a16z Podcast - Ben Horowitz Sharing History with Dr. Clarence Jones, MLK's Speechwriter

Episode Date: February 1, 2025

This week, a16z cofounder Ben Horowitz had a rare and invaluable conversation with Dr. Clarence B. Jones, a pivotal figure in American history. Dr. Jones, who served as speechwriter, attorney, and ad...visor to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., shared his personal insights on race, inclusion, and the lasting legacy of the civil rights movement in 2025.In their wide-ranging discussion, Dr. Jones reflected on the timeless wisdom of Dr. King, quoting one of the most enduring lines from the "I Have a Dream" speech: “I want my four children to be judged by the content of their character, not by the color of their skin.”“That, to me, is still, that’s the template,” Dr. Jones said. “That still remains a template.”Their conversation covered critical themes in Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, delving into the history of the movement, the lessons from "Letter from Birmingham Jail," and the profound impact Dr. King’s work continues to have today.It was a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone who not only witnessed history but played a key role in shaping it, and we hope you enjoy it. About Dr. Clarence B. Jones:Dr. Clarence B. Jones served as legal counsel, strategic advisor, and draft speechwriter to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. from 1960 until Dr. King’s assassination in Memphis, Tennessee, on April 4, 1968. During that time, Dr. King depended on Dr. Jones for legal and strategic counsel and assistance in drafting landmark speeches and public testimony. He is credited with writing the first seven paragraphs of the iconic I Have A Dream speech. Across the decades following Dr. King’s assassination in 1968, Clarence B. Jones worked to carry on Dr. King’s legacy, to continue the nonviolent struggle for social justice, voting rights, and democratic inclusion. He is the founder of the Dr. Clarence B. Jones Institute for Social Advocacy, and also serves as the Founding Director Emeritus of the Institute for Nonviolence and Social Justice at the University of San Francisco. Dr. Jones is also the author of three acclaimed books "What Would Martin Say?", "Behind the Dream: The Making of the Speech that Transformed a Nation" and "Last of the Lions". Stay Updated: Let us know what you think: https://ratethispodcast.com/a16zBen on X:  http://twitter.com/bhorowitzFind a16z on X: https://twitter.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://twitter.com/stephsmithioPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 I want my four children to be judged by the content of the character, not by the color of their skin. That, to me, is still, that's the template. Hello, A16Z podcast listeners. Today, we've got a very special bonus episode from an exclusive event recorded this week, where our co-founder Ben Horowitz had the rare opportunity to sit down with Dr. Clarence B. Jones, pivotal figure in American history, who, among other things, served as Dr. Martin Luther King's draft speechwriter. In fact, he's credited with writing the first seven paragraphs of the iconic, I Have a Dream, speech. If you think about it, this speech is one of the most iconic
Starting point is 00:00:47 in history, and among the few that not only changed the world during its time, but one where its legacy continues to sway culture decades later. And that means that Dr. Jones not only witnessed history, but he literally wrote it. And today, you'll get to hear Dr. Jones reflect on his time with Dr. Martin Luther King, including how he thinks Dr. King would interpret the challenges of today. Finally, here is our very own Megan Holston-Alexander, who leads our cultural leadership fund to properly introduce Dr. Jones and his legacy. I hope you enjoy. As a reminder, the content here is for informational purposes only. Should not be taken as legal, business, tax or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security and is not directed
Starting point is 00:01:33 at any investors or potential investors in any A16Z fund. Please note that A16Z and its affiliates may also maintain investments in the companies discussed in this podcast. For more details, including a link to our investments, please see A16c.com slash disclosures. I have the very distinct honor of introducing the conversation tonight between Ben Horitz and Dr. Clarence Jones. Now, I got to meet Dr. Jones just a couple of months ago, and he asked me where I was from. I said Montgomery, Alabama.
Starting point is 00:02:07 He paused like he did not believe me. I said it again, and he just immediately started to riff on the things that we remember about it and the shared places and spaces and faces as he just reflected. on his time there. And Ben will know this is not an uncommon experience when someone who is from or has spent a reasonable amount of time in a Montgomery, in a Birmingham, in a Selma, in a Tuskegee. It sparks something in a spirit of connection with other people who have spent time there or are from there. And it really just builds a sense of connection because we understand the importance of these cities and the important things that happen there. And one of the reasons
Starting point is 00:02:45 why these spaces are so special are because of people like Dr. Jones. Now, while he's not from the South, he's from Philadelphia. Shout out to the Eagles. Congratulations. He spent an incredible amount of time traveling across the South as Dr. King's strategic advisor, as his legal counsel, as his draft speechwriter. He is responsible for the first seven paragraphs of the famous I Have a Dream speech. He helped exchange notes that would later become the basis. of letter from Birmingham jail. So thank you so much, Dr. Jones, for your bravery and contributions to that space.
Starting point is 00:03:22 So in spending time with Dr. Jones, Ben wanted us to hear those stories and to learn about that legacy that we will all get to share here tonight. So without further ado, I hand it to you, Ben, to kick off the conversation with Dr. Jones. All right.
