http://www.activistpost.com/2011/01/martin-luther-king-jr-and-tools-of.html
 
The   ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort   and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and   controversy. - Martin Luther King, Jr. 
Introduction:
Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated April 4, 1968, shortly after he started speaking out against the global elite and the injustice they inflict on all of  humanity though orchestrated  wars and economic oppression.  He believed  that "a nation that continues  year after year to spend more money on  military defense than on  programs of social uplift is approaching  spiritual death."[1] 
While  King may not physically be with us today, we are fortunate that he   left us with powerful principles and tools for defeating tyranny.    King, Gandhi and many others have set the precedent for our liberation,   proving that courage, love, persistence, and some simple tools are   ultimately victorious.
In  fact, the tools and principles utilized by King are so powerful that   they rocked the foundation of the global elite’s power structure.  As   Andrew Gavin Marshall writes:
When  Martin Luther King began speaking about more than race, and openly   criticized the entire social structure of empire and economic   exploitation, not simply of blacks, but of all people around the world   and at home, he posed too great a threat to the oligarchy to tolerate   him any longer. It was at this point that the National Security State chose to assassinate Martin Luther King, and the philanthropies   greatly expanded their financing of the Civil Rights Movement to ensure   that it would be led in their desired direction.[2]   
Hatred  for King by the elite’s agents in government  intensified after he   publicly identified the U.S. government as “the  greatest purveyor of   violence in the world today.” The FBI and U.S  military kept King under   24-hour surveillance, and agents had  infiltrated the civil rights   movement. Therefore, the elites were aware  of King’s Poor People’s   Campaign for Washington D.C., where King  planned to shut down the   nation’s capital in the spring of 1968 through  massive civil   disobedience until the government agreed to combat  economic inequality   in the United States rather than drop bombs on  Vietnam. 
  On  December 8, 1999, in the wrongful death lawsuit filed by the King   Family, a jury composed of six white and six black people deliberated   less than three hours to find that Loyd Jowers (who confessed on   television in 1999) and others “including governmental agencies,” were   parties to the conspiracy to assassinate Martin Luther King, Jr.[3]    During closing argument, King family attorney William  Pepper stated:  “When Martin King opposed the war, when he rallied people  to oppose the  war, he was threatening the bottom lines of some of the  largest  defense contractors in this country. This was about money.  He  was  threatening the weapons industry, the hardware, the armaments   industries, that would all lose as a result of the end of the war.”[4] 
 
All Americans would be well advised to review the evidence that was presented at the trial.  
Now  we shall examine Martin Luther King, Jr.’s principles and tools for   restoring freedom in greater detail, committing them to memory by   applying them with action each day.
  
Principles to Defeat the New World Order 
Courage
In  his eloquent speeches, King often quoted great philosophers.  It was   Aristotle that said, “courage is the first of human qualities because it   is the quality that guarantees the others.”[5]   Everything we do requires a particular degree of courage,  whether it be interviewing for a job, asking for a date, playing a   sport, or resisting a global fascist oligarchy.  Fear prevents us   reaching our potential and accomplishing what is most important.    “Cowards die many times before their deaths, the valiant never taste   death but once.”[6]   Every time fear prevents us from doing what our  conscience tells us we  must, we suffer a spiritual defeat which, if not  remedied, can lead to  habitual cowardice and spiritual death.  “A coward  is incapable of  exhibiting love; it is the prerogative of the brave.”[7]  
Agape Love 
King  realized that agape love is essential to bring about positive  social  change.  Agape love is simply redemptive good will for all men  and  women.[8]   If you truly love your spouse, children, family  friends, neighbors,  and humanity itself, you will take action to reverse  mankind’s  incremental enslavement.  An important aspect is telling  others the  truth, even when the truth is not pleasant to hear.  Agape  love also  requires that you not allow yourself to hate the global elite  and their  agents despite their history of unspeakable crimes against  humanity.  “Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do  that.  Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.”[9]    Of course, agape love does not imply that the global  elite should not  be arrested, tried by an impartial jury, convicted, and  imprisoned for their crimes. 
