Author | Thread |
AUTOADVERT |
newyorknewyork
Posts: 30117 Alba Posts: 1 Joined: 1/16/2004 Member: #541 |
![]() Really good article!
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/malcolm_x_was_right_about_america_20150201 NEW YORK—Malcolm X, unlike Martin Luther King Jr., did not believe America had a conscience. For him there was no great tension between the lofty ideals of the nation—which he said were a sham—and the failure to deliver justice to blacks. He, perhaps better than King, understood the inner workings of empire. He had no hope that those who managed empire would ever get in touch with their better selves to build a country free of exploitation and injustice. He argued that from the arrival of the first slave ship to the appearance of our vast archipelago of prisons and our squalid, urban internal colonies where the poor are trapped and abused, the American empire was unrelentingly hostile to those Frantz Fanon called “the wretched of the earth.” This, Malcolm knew, would not change until the empire was destroyed. Malcolm once said that, had he been a middle-class black who was encouraged to go to law school, rather than a poor child in a detention home who dropped out of school at 15, “I would today probably be among some city’s professional black bourgeoisie, sipping ****tails and palming myself off as a community spokesman for and leader of the suffering black masses, while my primary concern would be to grab a few more crumbs from the groaning board of the two-faced whites with whom they’re begging to ‘integrate.’ ” Malcolm X is the best medicine against genocide. He showed us by example and prophetic preaching that one does not have to stay in the mud. We can wake up; we can stand up; and we can take that long walk toward freedom. Freedom is first and foremost an inner recognition of self-respect, a knowledge that one was not put on this earth to be a nobody. Using drugs and killing each other are the worst forms of nobodyness. Our forefathers fought against great odds (slavery, lynching, and segregation), but they did not self-destruct. Some died fighting, and others, inspired by their example, kept moving toward the promised land of freedom, singing ‘we ain’t gonna let nobody turn us around.’ African-Americans can do the same today. We can fight for our dignity and self-respect. To be proud to be black does not mean being against white people, unless whites are against respecting the humanity of blacks. Malcolm was not against whites; he was for blacks and against their exploitation. https://vote.nba.com/en Vote for your Knicks.
|
newyorknewyork
Posts: 30117 Alba Posts: 1 Joined: 1/16/2004 Member: #541 |
![]() https://vote.nba.com/en Vote for your Knicks.
|
GoNyGoNyGo
Posts: 23559 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 5/29/2003 Member: #411 USA |
![]() Knickoftime wrote:GoNyGoNyGo wrote:When did I reject Schwartz's insight?Since you seem to put weight in those with direct access/interaction, do you have any reason to dismiss this person? You did misunderstand me and it was probably my fault. I meant yes to the article and that I acknowledge its existence. I did not mean yes to dismissing it. As I said before, I would weigh his opinion and as with everything see if it is political or genuine in nature. To say I am working hard is dismissive of the facts. A great thinker does not necessarily make a great President either. Although we have never seen any of BO's transciprts or papers, he is regarded as a brilliant mind. So far his foreign policy and decisions have been awful, IMO. 9/11 could have happened on anyone's watch and probably had more to do with the prior 8 YEARS than the 8 months of Bush. But of course, your bias would not allow you to accept that. The housing crisis has its roots in the late 70's. In fact the Bush administration tried to get banks to stop offering the sub-prime loans but the Democrat congress rejected it. Failure of intelligence? Lies? Hmmm, should I bring up the many You Tube videos of virtually every prominent democrat politician, including Bill and Hillary, saying that they knew SH had WMD? Lies, in Bob Woodward's book, he claims, that it was GWB who instruced his CIA team that they had to be sure of the intelligence. He was the one with reservations according to Woodward. Sounds like a thoughtful President who was concnerned about putting men in harm's way for the right reasons. As for him expressing a complex idea to you that is just hiding behind your elitist mind BS, in my opinion, of course. Oh and the whole caricature thing came up because you were complaining about HRC being described by caricatures of her. I would like to know what you meant by that but I brought up the caricature of Bush being stupid as a real caricature that has been endlessly perpetuated by the left and I think you proved it perfectly. |
WaltLongmire
Posts: 27623 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 6/28/2014 Member: #5843 |
![]() MaTT4281 wrote:WaltLongmire wrote:Another one...happened in June, but a newspaper showed it for the first time recently. Probably arrested for disorderly contact...failure to obey the officer. Seems like they might have tried to cover this up. gma.yahoo.com EnySpree: Can we agree to agree not to mention Phil Jackson and triangle for the rest of our lives?
