 Originally Posted by Universal Mind
I hope you're right, except for the Malcolm X part. He was a racist pig until his final days.
I suggest you read up some more on the man, because that's pretty far from the truth.
He had no problem whatsoever with white folks (he was voted as class president despite being the only black kid in his classes, stayed in a foster home with white folks, had a white girlfriend, countless white friends, etc. It wasn't until he landed in prison for robbery (which was only supposed to get him 2-3 years... but because he was with a white woman, he was hit with multiple 8-10 year sentences running concurrently), that his views on white people changed. In prison, he was convinced to join the Nation of Islam - a Black supremacy group. Since the members of this group managed to reform him from a violent criminal to an upright man of unflinching moral fortitude, he accepted anything they said. He worshiped the leader of the group, Elijah Mohamed, as if he was his own father and hung on his every word.
And since that man taught Malcolm hateful rhetoric, Malcolm repeated it without question (which is why he would constantly say "The Honorable Elijah Mohamed teaches us..." every few sentences). After members of the Nation Of Islam turned on Malcolm out of jealousy, and Malcolm found out that Elijah wasn't following the moral teachings he was preaching, he was silenced for 90 days. Malcolm realized he was being set up and left the Nation, and promptly went on a pilgrimage to Mecca.
Upon arriving there, he reshaped his entire worldview once he realized that the brand of "Islam" that the Nation Of Islam was teaching had almost nothing to do with authentic Islamic teachings. He dined and prayed with people of all colors while in Mecca, making special note of the White people with him, and returned to America with an fresh new perspective on race relations.
Post-Mecca Malcolm was not a racist. Not by any means. Post-Mecca Malcolm was the prime example of what we should all aspire to be - a self-sacrificing individual willing to question and re-examine his own stance on any given issue, learn from his mistakes, and make a commitment to rectify those mistakes and past failures. This idea that Malcolm was some sort of fire-breathing Black supremacist was the result of the American media's constant slandering and manipulation. Very little emphasis is placed on post-Mecca Malcolm whenever his name is mentioned in classrooms, and too much emphasis is place on the Malcolm from the Nation Of Islam. It's nothing more than character assassination (similar to what goes on with the Black Panthers of the 1960's - covering up all the positives by burying them with negative falsehoods).
Malcolm X was the spark of resistance that gave rise to American revolutionaries like Huey Newton, Bobby Seale, H. Rap Brown, Stokely Carmichael, Angela Davis, Eldridge Cleaver, the Black Panthers, the White Panthers, and countless student radicals on college and university campuses all across America during the 60's and 70's.
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 Originally Posted by Universal Mind
I think things might get so insane that we have a backlash many times bigger than the hippy movement ever got. The gun rights threats we are dealing with in addition to everything else are going to get the rednecks on the same team with the hippies.
I don't think the problem is whether or not people will band together and push for change - it's almost inevitable that they will. The main problem right now, is that most folks are ignorant of the politics of revolution. They don't understand the process. You have liberals that think the best way to deal with it is with picket signs and marches, and conservatives that are gearing up for armed combat.
Not even Gandhi or MLK were in favor of this pacifist hippie shit that passes for "activism" these days, but liberals constantly cite "non-violence" as the answer. Even Nelson Mandela's legacy was tainted by this nonsense - people claiming that he sparked change through wholly peaceful means and that that's the only way to bring about positive change. People don't know how to organize efficiently and effectively, what MLK and Gandhi meant by "non-violence," what Malcolm X meant by self-defense, etc. I think the biggest threat to this potential North American uprising, is the likelihood of it being hijacked but the largely ignorant masses (just like what happened in Egypt).
The whole process of dissent in America needs to be reworked and reformed, the people need to be educated with intelligent means of resistance.
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