Perseverance 
The Civil  Rights Movement would not have been successful without perseverance.   Perseverance means moving steadily towards an important goal in spite  of difficulties and obstacles.  Martin Luther King Jr. worked towards equality, justice and equal rights from the early  1950s  until his assassination in 1968, which he foresaw.  King and other   activists faced being sprayed with high-power fire hoses, police dogs,   arrest, prison, beatings, court injunctions, and death threats.  The   King family home was even bombed on January 30, 1956.  When he arrived   home to his bombed house, King walked onto the front porch and calmed   the crowd of his angry supporters: 
I  did not start this boycott. I was asked by you to serve as your   spokesman. I want it to be known the length and breadth of this land   that if I am stopped, this movement will not stop.  If I am stopped, our   work will not stop.  For what we are doing is right.  What we are  doing  is just. And God is with us.[10]
Tools That Defeat All Forms of Tyranny 
The  hope of a secure and livable world lies with disciplined   nonconformists who are dedicated to justice, peace, and brotherhood. –   Martin Luther King, Jr. 
Education 
King  valued education and spent much of his time teaching  others in the  Civil Rights Movement.  As Thomas Jefferson said, “if a  nation expects  to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it  expects what  never was and never will be.”  Therefore, we must educate  ourselves and  others on the fact that wealthy individuals and private organizations like the Council on Foreign Relations  are primarily responsible for government policy.  Most importantly, we must escape the false left-right paradigm  (Democrat vs. Republican) which is nothing more than a divide-and-conquer strategy implemented by the global elite.  
 
Non-Compliance
Martin Luther King stated that, “one  has  not only a legal, but a moral responsibility to obey just laws.   Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws.”[11]  Rosa Parks refused to comply with the law requiring her to give-up her seat on the bus. Sit-ins were an integral part of the non-violent strategy of civil   disobedience and mass protests that eventually led to passage of the   Civil Rights Act of 1964, which ended legally-sanctioned racial   segregation in the United States.  
Much  like past civil rights activists refused to submit to unjust and   immoral laws, we must refuse to comply with laws and administrative   dictates that reduce us to serfs.  We must refuse to be radiated by  airport naked body scanners.  We must refuse to be groped and fondled by government agents, in violation of the 4th Amendment and natural   unalienable rights, when there is no probable cause or even reasonable   suspicion of criminal activity.  We must refuse to allow our naïve young   men and women to join the military, so that the global elite cannot  use  them as pawns to conquer practically defenseless third-world countries to steal natural resources for profit.  We must refuse to allow three-year-old children to be strip-searched in public by mindless drones, while adult men and women stand by immobile.  We must refuse to let  government forcibly medicate us into submission by fluoridating the  public water supply.  We must refuse to give our kids vaccines loaded with toxic levels of mercury, aluminum, and squalene.  We must refuse to allow low-level drug offenders to be incarcerated  at taxpayer expense while the government traffics narcotics.  You can think of many other things that you should not tolerate as well.    
Boycott
 On  December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks was arrested for  refusing to give-up her  seat due to her skin color and move to the back  of a public bus.  The  Montgomery Bus Boycott, led by Martin Luther King,  Jr. and others  followed, lasting 385 days.  The boycott campaign ended  with a U.S.  District Court ruling in Browder v. Gayle that ended racial segregation on all Montgomery public buses.
Boycotts  can be successful today as well.  We must refuse to do business  with  companies that donate money to ‘think-tanks,’ tax free  foundations, and  false charities that strategize how to take our money  while enslaving  us.  Furthermore, why support a bank that made huge  profits making bad  loans through the fractional reserve banking scam, only to later be bailed out by taxpayers?  It should be noted that by some estimates the four largest banks make up 55 percent of U.S. banking assets.
 We must boycott credit cards in favor of cash because their high interest rates are usury, and using  them promotes the cashless society control grid, where a  record of all  of your transactions is kept so that companies and the  government can monitor and predict your behavior.
  Make no mistake, mortgage and credit card debt is the modern form of slavery.  Special laws have been passed to allow banks and credit card companies to charge absurdly high interest rates.  
Protests and Marches 
“He  who passively accepts evil is as much  involved in it as he who helps  perpetrate it.  He who accepts evil  without protesting against it is  really cooperating with it.”[12]    King led many marches and protests on his quest for  equality, most  notably the Albany movement (1961), Birmingham campaign  (1963), and the  march on Washington (1963).  Today, organizing a peaceful  march,  protest, or meetup is easier than ever thanks to online meet-up  groups  and social networking. 
