So two of the people I've always been fascinated with are MLK, Jr. and Malcolm-X... Because they 'got it' when it came to what it really means to be equal in a society that, during their lifetimes, was anything but. If you've never read The Autobiography of Malcolm X (it isn't... was ghost written by Alex Haley -- guy that faked Roots) it's a book that should be read and absorbed...
And this weekend while working in the shop (between sunshine episodes), I started watching the PBS series Eyes on the Prize, based on Juan Williams book, for which he won a lot of awards. Now I don't like Juan Williams much any more because he is such a schill for far left stupidity... bloviating talking points I don't think he believes on Fox for a 7-figure paycheck. But when he was at NPR, I thought he was one of the few voices of reason and good analysis. Never got around to reading his book... and never watched the series.
And it is fascinating. Brilliantly done. Interviews with some of the leaders of the movement and amazing footage from the early era of televison. And as I am only up to episode 7 (of 14 or 15)... the journey has been rather fascinating and a revelation into what real racism and White Supremacy in America once looked like. In fact, looked like in my lifetime since 1964 was when the Civil Rights Act was signed to 'try' and deal with some of the more egregious abuses against an entire community of Americans we have come a long, long way!
With all the talk about white supremacy and how bad people have it in our 'racist' society today, it is interesting to see what things were like just 50 years ago. And in watching the series, I am amazed how far we have really come in a single generation! These people didn't deal with 'dogwhistles' or cultural appropriation or other made-up historionic stuff which is, these days, almost pathetic to think about. They dealt with the real deal... Real racism. Real hate. Real danger. Fire-hoses in Selma, people getting lynched, skull-thumped, dog-bit... and that doesn't even start to count and folks getting killed by 'real' Klukker white supremacist scum. Shot in the back, lynched or killed by corrupt deputies... working for Southern bosses. Want to see 'real' racism and white-supremacy, almost all of which was fomented by Southern Democrats (and the powers-that-be in the Democratic Party) watch this series.
It's a long time commitment to watch... but as documentary series go, it has me completely hooked.
Worth the watch...
Sirhr
P.S. Right now, we are moving into c. 1967, and I think the movement is starting to come apart at the seams... A new, younger generation of activists (Including Jesse Jackson and Stokley Carmichael and Huey Newton) are starting to get impatient and take the movement in some ways that, well, probably did more harm than good. I think that I am about to watch the whole thing spin off the rails and get us where we are now. But for the early leaders of the movement, they accomplished a lot. And some even stayed alive while doing it. What came next? Guess that's for the other half of the episodes.
And this weekend while working in the shop (between sunshine episodes), I started watching the PBS series Eyes on the Prize, based on Juan Williams book, for which he won a lot of awards. Now I don't like Juan Williams much any more because he is such a schill for far left stupidity... bloviating talking points I don't think he believes on Fox for a 7-figure paycheck. But when he was at NPR, I thought he was one of the few voices of reason and good analysis. Never got around to reading his book... and never watched the series.
And it is fascinating. Brilliantly done. Interviews with some of the leaders of the movement and amazing footage from the early era of televison. And as I am only up to episode 7 (of 14 or 15)... the journey has been rather fascinating and a revelation into what real racism and White Supremacy in America once looked like. In fact, looked like in my lifetime since 1964 was when the Civil Rights Act was signed to 'try' and deal with some of the more egregious abuses against an entire community of Americans we have come a long, long way!
With all the talk about white supremacy and how bad people have it in our 'racist' society today, it is interesting to see what things were like just 50 years ago. And in watching the series, I am amazed how far we have really come in a single generation! These people didn't deal with 'dogwhistles' or cultural appropriation or other made-up historionic stuff which is, these days, almost pathetic to think about. They dealt with the real deal... Real racism. Real hate. Real danger. Fire-hoses in Selma, people getting lynched, skull-thumped, dog-bit... and that doesn't even start to count and folks getting killed by 'real' Klukker white supremacist scum. Shot in the back, lynched or killed by corrupt deputies... working for Southern bosses. Want to see 'real' racism and white-supremacy, almost all of which was fomented by Southern Democrats (and the powers-that-be in the Democratic Party) watch this series.
It's a long time commitment to watch... but as documentary series go, it has me completely hooked.
Worth the watch...
Sirhr
P.S. Right now, we are moving into c. 1967, and I think the movement is starting to come apart at the seams... A new, younger generation of activists (Including Jesse Jackson and Stokley Carmichael and Huey Newton) are starting to get impatient and take the movement in some ways that, well, probably did more harm than good. I think that I am about to watch the whole thing spin off the rails and get us where we are now. But for the early leaders of the movement, they accomplished a lot. And some even stayed alive while doing it. What came next? Guess that's for the other half of the episodes.