Starting point is 00:03:42 Yeah, so thank you all for coming. This is an honor and I'm excited to have this conversation. You know, what we see when we look at history through the history books and films is just so different than how it's described by somebody who actually lived it. So this is really good.
Starting point is 00:03:59 And why don't we start at the beginning? Because it's a very interesting story. So when you met Dr. King, you were an entertainment lawyer and he had caught a case on tax evasion. And tell us about that because you were a completely different person. Oh, yeah. Dr. King was indicted by the state of Alabama in 1960 for tax evasion, and he had four superb lawyers.
Starting point is 00:04:26 His chief counsel was Judge Schubert Delaney, a trial lawyer from New York. He had two tax lawyers from Chicago, and he had a young lawyer. He's not young anymore. Fred Gray from Montgomery, Alabama. But his chief defense counsel, Judge Hubert Delaney, he had known me and had an over-exaggerated opinion of my abilities. And so, Judge Delaney called me and he said, Clarence, this is just preacher. I'm representing this preacher. It's been indicted in Birmingham, and I need somebody to handle all the legal research.
Starting point is 00:05:05 Now, when he first called me, I thought he was talking about my going to the library. in Altadena, California at 2751 Altadena Avenue, which I'll talk about it later. And he said, no, no, no, Clarence, you have to go, no, you have to go down. I said, no, Judge, I can't do that. I can't do that. And he was very, very disappointed and so forth. And then he called me up one early Friday morning. Oh, we had had a conversation, a long conversation Thursday night.
Starting point is 00:05:37 He called me up early Friday morning. He said, Clarence, I didn't know it. But, you know, the conversation I was talking to you about Martin King, he's in the air. He's on his way to Los Angeles right now. And I told him, taking advantage of the change of time, I told him that the very first thing he should do when he gets to California is to come up and see you. And I said, no, you didn't. He said, yes, I did. And so, lo and behold, on a Friday evening, I'm living at 20.
Starting point is 00:06:10 5751 Highview Avenue in Althadena, California. Paranthetically, the owner of the house called me about a week ago, remember? Because she knew I would be interested to say that the house that I'm telling you with Dr. King came was one of the two houses in Alphabina that had not been burned down. So she wanted me to know that, she thought.
Starting point is 00:06:31 Anyway, so into my house one on Friday evening is Martin, who walks Martin Luther King Jr. Now, at 2751 in High Avenue Avenue. It had, it was an interesting house because it had, it had, it still has, I just haven't seen it recently, but it had a retractable ceiling. So you press a button and then the ceiling of the house pulls back and good weather. You look at the San Gabriel Mountains and it's beautiful and it was into that setting that Martin King came. It was a very nice day. And he walks in and he says, Attorney Jones, you have a very nice house here. I said, yes, I know,
Starting point is 00:07:16 Dr. King. When I had an Impala, I had him in Pala Chevrolet, convertible that my wife had given me on graduation present from law school, you see. So I got impalible. There was a lemon tree and so anyway. So Dr. King walks into this house, walking in the setting, and he gets right to the point. he says Attorney Jones. He says, we have lots of white lawyers, particularly from the Northeast, from Harvard and University of Pennsylvania and Yale who want to help us.
Starting point is 00:07:50 She said, but what we need a young, we need a young Negro lawyers like you to help us of people who are struggling for our freedom in the South. So I listened to what Dr. King said, and I said, Dr. King, your chief counselor, Hubert Delaney told me, and I applaud what, You were doing what you're trying to do.
Starting point is 00:08:08 See, I went to Boston University Law School. Dr. King went to the Boston School of the video. He was three years ahead of me. So when I was in law school, the deed of the Boston Law School, a fellow by the name of Howard Thurman, I heard something around Boston about how this had this bright young teacher from him.
Starting point is 00:08:29 And I didn't pay anything. That wasn't my thing. Anyway, so he gets right to the point about how they need to. help. And I listened to him. And I said, Dr. King, I'd like to help you. I said to Judge Delaney, I do research and send you, but I'm living here. I can't come. He wanted me to come to Alabama. Can't do that. So he asked me some questions about myself, some questions about my mother. I am an only child. My parents were domestic household servants. I said, my mother was a maid and a cook,
Starting point is 00:09:05 and my father was a chauffeur d'gner gardener so i told dr king this told him about my background and he listened and i told him about one of the most painful things in my life it was the death of my mother and i told him about i don't want to digress too much to receive i was raised by irish catholic nuns i told him this and so i was raised by irish catholic nuns from the time i was six and to fourteen and And as Irish Catholic nuns used to say to me and other colored boys, my parents were domestic household servants, my mother was a maiden of cook, my father was a chauffeur, they were too poor to keep me at the age of six,
Starting point is 00:09:49 so they put me in the Catholic boarding school. So from six to 14, I was raised by Irish Catholic nuns. And the six years all, the nuns would say, Master Jones, Be a good boy. Jesus loves you. We love you. And you are beautiful. Master Jones, be a good boy.
