Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Ali: “You must listen to me” | the becoming radical

Ali: “You must listen to me” | the becoming radical:

ALI: “YOU MUST LISTEN TO ME”

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1972
James Baldwin declared in his No Name in the Street:
The truth is that the country does not know what to do with its black population now that the blacks are no longer a source of wealth, are no longer to be bought and sold and bred, like cattle; and they especially do not know what to do with young black men, who pose as devastating a threat to the economy as they do to the morals of young white cheerleaders. It is not at all accidental that the jails and the army and the needle claim so many, but there are still too many prancing around for the public comfort. Americans, of course, will deny, with horror, that they are dreaming of anything like “the final solution”—those Americans, that is, who are likely to be asked: what goes on in the vast, private hinterland of the American heart can only be guessed at, by observing the way the country goes these days. (Baldwin, 1998, pp. 432-433) [1]
George Carlin opened one of his best routines singing Muhammad Ali’s name as part of his album Class Clown