|
misterearl
Posts: 38786 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 11/16/2004 Member: #799 USA |
![]() For Michael Jordan, A Chance To Speak Up (For Once)
Carmelo Anthony, Dwayne Wade LeBron James and Chris Paul use their platform to make a powerful statement. Michael Jordan may be regarded (by some) as the best player ever, but he has no voice. Being an agent of change is never convenient. once a knick always a knick
|
WaltLongmire
Posts: 27623 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 6/28/2014 Member: #5843 |
![]() GoNyGoNyGo wrote:Knickoftime wrote:GoNyGoNyGo wrote:When did I reject Schwartz's insight?Since you seem to put weight in those with direct access/interaction, do you have any reason to dismiss this person? Folks will get characterized or caricatured because they give you factual ammunition. Lots of anti-intellectualism going on these days, but it has been a tradition in some quarters for decades. If you are curious, think, question why, or give too much thought to both sides of an argument your are an elitist intellectual. Folks want instant answers and simplistic ways to look at an issue, whatever it is. The anti-science theme from some on the right is just astounding at times, and as a former educator it is embarrassing to see the ignorance which many of our elected officials have today. Obama has been brutalized by many on the right, and caricatured in some racially tinged ways at times...but you never go after him for his knowledge and intelligence. There is also a lot of misogyny behind some of the hatred for her, but that is another issue, I suppose. George Bush Jr. was not like his dad, who was a solid moderate republican until he teamed with Reagan. Intelligent or not, though, Jr's biggest problem was falling in behind his fellow Chicken Hawks on the push to go to war in Iraq. EnySpree: Can we agree to agree not to mention Phil Jackson and triangle for the rest of our lives?
|
BRIGGS
Posts: 53275 Alba Posts: 7 Joined: 7/30/2002 Member: #303 |
![]() This thread has taken on a life of its own.
RIP Crushalot😞
|
Knickoftime
Posts: 24159 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 1/13/2011 Member: #3370 |
![]() GoNyGoNyGo wrote:You did misunderstand me and it was probably my fault. I meant yes to the article and that I acknowledge its existence. I did not mean yes to dismissing it. As I said before, I would weigh his opinion and as with everything see if it is political or genuine in nature. Fair enough. A great thinker does not necessarily make a great President either. We're getting away from what's at dispute and it's complicating the issue. I said I question his intelligence, was specific as to what I meant when asked, and made it clear I offered my opinion as what sort of mind is well suited to be a president. So now I don't know by that response if you're now arguing GWB was a great thinker or if you agree he is not one but didn't need to be? 9/11 could have happened on anyone's watch and probably had more to do with the prior 8 YEARS than the 8 months of Bush. But of course, your bias would not allow you to accept that. This is what I mean by working too hard. You just made a leap of assumption about me and what I think that you're in no position to. I'm responding to your words, you're responding to what you assume I think. There is no argument here. That is what you just did, and you should not. The rise of Al-Quada is certainly a complicated issue and by no means is Bush II responsible, not even a little bit. But 9/11 happened on his watch. The specific attack occurred while he was president. And we know about the intelligence briefings leading up to it. To absolve his administration of what happened that morning and the weeks and months leading up to that morning because his administration wasn't responsible for the attacker's rise as an organized terrorist group is a naked stretch of tortured partisan logic. And since it appears I need to be clear - I'm not saying 9/11 was his fault. It happened during his administration. To whatever level the event could or could not have been prevented (and none of us have that answer, including me) is on his record, period. Now I responded to that not because I'm interested in a piecemeal review of Bush's administration, but because you committed the error of assuming you knew what i was thinking and I had to correct you. If you'd like to further absolve Bush of any responsibilities for the crises' during his terms, you may. Just understand you seem to be painting him with your arguments as a intelligent thinker ineffectually swept up in matters beyond his ability to correct curtail or positively influence in any way. If that is how you choose to think of him, I don't begrudge you that. As for him expressing a complex idea to you that is just hiding behind your elitist mind BS, in my opinion, of course. What if it was? What if I had intellectual standards for world leaders that hopes they are the best of the best minds? So what if I wanted our president to be more intellectually capable then you or I? 