Starting point is 00:10:20 Jesus loves you. We love you. And you are beautiful. That I said that to me from the time I was six into 14. So I'm telling Dr. King, this. I'm telling you, like I told Dr. King, and so when you hear that from the time you're six to 14, so when I transitioned to public school, I believe that stuff. Now, I didn't
Starting point is 00:10:52 remember all that other things, we love you, but the thing that I remember was that Jesus loves you, and you were beautiful. So when I went to public school, I know this is a long answer to your question. But I got to get this out. It's a good story. I'm 94 years old today. I don't mean today. I don't mean this day.
Starting point is 00:11:22 I'm 94, yeah, 94 years old January 8th, okay? No, I'm 94 years old. Let me just tell you something. There is hardly a day that I don't wake up and look I'm going to mirror, and I don't think that I'm beautiful. Now, it has nothing to do with the objective facts as to whether I am or not, but that's what I think I am. You understand? So this had a profound effect on me, this little black kid.
Starting point is 00:11:58 So I'm telling Dr. King all about this, and he's listening. And at the end, I'm telling I can't help him. And he is crestfallen. I mean, really crestfallen. That was the Friday evening. My phone rings the next morning. I answer the phone. He says, Attorney Jones.
Starting point is 00:12:21 I said, yes, my name is Dora McDonald. I said, yes. I'm the personal secretary of Dr. King. And you know, Attorney Jones, he forgot. He's going to be preaching in Baldwin Hills tomorrow in a Baptist church, and he would like for you to be his guest. Now, I had only been in California like a year, but I knew something about Baldwin Hills.
Starting point is 00:12:48 Baldwin Hills at that time was like the Black Beverly Hills. So I'm feeling guilty. So I said, oh, this preacher won't leave me alone, so I can go. I go to this church. No, I had as I said You went to the church You were not going to do it Oh, no, I wasn't going to do it
Starting point is 00:13:05 No, I wasn't going to do it You liked the house Oh yeah, I liked the house And the other thing, Ben, is that I drive up in my little Chevrolet convertible And I see these Lincoln's And these Cadillacs
Starting point is 00:13:18 And I said, damn And I'm sitting like Third away from the front I never heard Dr. King speak before Yeah Never ever heard him speak before Now your wife had heard him Yeah, she had heard him
Starting point is 00:13:30 Yeah. Okay. We were seven-something pregnant. She didn't want to come. In fact, we had an argument. She says, I'm not going, but you're going to that church. So I said, okay, I'm not going. I said, okay, don't make a big thing I'm gone. Don't make a big thing, I'm gone. Now, I had never heard Dr. King speak before. Never, ever. I mean, I heard about him. And he gets up in the pulpit and he says,
Starting point is 00:13:55 ladies and gentlemen, brothers and sisters, the texts of my text of my, sermon today is a role in responsibility of our more educated among us to help our less fortunate brothers and sisters who are struggling for freedom in the South. So I thought to myself, this is one smart dude. I really did. He's preaching to one person. I said, here he goes to the most important powerful in the black bourgeoisie.
Starting point is 00:14:32 And so I said, this is a smart dude. I never heard him speak before. When I heard and saw him speak, I said, oh my God, it was like unbelievable. I never heard anybody speak like that. And he's going on and on and on and on. And he comes to a point. And he says, for example,
Starting point is 00:14:55 there's a young man sitting in this church today. I wonder who? Young man, a young lawyer. They tell me that this young man, his brains have been touched by Jesus. They tell me that this young man, that when he does legal research on any problem, he goes all the way back to the time of William the conqueror.
Starting point is 00:15:28 1066 and the Magna Carta. So I'm beginning to think, now, how the hell does that Baptist preacher know anything about this? And then my friends in New York and around the country tell me that when this young lawyer writes down what he finds, the words are so compelling nature, is jump off the page. At that point, I began to think,
Starting point is 00:15:54 when this church service is over, I'm going to find out who this young man is. Because the way Dr. King described him, if he is as Dr. King described, I'm a lawyer. I need to find out who this man that Dr. King is talking about. And he goes all the way back and he says, I had a chance to visit with this young man and the other night at his home and out of the Dean of California,
Starting point is 00:16:21 and I said, oh no. I said, no, you're not. I'm saying to myself, And then what Dr. King did, it was very unfair. Now, I told him things. The exchange that he asked me, I told him things that I didn't think he wanted to repeat to 1,500 strangers. And I told him things about my mother being the maid and a cook, my father's,
Starting point is 00:16:49 chaufer in the garden, and all that and so forth. And then there's an actual poem by Langston Hughes. called Life Ain't Been No Crystal Stair. And what Dr. King did in his area dightness is that he changed the sequence and the words in that poem. The poem is about a Negro domestic. She's working in his house, and she's scrubbing the staircase. And as she pauses periodically, she says,
Starting point is 00:17:23 Life ain't been no crystal stare. But Dr. King made my mother the actor, okay, made her the person talking about me. And when he did that, I started to cry. Because I had this vision of my mother. She died in 19, whenever she died in 1950, something. And I was very moved. And as I started to cry, I began to have visions of not only my mother, but my father, who was domestic household servants.