While  peaceful protests and marches are effective in attracting public   attention important issues, it must be noted that there are obstacles to  organizing large demonstrations. First, similar to the FBI falsely  labeling  King as a communist and wire-tapping his phone,[13] the government may label you a “domestic extremist” and put you on a watch list.    Second, the city where you want to have the protest  may violate your  First Amendment by requiring you to obtain a permit, or  telling you that  you may only protest in a free speech zone.  Third, as King’s movement was infiltrated by people he trusted, your march or protest will be infiltrated by undercover law enforcement, modern day Judas Iscariots, or, at worse, agents provocateur and black-bloc (government sponsored) anarchists.   
Email
Unfortunately,  King did not have the access to the power  and efficiency of email.  On  the other hand, we must utilize it each  week by emailing our contacts  the best articles for exposing the New  World Order from the many great  sites and blogs exposing the agenda.  Our future economic health,  safety, and survival depends on us educating our friends and families  about the Chinese-like totalitarian policies that the globalists intend  to implement.  If you do not inform your friends and family, who will?
Flyers 
Every  weekend each peace/truth activist should deliver at  least 50 to 100  flyers to front doors in their neighborhood.  The  flyers should contain  the “real news” and links to trustworthy  alternative news sites.  If  just 10,000 people distribute 100 flyers  every weekend, 49 weeks per  year, we will reach 49,000,000 people each  year (10,000 people x 100  flyers x 49 weeks). Distributing 100 flyers  takes less than an hour and  black and white copies are inexpensive.
Nullification: 
Martin Luther King, Jr. stated that “injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”[14]   Jury nullification occurs when a jury returns a  verdict of "Not  Guilty" despite its belief that the defendant is guilty  of the  violation charged. The jury in effect nullifies a law that it  believes  is either immoral or wrongly applied.[15] In the United States, jury nullification first appeared in the pre-Civil War era when juries sometimes refused   to convict for violations of the Fugitive Slave Act. Later, during   alcohol prohibition, juries often nullified alcohol control laws,   possibly as often as 60% of the time. Should juries nullify laws pertaining to speeding, drug  use, tax laws, refusing to be drafted during times of war?  
“State nullification is the idea that the states can and must refuse to enforce unconstitutional federal laws.”[16]    This power is granted to the states by the Tenth  Amendment to the  U.S. Constitution. “The powers not delegated to the  United States by  the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States,  are reserved to  the States respectively, or to the people.”  In short  state and local  governments should not assist the federal government in  enforcing  unconstitutional federal laws. 
Conclusion: 
“We  know through painful experience that freedom is never  voluntarily  given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the  oppressed.”[17]   We must demand our freedom now and use the tools  listed above to  peaceably bring it into existence.  Martin Luther King,  Jr. broke silence, and the Civil Rights Movement set the precedent. Just as the   globalists have spent many years implementing their plans to enslave   mankind in debt and fear of war, our victory will not be gained   overnight.  Each individual that desires freedom  must be the change  that he or she wants to see in the world.[18] Once our freedom is obtained, it must be vigilantly  guarded, as the  masters of deception always quickly regroup when  defeated.  But rest  assured, by all of us who desire true freedom, following  King’s example  in our local communities, the banking and corporate  sowers of inequity  will lose their control over humanity.   
When  our days become dreary with low-hovering clouds of despair, and  when  our nights become darker than a thousand midnights, let us remember   that there is a creative force in this universe, working to pull down   the gigantic mountains of evil, a power that is able to make a way out   of no way and transform dark yesterdays into bright tomorrows.  Let us   realize the arc of the moral universe is long but bends towards justice.[19]     
Ethan  Jacobs, J.D. is a licensed California attorney with a B.A. in Political  Science.  His passion is researching and writing about a wide range of  issues, hoping to raise public awareness.
We sing this song in my little church choir every year around Martin Luther King day - I just love it.
The last paragraph really tells us where we are now and what our task is. We must be loving, courageous, kind, and serving others as the 'clouds of despair' grow deeper and more threatening, as the 'nights become darker than a thousand midnights' we take a lesson from Nelson Mandela who did not let 27 years in isolated prison crush his spirit. He did not let hate and bitterness eat him up - he conquered all without desire for revenge but a desire to move all people forward. Another wonderful example.
We can't let the toxic waste of ego poison our spirit, for we are created by and for love and we will purify the polluted spiritual landscape with the outpouring of the cleansing force of love, which is truly the only reality, all else is the imaginary ego.
Martin Luther King, jr and Nelson Mandela show us the level of commitment we need to accomplish our job.
As Tscout says, 'A big peace bubble to all the lovers of humankind...'