'Elite' by any standard definition of the word is a superlative, but the right has turned it into a derogatory word that means what? That we want more than the everyman to be our leaders? Oh and the whole caricature thing came up because you were complaining about HRC being described by caricatures of her. I would like to know what you meant by that but I brought up the caricature of Bush being stupid as a real caricature that has been endlessly perpetuated by the left and I think you proved it perfectly. Nobody has argued the caricature of Bush isn't as a bumbling idiot. Why do you think this is in dispute? All I've done is argued that he doesn't appear to be an intellectual heavyweight, which is not at all the same thing as stupid. You seem to be seeing what you want to see rather what I have written clearly and repeatedly, including I don't think he's stupid 3 separates times now. You ought to earnestly consider why you can't seem to take yes for an answer. |
Knickoftime
Posts: 24159 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 1/13/2011 Member: #3370 |
![]() WaltLongmire wrote:There is also a lot of misogyny behind some of the hatred for her, but that is another issue, I suppose. Indeed and we've seen it on display in this very thread. Bill Clinton: cheater, philanderer, disrespectful to his wife and marriage - likable. Hilary Clinton: she didn't kick him to the curb for it - hard to stomach. When that dynamic is highlighted the answer is - "well, it's not just me". Well, duh, that's the whole point. If anyone can't look in the mirror and then outward after that simple display and consider the cultural issues that have contributed to attitudes toward 'HRC', you're doing yourself a disservice. |
WaltLongmire
Posts: 27623 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 6/28/2014 Member: #5843 |
![]() BRIGGS wrote:This thread has taken on a life of its own. Now this is something I can agree with. EnySpree: Can we agree to agree not to mention Phil Jackson and triangle for the rest of our lives?
|
Uptown
Posts: 31322 Alba Posts: 3 Joined: 4/1/2008 Member: #1883 |
![]() misterearl wrote:For Michael Jordan, A Chance To Speak Up (For Once) Dont hold your breath. Its sad when you think of the influence Jordan has had over so many inner city kids, that he couldn't use his stature to direct these kids in a more positive direction. |
GoNyGoNyGo
Posts: 23559 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 5/29/2003 Member: #411 USA |
![]() Knickoftime wrote:GoNyGoNyGo wrote:You did misunderstand me and it was probably my fault. I meant yes to the article and that I acknowledge its existence. I did not mean yes to dismissing it. As I said before, I would weigh his opinion and as with everything see if it is political or genuine in nature. You brought up the Bush years as an example of him not being an elite thinker. Or at least that is the way I understood it to be. Regardless. You don't GWB think is stupid, I get it. So is the caricature unfair? As for HRC, what is the caricature of her, I ask again. |
Knickoftime
Posts: 24159 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 1/13/2011 Member: #3370 |
![]() GoNyGoNyGo wrote:You brought up the Bush years as an example of him not being an elite thinker. Or at least that is the way I understood it to be. And I don't know know exactly what your point is, if we're talking politics, the economic collapse 2008 happened during the culmination of his administration. 9/11 happened under his administration. The invasion of Irag happened during his administration, be a product of a lie or a failure of the intelligence it was sold on. That is where I explicitly separated my view of his intelligence with his track record as president, in precise words. Dude, would be nice if you actually participated in the conversation actually occurring, rather than the one you think you're having. Regardless. You don't GWB think is stupid, I get it. So is the caricature unfair? Of course it is. Most caricatures are, that's what makes them caricatures. To exaggerate a superficial characteristic to the extreme. As for HRC, what is the caricature of her, I ask again. The power mad bitch who exists only to climb the ladder. All I said to start this was there is inner life, a pre-public eye/national stage person there people don't seem to acknowledge. If memory serves, you (or someone else) acknowledged having no knowledge of her pre-first lady career. |