Starting point is 00:18:05 And then when he said, he had forgotten but once he came, that sort of hit me. And I really started to weep. I put on dark sunglasses so that the people in the church wouldn't see that I was really crying. As Dr. King recounted, my mother. particularly. Church service is over. He's very popular. So as I'm getting myself together,
Starting point is 00:18:32 I approached him, he sees me coming over to it. He says, the Tony Jones, I never mentioned your name. I never mentioned your name. I just walked over there. He says, sometimes we Baptist preachers, I never mentioned your name. I never mentioned your name. I didn't say anything to him.
Starting point is 00:18:46 I just walked over to him. I pulled him to me very closely. And I leaned over to him. And I said, Dr. King, when do you want me to go to Montgomery, Alabama? And that's what I call the making of a disciple. Now, let me just tell you something. I've been here for 21 years. And I shared with Ben.
Starting point is 00:19:13 I knew less about Ben than I knew about his father and his grandfather. I came up in a generation where there were white, people who were liberal, many of them luster, some of them communists. And they were genuinely dedicated to the struggle, to the aspirations of the Negro people. Some of them were members of the Communist Party. But they were all as white Jewish people.
Starting point is 00:19:46 They were all fiercely involved in what we call the Negro struggle. Ben Horowitz comes from a legacy that he should be very proud of. And like all, father and sons and grandsons, you know, people have different opinions. People have different journeys. I was being interviewed by Soledad O'Brien on television from 21 years ago. And Soledadad O'Brien and I got into something about Dr. King would have said this, Dr. King would have said that, and I said, Solberg, you don't know what you're talking about.
Starting point is 00:20:31 The day after, I get a call from a man who identified himself as John Hennessy. John Hennessy says, Mr. Johnson, I'm the president of Stanford University. He said, I saw you, and a couple of other people saw you having Soledadad. talking about some of the dispute, he says, and you said, you wanted to take the time. I said, I don't know where or what I'm going to do. You want to take your time and write and set the record straight. He says, we have a Martin Luther King Jr. Research and Education Center out here.
Starting point is 00:21:03 And I talked to one of my members of the board of trustees, and a man named Claiborne Carson's going to call you. And I said, okay. But Dr. Jones, I have to tell you humorously what I mentioned named Claiborne Carson. He says, he knew of you, but he thought you were dead. So I said to Dr. Carson, no, he's very much alive. So I ended up coming to visit Stanford University 21 years ago with a good friend of mine who's from Carl Dixon in Los Angeles.
Starting point is 00:21:36 So I was decided what I was going to do. I wouldn't go so far as to say that Stanford was trying to sell me. They just wanted me to see what the facilities were like. Hennessy was very nice. and Stanford was like I said, wow, it was a big place, you know. I didn't know anything about Stanford, really, I didn't. And so I go over to the research center, and they let me see some boxes of material
Starting point is 00:22:01 that they had collected on Dr. King trying to show me how authentic the Martin Luther King Research Center was if I wanted to come there and work. And they bought a box, and in this box was a folder. And I looked down in the folder, and there was a photostatic copy of the program from the March on Washington. And in the photostatic copy, it was a copy of a note I had written to Martin King. So I saw this March on Washington program.
Starting point is 00:22:41 I saw my note to Martin, and I burst into tears. Because I went back and rolled back the cat, as they say. I said, oh, my God, this is a photostatic copy of the actual program that I wrote a note to Martin King. He wrote it on the program. On the program. Oh, wow, wow. And what I wrote on the program was that we were told that Dr. W.E. DeV.
Starting point is 00:23:17 had died that night before in Ghana at 90 years of age. And so I wrote to Martin on a program, just got word after the Du Bois died in Ghana, maybe the people at the March should know this. And I wrote it, Martin got it, and he looked at it. And by the way, when A. Fuller Randolph read this note got the 200,000 people like, you know, because Dr. Du Bois.
Starting point is 00:23:42 But when I saw that note, this is the point I want to make, when I saw that note, that photo, that note, that photo of the note. I then began to walk back the cat, as they say. I said, oh, my God. Dr. King took the March program home. The march was on a Wednesday. So he took the program note home. He goes to Atlanta. He has his personal effects. and Coretta must have decided that this note exchange between Martin and I
Starting point is 00:24:21 was so important that she wanted to give it to Stanford and that's what caused me to just burst in the tears. That's amazing. It's like being in a time machine talking to you. It's amazing. One of the things you wrote in behind the dream
Starting point is 00:24:40 that really struck me was it was a shame that the film of the March on Washington and I Have the Dream speech was in black and white. Yes. Because the feeling was, you know, in color. It was the joy, the excitement. That was out of it. And it got me thinking,
Starting point is 00:25:03 when I think of Dr. King from the films and even the film summit, he's like very serious, dour, the most serious person in the world. But then when you read what he writes, and I hear you talk, it sounds like the actual Dr. King was much different than that.
Starting point is 00:25:21 What kind of person was he to be around? Humorous, brilliant. Yeah. I call him a spoiled rat. I tell you, you got your whole life program for you. Your father's got this church. He didn't grow up with Irish nuns. Yeah, that's right.
