout history that , resurfacing a .

Alexander, for her part, has famously said that racial profiling and the mass incarceration of African-Americans are just that once ruled across the American South.

More conservative thinkers may hold black people solely accountable for their problems. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development , along with public intellectuals like and .

Depending on who you ask, then, black people aren’t much better off than in 1968 because either there’s not enough government help or there’s way too much.

What would MLK do?

I don’t have to wonder what Dr. King would recommend. He believed in institutional racism.

In 1968, King and the Southern Christian Leadership Council sought to tackle inequality with the . This was not a legislative proposal, per se, but a where all citizens had educational opportunities, a home, “,” “a meaningful job at a living wage” and “a secure and adequate income.”

To achieve that, King wrote, the U.S. government should create an initiative to “abolish unemployment,” by developing incentives to increase the number of jobs for black Americans. He also recommended “another program to supplement the income of those whose earnings are below the poverty level.”

Those ideas were revolutionary in 1968. Today, they seem prescient. King’s notion that all citizens need a living wage portends the concept now gaining traction worldwide.

are also obvious influences on Sen. Bernie Sanders, who in the 2016 presidential primaries advocated equality for all people, economic incentives for working families, improved schools, greater access to higher education and for anti-poverty initiatives.

The ConversationProgress has been made. Just not as much as many of us would like. To , “Lord, we ain’t what we oughta be. We ain’t what we want to be. We ain’t what we gonna be. But, thank God, we ain’t what we was.”

 is an associate professor of political science and director of African-American Studies at the University of Florida.

This article was originally published on .

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