H1AND1
Posts: 21747 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 9/9/2013 Member: #5648 |
![]() WaltLongmire wrote:Obama has been brutalized by many on the right, and caricatured in some racially tinged ways at times...but you never go after him for his knowledge and intelligence. There is also a lot of misogyny behind some of the hatred for her, but that is another issue, I suppose. There is a conspiracy among the many birther-esque theories that claim Obama was actually dumb and got terrible grades in college: The implication being Obama was a dumbass who benefitted from affirmative action type advancement policies. Actually, the head Birther aka the current GOP nominee for president a couple years back offered a cash reward for anyone who could produce Obama's college transcripts because he didn't believe he was smart and thought that would prove it. |
Knickoftime
Posts: 24159 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 1/13/2011 Member: #3370 |
![]() H1AND1 wrote:WaltLongmire wrote:Obama has been brutalized by many on the right, and caricatured in some racially tinged ways at times...but you never go after him for his knowledge and intelligence. There is also a lot of misogyny behind some of the hatred for her, but that is another issue, I suppose. To dovetail into another discussion. You can be intelligent by not present that way, that's entirely possible. But it doesn't work in reverse. If you can't recognize Obama's intellect just by observing him, seeing him think and speak on the fly, there's a good reason for that - because you can't. I don't know what kind of a student he was, obviously people have hard and fast idea of what kind of president he was been, but his intellect is perfectly plain to see. |
WaltLongmire
Posts: 27623 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 6/28/2014 Member: #5843 |
![]() Uptown wrote:misterearl wrote:For Michael Jordan, A Chance To Speak Up (For Once) Sad, and at this point, a bit strange. Jim Brown used to take shots at OJ Simpson, Jordan, and other black athletes who did not voice their concerns over social inequalities. At times it seems that athletes feel they are not part of the real world. EnySpree: Can we agree to agree not to mention Phil Jackson and triangle for the rest of our lives?
|
arkrud
Posts: 32217 Alba Posts: 7 Joined: 8/31/2005 Member: #995 USA |
![]() WaltLongmire wrote:BRIGGS wrote:This thread has taken on a life of its own. You see it works at the end. "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." Hamlet
|
H1AND1
Posts: 21747 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 9/9/2013 Member: #5648 |
![]() Knickoftime wrote:H1AND1 wrote:WaltLongmire wrote:Obama has been brutalized by many on the right, and caricatured in some racially tinged ways at times...but you never go after him for his knowledge and intelligence. There is also a lot of misogyny behind some of the hatred for her, but that is another issue, I suppose. For sure. It's just another ****amamie conspiracy theory to smear the guy apart from any logic or reason. People just come up with this stuff and do the proverbial throw it all against the wall to see if any of it sticks. When Obama won in 2008 there was a concerted effort from day one to delegitimize his presidency. Forget the "respect for the office" that the GOP would crow about when W was president and the shoe was on the other foot. Mitch McConnell said it himself on the record "the goal was to make Obama a one term president". Forget any and all compromise on Obama's policy objectives which in non la la land were pretty much straight down the line centrist fare. Hell, 20 years ago Obama would be a moderate republican. But that just shows how far to the right the GOP has been pulled in its nativist paranoid death spiral. And Trump is the logical conclusion of this. For example: The basic ideas of Obamacare were outlined first by the heritage foundation as a market based solution alternative to Clintons attempt to extend a Medicare for all solution to healthcare in this country. Romney did it in Mass and said to the world that this was how the republicans could reform the healthcare system. He ran on it in 2008. Even Jim DeMint was all over TV talking about Romneycare being exhibit A1 in why he should be their nominee (YouTube the clip). |
holfresh
Posts: 38679 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 1/14/2006 Member: #1081 |
![]() arkrud wrote:holfresh wrote:David Duke is so happy to see Donald Trump gain traction with the platform he has been an advocate of for many years that he now decides to run for the Senate.. The sharks are already getting their free lunches with no repercussions...Silence is not an option when you are being killed... |