Starting point is 00:25:39 Right, right. And he was very hard for me to say this, but let me just say this. Martin King was the most brilliant, vulnerable, sometimes personally irresponsible, brilliant person. I'd ever met. In fact, I let Dr. King know very armed in our relationship. I was not nonviolent. Especially towards him, yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:04 No, no, no, no. No, I let him know I'm not nonviolent. Yeah. I was not committed to him. nonviolence and people around him like Andy Young and people cause that's a white man puts his hand on me he's gone down don't you be talking this nonviolent stuff to me I respect you and I will defend you as long as you don't expect me to be I will kick your butt in a minute he says Clarence and he used to say to Dorothy
Starting point is 00:26:39 We've got to make sure that Clarence never is in a situation where he can embarrass us. Never in a situation because he will embarrass us. And I believe that most of the time I was with him until the last year of his life, something happened. Something happened to me because I began to look at him and I said, you know, this is me talking to myself. I said, this dude really believes him. He really believes him. Martin came and said, aren't you be talking to Burke Marshall
Starting point is 00:27:19 and talking about Robert? You talk so bad about the Attorney General Clarence. You know, he's just a human being. You guys can't protect me. You've got to understand. The way we used to get rid of the tension is that we would do mock funerals. We would do make-believe funerals
Starting point is 00:27:37 if one of us got killed. Okay? So let's say they would do a make-believe funeral for me. And Martin would say, Lord, no, come on now. We know he doesn't deserve it. I tried all my life to get him to stop digging all those martinis. Lord. And you know, when he came down south and started drinking Jack Daniels,
Starting point is 00:27:59 I couldn't get him to stop. But, you know, he was a good man, Lord, let him in. Let him in, Lord, let him in. Because he did this and he did that. He would try to, he would try to externalize what we all believed. The reason I am, I mean, I'm not on welfare. I'm the reasoned okay. You've been more wealthy if you'd stay.
Starting point is 00:28:23 No, no, no. What I'm trying to say is that because of the money and wealth didn't mean anything. Yeah. And one of the reasons that didn't mean anything because I never believed I would live beyond the age of 50. None of us ever believed me. I never believed in Martin, believe, with 1950. I just thought that that's just the way it was. And I only changed in the last six months
Starting point is 00:28:50 a year with Martin when I began to say, this man is not crazy. He really does believe. He really believed that his Lord Jesus Christ. He deeply believed there's nothing I can do that doesn't Harry Belapon, he can do, nothing the Attorney General can do. He really believed that he was protected by His Lord Jesus Christ. Now, I thought he was crazy. But that's what he believed.
Starting point is 00:29:18 And because of the depth of his belief, it had a profound impact on me. Because I said, if somebody is so fearless, I ascribe just fearlessness. to he was partially crazy. Yeah. Well, the FBI was after him the whole time. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:42 I mean, they turned the IRS on him, everything. Oh, they did everything. Yeah, yeah. They did everything to destroy him. Yeah. And it had a profound effect on him. It had such a profound effect on him that I had to go see his personal physician
Starting point is 00:29:55 with a fellow by name is Stanley Levinson. First physician, he says, Clarence, Martin needs to see a psychiatrist, and needs to see a doctor. He needs to be hospitalized. He is in such bad shape. He needs to be hospitalized. I said, excuse me?
Starting point is 00:30:12 He says, yeah, he's in such bad shape, I'm telling you. So I turned to, his name was Arthur Logan, who was his personal physician. And I look at Arthur Logan, just like I'm looking at you. I said, Arthur, Martin is not going to be hospitalized. Arthur Logan got very offended. Clarence, you're a good lawyer, but, you know, I, this is a medical doctor.
Starting point is 00:30:36 I am telling you, if he is not hospitalized, it doesn't do anything. I said, no, it's not going to happen. He says, I'm going to take you to the New York bar. I said, I don't get where you take me. He's not going. I'm not going to permit. I won't prevent anything possible. So, Arthur, says, well, why are you so admin on this?
Starting point is 00:30:54 I said, let me tell you, Arthur. Let me bring you, you're in a medical world. Well, let me bring you to the real world I live in. I said, whether it's within 30 days or 60 days or 90 days, but within 30 to 60 days, every conversation that Martin is having with his psychiatrist is being transcribed. And within 60 days, the transcription of his sessions will be on the desk of J. Edgar Hoover. Yeah, definitely. I'm absolutely convinced that.
Starting point is 00:31:27 And I can't take that risk. And Arthur Logan was so angry at me. He was going to take me to the bar, so I said, I don't get damn what you should do it. And he was. He was in bad shape and did some stupid, foolish things. And yet, you're not here to hear me. I mean, you are here to talk to this 94-year-old crazy fool. I got that.
Starting point is 00:31:54 But you're here because of my relationship to Martin King. King, if I live a thousand lifetimes, thousand lifetimes, nobody was fearless. We were talking about the march from Selma to Montgomery. I never will forget that. Marched Selma to Montgomery, and he's speaking, the capital is right across the street, and somebody says to him, Dr. King, how long, how long? And Dr. King says, not long, not long. Then he goes off the moral arc of the universe is long,
Starting point is 00:32:35 but it bends towards justice. How long, not long. And he started quoting and quoting and quoting and quoting. If I had to bookend Martin King's life, I would bookend them by two speeches of documents. One, the letter from the Birmingham jail. Yeah. It would be one bookend.
