Ramblings

ULTRACOMFY's personal homepage.

User Tools

Site Tools


malcolm_x

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
malcolm_x [2024/02/17 14:04] ultracomfymalcolm_x [2025/04/09 20:15] (current) ultracomfy
Line 1: Line 1:
 +~~Title:Malcolm X~~
 <WRAP column right 18%> <WRAP column right 18%>
 {{page>Templates:Secularization}} {{page>Templates:Secularization}}
Line 25: Line 26:
 The reason Malcolm X was able to gain so much fame was because many of the things he said had some truth to it. He wasn't //wrong//, per se, he was merely //misguided//. Although based on flawed premises, his arguments were sound and offered clear and precise solutions to problems. The United States really did gather independence from their oppressors through violence, and that this could be similar to what happened during the decolonization seems at least plausible((Being extra vague here because I actually don't know any better.)). The reason Malcolm X was able to gain so much fame was because many of the things he said had some truth to it. He wasn't //wrong//, per se, he was merely //misguided//. Although based on flawed premises, his arguments were sound and offered clear and precise solutions to problems. The United States really did gather independence from their oppressors through violence, and that this could be similar to what happened during the decolonization seems at least plausible((Being extra vague here because I actually don't know any better.)).
  
-Similarly, it is also correct that black emancipation is something the black community was indisputably entitled to and, if whites wouldn't give them on their own, they would indeed be right to take by force. Honestly, at this point I don't even think that I can disagree with this. I personally believe that using force to get there would have been ill-advised at the time, but it wouldn't necessarily have been //wrong// or //morally objectionable//((Although, of course, a policy of [[Malum Necessarium]] should be applied.)).+Similarly, it is also correct that black emancipation is something the black community was indisputably entitled to and, if whites wouldn't give them on their own, they would indeed be right to take by force. Honestly, at this point I don't even think that I can disagree with this. I personally believe that using force to get there would have been ill-advised at the time, but it wouldn't necessarily have been //wrong// or //morally objectionable//((Although, of course, a policy of [[Malus Necessarium]] should be applied.)).
  
 Perhaps the most unfortunate truth that may have led Malcolm X down this path is that he was also right about [[human nature]]. Advances of black civil rights //were// and continue to be used as token victories for personal and/or political gains. Black suffrage //did// allow blacks to vote in presidential elections, but what difference did that make? They were still being treated like trash, subjected to racial segregation, systemic racism and racial profiling, and the potential of the then 11 Million eligible black voters to make a difference just //did not matter// because no presidential candidate was seriously inclined to do something about it. Even today, more than 50 years later, black communities are still subject to systemic disadvantages, economic inequality (ie. economic segregation and residential segregation), increased mortality, racial profiling and they still have to go on the streets to protest because their concerns are not being taken serious. Perhaps the most unfortunate truth that may have led Malcolm X down this path is that he was also right about [[human nature]]. Advances of black civil rights //were// and continue to be used as token victories for personal and/or political gains. Black suffrage //did// allow blacks to vote in presidential elections, but what difference did that make? They were still being treated like trash, subjected to racial segregation, systemic racism and racial profiling, and the potential of the then 11 Million eligible black voters to make a difference just //did not matter// because no presidential candidate was seriously inclined to do something about it. Even today, more than 50 years later, black communities are still subject to systemic disadvantages, economic inequality (ie. economic segregation and residential segregation), increased mortality, racial profiling and they still have to go on the streets to protest because their concerns are not being taken serious.
malcolm_x.1708175057.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/02/17 14:04 by ultracomfy

Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki