The MLK ProjectTemporada 2

TV-PG
A documentary challenges mainstream civil rights movement narratives, examining communist influences and government dependency while questioning systemic racism claims and exploring post-Civil War segregation's historical context.

Where to Watch The MLK Project • Temporada 2

10 Episodes

  • But Whoever Causes One Of These Little Ones To Sin
    E1
    But Whoever Causes One Of These Little Ones To SinSeason 2 opens by directly confronting the moral and ideological foundations of the Civil Rights Movement, asserting that many of its most celebrated tactics inflicted lasting harm on America rather than securing genuine progress. Through archival footage, firsthand accounts, and historical analysis, the episode contrasts the warnings of respected negro church leaders with the rising influence of radical ideology, youth agitation, and strategic nonviolent confrontation. It examines how King, along with the individuals with whom he surrounded himself directed civil rights efforts toward provoking crisis, exploiting children, and leveraging public disorder to force federal intervention. By tracing the removal of Christian authority from the public square alongside the centralization of political power, this episode challenges the prevailing narrative of moral advancement and argues that America’s cultural upheaval of the 1960s was driven less by justice than by a calculated effort to res
  • Do Not Fear What They Fear
    E2
    Do Not Fear What They FearChad O. Jackson recontextualizes the Civil Rights Movement by framing it as a strategic theater of the Cold War. Rather than a purely grassroots moral crusade, the episode argues that the movement was a leveraged instrument used by global and domestic actors to reshape American governance.
  • Not Many Of You Should Become Teachers
    E3
    Not Many Of You Should Become TeachersChad O. Jackson explores Martin Luther King Jr.’s political identity as a calculated maneuver within the high-stakes environment of the Cold War. It reframes his actions not as partisan loyalty, but as a sophisticated effort to navigate fractured political parties and federal scrutiny.
  • Many Will Follow Their Sensuality
    E4
    Many Will Follow Their SensualityChad O. Jackson examines the strategic construction of the March on Washington and the legislative push for President Kennedy’s civil rights bill. It portrays the event not as a spontaneous gathering, but as a highly coordinated operation involving political maneuvering, media framing, and private alliances.
  • For The Wisdom Of This World Is Folly With God
    E5
    For The Wisdom Of This World Is Folly With GodChad O. Jackson explores the period immediately following the March on Washington, detailing how federal authority, media narratives, and movement leadership merged to drive radical national change. It focuses on the shift from public demonstration to the raw exercise of political power.
  • Thou Shalt Not Covet...Any Thing That Is Thy Neighbor's
    E6
    Thou Shalt Not Covet...Any Thing That Is Thy Neighbor'sChad O. Jackson explores the psychological and political shift within the Black middle class as traditional "middle-class values" were increasingly challenged by the rhetoric of the civil rights movement. It focuses on the internal tension between economic success and the emerging demands for racial solidarity and protest.
  • He Heaps Up Riches. And Does Not Know Who Will Gather Them.
    E7
    He Heaps Up Riches. And Does Not Know Who Will Gather Them.Chad O. Jackson explores the late 1960s as a period of transition where the movement's focus shifted from legal integration to a radical restructuring of American economics and foreign policy.
  • Let Them Be Caught In The Schemes That They Have Devised
    E8
    Let Them Be Caught In The Schemes That They Have DevisedChad O. Jackson explores the volatile landscape of 1967, a year defined by the fragmentation of the civil rights movement and its collision with global antiwar sentiment and domestic militancy.
  • Then they said, "Come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower..."
    E9
    Then they said, "Come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower..."Chad O. Jackson focuses on the final evolution of Martin Luther King Jr.’s activism in 1968, as he shifts from legal reform toward a campaign for total economic restructuring.
  • Special Episode
    E10
    Special EpisodeIn this special episode of "The MLK Project, Chad O. Jackson provides an investigative deep dive into the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., moving beyond standard historical accounts to explore the complex web of interests surrounding his death.

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