Starting point is 00:32:55 And the other would be time to break the silence, the speech opposing the war in Vietnam. Yeah. Now, in the letter from the Birmingham jail, he was in jail, and I go in to see him. And when I go in to see him, I said, you know, Harry Belafone and I said,
Starting point is 00:33:18 we've got to raise some bail money. And Martin wouldn't hear it. He says, well, you and Harry have to deal with. I said, Martin, pay attention to me. We got to raise some bail money because when I come in to see you, I'm running like the gauntlet. Now, I was the only person who could go in to see Martin
Starting point is 00:33:31 when he was in jail in Birmingham. And so what I did, and at that time, I'd wear a suit and shirt and tie. I was the only person going to see him, so they didn't pat me down or anything. They just, okay, attorney's going to see him. And what I did, because when I went into see him, he was responding to a full-page ad
Starting point is 00:33:53 that had been taken out in the Birmingham jail. He was really upset about it. And so he wanted to write an answer to that. So I would bring blank sheets of paper under my jacket, suit jacket, paper. And I came and see him twice a day. And I did that for a period of five days, for May 20th until five or six days later. That was a letter from the Birmingham jail. I didn't pay any changes in the letter.
Starting point is 00:34:20 Six weeks later, I'm in Atlanta, Georgia. sitting outside Martin's office. Martin isn't there, but the secretary of Doran McDonald's. Clarence, I'm so glad you're here because the magazine, Christianity in Crisis, they want to publish Martin's letter from the Birmingham jail. I said, well, I never saw it.
Starting point is 00:34:37 I never read it. So she says, oh, we have a little grab copy. So I go and I read the copy. And I go and read the memorandum of copy of the letter from the Birmingham jail. And I sit down and I read the letter and I said, oh, my, God. Because I knew the circumstances in which he had written this letter.
Starting point is 00:35:01 He didn't have any books. He didn't have anything. So I said to him, I said, listen, Martin, you'll get no credit for being able to quote scripture. You've got a PhD theology. He's supposed to school to be able to do that. But the dude would be quoting thorough. The dude would be quoting angles. The dude will be quoting verbatim. I was there. He didn't. have anything to look at. He did this out of his head. And so when I read that letter from the Birmingham jail, I said to myself, that is one smart dude.
Starting point is 00:35:35 So, as I said, if I had to book on what he... I've had the book on his life. One letter from the Birmingham jail, his other would be the time to break the silence. Now let me just say something here. You don't have to do this. I mean, when I say you, I mean, Nijitzen Horowitz. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:51 I'm speaking. That's what I'm saying. I'm not speaking personally. I mean, I am speaking personally. First of all, I've got to say something publicly. I don't know what kind of stuff you got going down, brother. But I don't know what you did or what to look at that woman over there. No, no, let me just, sir. No, I thought I had some bad stuff going on all my life.
Starting point is 00:36:20 Man, I don't know what kind of stuff you got. going on because damn woo we he's talking about my wife felicia that's right i'm just saying we've been married 35 years that's what i'm saying so i mean i'm just saying i got a long memory i forget some things and i don't need to embarrass you but i just state what the facts are you know as they think race if so local the thing speaks for itself I am so touched and honored as I look around and I think, now I know I see all these people out here. I know Andreessen Harwoods.
Starting point is 00:37:05 I mean, you're in the business of making money, right? That's the business. I mean, that's what you do, right? Well, no, no, no. I don't want to put you on the spot. I know you. I know that's what you do. Okay?
Starting point is 00:37:19 In fact, Ben, you know what? Maybe I should get my series A. Maybe I should... You think I'm too old to come? You think I'm too old to qualify? Could I come and work here? Well, I think... I mean, I don't know if I can qualify, but you know...
Starting point is 00:37:35 I mean, man, this is a... You've got to pitch me on an idea. You can't just... Oh, okay. Oh, that's right. Okay. That's tough. That's tough.
Starting point is 00:37:44 But in all seriousness, race if so local, the thing speaks for itself. The thing. speaks for itself. Now, I don't know what notices went out about this, meaning. I suppose if I got something with Ben Horowitz, I would come. But aside from that, I always assume that people have alternatives.
Starting point is 00:38:10 As powerful as Angeisen Horowitz is, you may say, well, I'm busy today, I can't do that. I don't know what notice they sent out where I got Clarence done. I don't know. You may say, well, I'd like to come. I'm busy today, I can't do that. But I look around and I see all these people and I said, damn, you must have been busy,
Starting point is 00:38:27 but she sure came out. And I know you came out of curiosity to see this crazy person, me. But she really came out as a tribute to the legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. and to Andreessen Horowitz. And this is a bad dude here. This is a bad dude.
Starting point is 00:38:49 And by the way, as I'm thinking, as I'm coming over here, you know, I was with the Attorney General. I want to tell you, one, Robert Kennedy, the Robert of Kennedy. Senior. Bobby Jr. is a different. Yeah, Robert Kennedy. I had the most fierce.
Starting point is 00:39:05 We were always at loggerheads, always at loggerheads. And then Martin King gets assassinated. It's April 4, 1968. Robert Kennedy, she is running for president. And he said, Gary in Neander, and he gets the word that Martin King has been assassinated. And his handlers are telling him, you've got to cancel this. You can't go and speak to this all-black group
Starting point is 00:39:39 because they don't know that Martin King's been saying, we've got to get you out of here as quickly as possible. You've got to cancel this. Robert Kennedy says no. I'm not going to do that. So Robert Kennedy speaks to an all-black audience in Gary, Indiana.
Starting point is 00:40:03 And he says, ladies and gentlemen, brothers and sisters, I have some very sad news for you. Martin Luther King, Jr. has been assassinated. And the crowd is, like, stunned. And without pausing, he says, I had a member of my family,
Starting point is 00:40:32 who was also a assassinator. We don't have all of the details yet. And he goes on and he starts quoting some things and so beautiful speech. And then a friend of mine who was a treasury agent who was assigned to guard Robert Kennedy after he gave that speech tells me that Robert Kennedy
Starting point is 00:40:57 sits down and puts his head in his arms and he sobs. And he says, my God, my God, what is our country coming to? Now, I had been one of the fiercest critics of Robert Kennedy up until that day. And when somebody told me
Starting point is 00:41:27 and described to me that he sobbed, I said, Clarence, there's something about Robert Kennedy, you don't know, and you've got to find out more. And that's when I changed my whole opinion about Robert Kennedy.
Starting point is 00:41:47 Yeah. We had an interesting conversation about this. I think it's actually very relevant as it relates to Dr. King. So it's interesting. I went to Christopher Columbus Elementary School. And at the time I went, Columbus was a big hero. Where was that geographically here? Berkeley, California. Oh, Berkeley? Oh, wow. Okay. You know, I mean, he connected two civilizations that had grown up for 10,000 years, never met each other. So it was a big deal. He created the world that we live in now. And then I went to Martin Luther King Jr. High School. Oh, really? Yeah. But through my lifetime, people stopped viewing Christopher Columbus from kind of the era he came from and started to judge him from the era that we live in. And at the same time, Martin Luther King became the biggest American hero,
Starting point is 00:42:39 really bigger than Abraham Lincoln or George Washington or any of them with the Stevie Wonder song. And Reagan made the holiday. It was amazing. And as you said, if you listen to speech, it's like, yeah, obviously he's our biggest hero. But I noticed something in the last four years, people are starting to look at Dr. King, not from his era, but from our era. And so now you have these new movements like the anti-racism movement and so forth. And they're going, well, colorblind, okay, but, you know, we really have to see color.
Starting point is 00:43:17 well, integration okay, but, you know, we're going to have a separate black graduation at Stanford and that kind of thing. So it's kind of like, well, maybe like he's not perfect on that. And then the thing that really made me sit down was President Trump was inaugurated on Martin Luther King Day. It was effusive in his praise. And it was really a lot directed at the new movement. Right. And so now sitting here, how do you think about, on the spectrum of Ibram-Kendi anti-racism to we shouldn't have affirmative action? Like, how would Dr. King think about these things? Or how do you think about this thing?
Starting point is 00:44:03 Diversity, equity, and inclusion. I didn't realize that those words suddenly seemed like it got bad words. I don't know. Yeah. Yeah, right. They seem to be getting a negative connotation. Yes. You know?
Starting point is 00:44:17 So I look at the concept of diversity, equity, inclusion, and the history of the legacy of Martin King based on one word, power, P-O-W-E-R. Yeah. Power. Now, I don't know when the challenge of the words that I want my four children to be judged, by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.
Starting point is 00:44:48 I don't know how we transition from that simple concept. Very good concept. Yeah. Very good concept. Yeah. The whole books being written on the thesis that, if you go behind some of the books talking about diversity, equity, and inclusion, if you really go and analyze them very analytically,
Starting point is 00:45:18 you come away with the conclusion that no matter how much a society will try, white people are going to be irredeemable. And I don't believe that. I believe just the opposite. I believe that the way you get people talking, thinking comfortably about race, is to be comfortable
Starting point is 00:45:46 and acknowledging what the historical facts are or were. Nobody in this room had anything to do with the institution of slavery. None of us. But the institution of slavery had profound consequences going forward in our country. The question is, At what point have we as a society arrived? At what point have we arrived where the institutional consequences
Starting point is 00:46:26 of 300 plus or more years of the institution of slavery is totally irrelevant, has had no going forward consequences on those people who are successes to slave owners and those people who are successes to slaves. When will we arrive at a point when white people sitting out there? You had nothing to do with slavery.
Starting point is 00:47:01 That's the fact. And black and brown people sitting out there. You had nothing to do with ancestors who look like you having formerly been slaves. Power, Frederick Douglass said, concedes nothing without a demand. It never has and never will. I think it's a meaningless exercise to try to speculate about this projected new society. where race and the color of your skin is irrelevant.
Starting point is 00:47:47 I think that the issue confronting all of us is not that your color is irrelevant. You're goddamn right. Yeah, I'm dark brown, and you see me as dark brown. That is a reality. Someone who is white, I see them as white, and that is reality. But what today...
Starting point is 00:48:06 In 2025, what kind of values do we attach to that reality? Automatically, if a white person wakes up today in America, is that white person? Presumptively, until proven to the contrary, a racist? There are books that make that the thesis. I'm a former trial lawyer, so I look at things more pragmatic. We are challenged. This will eat us to death. This issue of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
Starting point is 00:48:50 I looked at the television. I mean, does Donald Trump really know what he's banning when he says diversity, equity, and inclusion? No more diversity, equity, inclusion in the armed forces. No more diversity and equity inclusion. Okay. What is being prohibited? What is being fought against? And those people who are proposing
Starting point is 00:49:10 diversity, equity, and inclusion, I challenge you. What are you proposing? Are you not accepting the reality? What do you? In 2025? Clearly, I think it's fair to say. 2025, with respect to the position
Starting point is 00:49:28 of black people in America, 2025, is different than it was 30 years ago, 50 years ago. That is a simple historical fact. How much that difference is? I don't know. But we've got to get out of this thing we seem to be trapped in. That somehow DEI, diversity, equity, and inclusion is a bad thing. If the people who have the power make a judgment,
Starting point is 00:50:03 I think in a workforce, I think if I'm running a company, I'd like to see whether or not there are potential pools of talent and people out there other than those who look like me. Let's just say, the audience here is all white. Or flip it, the audience here is all black. Hmm? What is it? What is it about this thing that Martin King was so brilliant? I want my four children to be judged by the content of the character, not by the color of their skin. That, to me, is still, that's the template. That still remains a template. I mean, I read all the books. I mean, I taught. I'm retired. I use, I taught. I'm retired. Six years ago, I taught in the election in the law school,
Starting point is 00:51:03 I lectured in the graduate school here at Stanford, I lectured and so forth and so forth. This would always come up. And now today, I'm being invited to speak at very distinguished universities, and they want to deal with diversity, equity, and inclusion. And I say, when you see it, you can believe it, when you see it. When I leave here, do I have to write five pages to describe the audience that I see? Do I have to go and say, well, I was at this thing on Jesus and Horrors I saw it?
Starting point is 00:51:36 Do I have to go and write five pages to describe the experience I'm having here and looking at this audience? Do I have to do that? Ray Sipsilarko, the thing speaks for itself. Unfortunately, as I said, you and Ben, what you have seen, and lived and done experience in your lifetime. That's a template. Somebody says to you, Ben Harwis, how did you get into it?
Starting point is 00:52:09 Did you want to get involved in diversity, equity, and included? Did you do that purposely? And by the way, when you met that beautiful woman who is your wife, she's not white, I noticed. You know, she's not white. Oh, no. So, I mean, I'm just saying, people could say, what process brought you? Were you crazy?
Starting point is 00:52:34 You know, as you were talking, I was thinking the part that people don't realize is that judging somebody by the content of their character takes work because you have to understand their character. Hello. And your story about Bobby Sr., where it took you a while in an effort, to understand his character before you're okay with him. Change me 180 degrees. And I think that that's the thing, you know, we talk about this at the firm a lot. It's an effort, particularly if the person doesn't have your background
Starting point is 00:53:06 isn't from your culture and so forth. And I think that what people don't recognize, look, I'll tell you why we do what we do at the firm, because it makes me a lot of money, because I get the best talent. Hello. And that's always why we've done it. But it's work, but with massive reward. And to me, reading behind the dream,
Starting point is 00:53:28 the thing that struck me most was the culture of the civil rights movement, be it you, Stanley Levinson, Nelson Rockefeller, Martin K. You guys all judge each other on who you were. Right, right. And there was no need to go, oh, you're white, so like you've got to work your way or you're black so like you're less than me. or, like, none of that actually existed. You guys had a common purpose.
Starting point is 00:53:56 You were working for a common goal, and you took the time to know each other. And that's the model. And it's so crazy how politicized it still gets and how we always want to be in a race war for whatever. I know. For some reason. It's just so bizarre.
Starting point is 00:54:10 But I'll just say this. I couldn't be more grateful for you writing it down and sharing it with us. I really felt like I went back and experienced the whole thing. And it's amazing. And it is the model. And if nobody else does it, I tell you now at Andresen Horowitz, we're doing it. And we want...
Starting point is 00:54:29 You're doing it successfully. Yeah, we want our firm and our community to be like your community was, because it's amazing. Wow. Wow. Wow. I don't know that I can... I don't know that I can ever... You hear what he just said? Damn.
Starting point is 00:54:48 You got to monetize that, man. You know, he... Well, that's where we're monetizing. Incredible. So anyway, so thank you all so much. And please join me in thanking the amazing Dr. Kyle. All right, that is all for today. If you did make it this far, first of all, thank you.
Starting point is 00:55:17 We put a lot of thought into each of these episodes, whether it's guests, the calendar tetras, the cycles with our amazing editing. or Tommy until the music is just right. So if you like what we put together, consider dropping us a line at rate this podcast.com slash A16C. And let us know what your favorite episode is. It'll make my day and I'm sure Tommy's too. We'll catch you on the flip side.

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