Printer-friendly copy Email this topic to a friend
Lobby Pass The Popcorn Pass The Popcorn Archives topic #51864

Subject: "Power of nightmares" This topic is locked.
Previous topic | Next topic
Nettrice
Charter member
61747 posts
Fri Jun-09-06 10:46 AM

Click to send private message to this authorClick to view this author's profileClick to add this author to your buddy list
77. "Power of nightmares"
In response to In response to 76
Fri Jun-09-06 10:47 AM by Nettrice

  

          

>I was saying
>that he had not whittled away to nothing at the time of MX's
>assassination.

Check this out: http://www.ink19.com/issues/april2003/printReviews/evolutionOfNationOf.html

"Elijah Muhammad was only the figurehead of the Nation of Islam. His ability to shape the evolution of the Nation was quite limited, and his ideology quickly became stagnant. Thus, it is no wonder that when Malcolm X disavowed Muhammad's ideological tunnel vision, many left the Nation with him."

>Also, if E.M. was a figurehead, who was the actual leader
>during this time?

Not leader but leaders. There were plenty of spokesmen/leaders speaking on behalf of Elijah Muhammad at the time of Shabazz' death.

>Mentioning an organization and telling on them is 2 different
>things.

I provided a link...people can read.

>>>So yes, Black people were the puppets that were seen
>pulling
>>>the trigger, but who was the puppeteer?
>>
>>So are you denying that some of the assassins were not from
>>No. 25?
>
>This is also misleading because you typed the question in the
>form of a double negative. So I will re-type the question the
>way that I think you meant to ask it, and you can let me know
>whether my re-phrasing is accurate or inaccurate.

There was no need to re-type anything. You knew what I meant.

>Some of the
>assassins may've been from Mosque # 25, some of them may not
>have been. Talmadge Hayer I believe was from mosque # 25, so
>at least he was one that I would have to say yes to.

No. 25 was involved. NOI do not do anything without a directive. Even if they had been working for the FBI they could not have just acted on their own. My point is that the assassins were getting directives from the FBI and NOI. It was the same directive.

This reminds me of a time some "spies" from a local newspaper signed up for classes at a new center where I was director. The newspaper had previous published some damaging articles about the org and I told my supervisors that I thought they were plants. Sure enough the paper published another negative article but praised the new center. The plants disappeared. I learned a lot from that experience...about politics and the b.s. people will do to maintain a status quo.

>>Like a witness protection program it was part of the deal.
>>
>
>No, it wasn't part of the deal; IT WAS PART OF THE JOB. No
>need for them to hang around there anymore, their work was
>done (i.e., MX was dead and confusion, fingerpointing, and
>misblaming was abound concerning who was responsible for his
>death) so time to move on to the next assignment.

There was plenty of chaos before he died and it continued afterwards.

>Fishy, huh? What I got out of those links is that Farrakhan
>gave a leadership position in the NOI to a man who was wrongly
>convicted for the death of MX. Abdul Aziz (then Norman
>Butler) stood trial for the murder of MX and was convicted but
>he wasn't even at the Audobon that day. That day, he had gone
>to the hospital for a doctor's appt. for treatment for his
>injured leg, which was confirmed by witnesses and hospital
>records. But yet, he was still convicted of MX's
>assassination.

And that's not fishy?

>You can disagree all you want. Malcolm couldn't prove it;
>Betty couldn't prove it; and you can't prove. The only thing
>anyone can do is have suspicions and make accusations, but no
>one can prove anything so no one really knows.

After talking with my colleague whose family was at the Audobon when Shabazz was murdered it was clear that any voices that could prove anything were silenced out of fear. My "boy" jambone just posted an excellent video that just touches on that fear. You should check it out.

>What documents did he show you? What was the source of these
>documents?

Some publications within the NOI at the time and right after Shabazz' death.

>First of all, E.M. identified these women as his wives and he
>took care of them and their children as such (one of these
>women, Tynetta Muhammad and her son, Ishmael (also, E.M.'s
>son), hold leadership positions in the Nation to this very
>day). MX knew about this so-called immorality when he was on
>silent probation and was trying to get back into an active
>position in the NOI. So for him to claim to be leaving
>because of some "sexual immorality" sounds suspect to me.

Well, in this country what Muhammad did is immoral AND illegal. Ask the Mormons.

>Okay, I know the pilgrimage to Mecca is a requirement of
>Muslims in the NOI if it is within their means.

Man, it is more than just the haijj (that was an example). There are plenty of requirements for folks who truly follow Islam that is not a requirement in the NOI.

>Secondly, this wasn't Malcolm's first time seeing white
>Muslims. He made a trip to the so-called Middle East years
>before the 1964 trip and unless all the white Muslims had left
>town that day, it is likely he saw white Muslims and knew that
>there white Muslims existed.

I think what Shabazz was saying was that it all came together for him during the haijj.

>Thirdly, I refuse to believe that MX was naive enough to
>believe in this ritual meaning much of anything.

WTF??? What b.s. is this? Plenty of Muslims around the world take haijj very seriously.

>And lastly, I assume that you believe the NOI should practice
>a non-race prejudiced based Islam like the Islamic Arabs
>enslaving and committing all kinds of abuses and atrocities
>against Black Afrikans in the Sudan.

But you cannot generalize Islam or any religion. Corruption was everywhere. You should check out The Power of Nightmares:

"This film explores the origins in the 1940s and 50s of Islamic Fundamentalism in the Middle East, and Neoconservatism in America, parallels between these movements, and their effect on the world today. From the introduction to Part 1:

"Both were idealists who were born out of the failure of the liberal dream to build a better world. And both had a very similar explanation for what caused that failure. These two groups have changed the world, but not in the way that either intended. Together, they created today's nightmare vision of a secret, organized evil that threatens the world. A fantasy that politicians then found restored their power and authority in a disillusioned age. And those with the darkest fears became the most powerful. " The Power of Nightmares, Baby It's Cold Outside." - http://www.archive.org/details/ThePowerOfNightmares

BTW - I am not a Muslim, Christian, Buddhist, nor do I represent any religion or philosophy. I hate corruption and recognize that there is duality in most things. People have to make a choice.

From an excellent article about "The Power of Individual Choice". I especially liked this part:

"Individual choice is very important. There is no way one cannot choose. Each volition comes with a resulting effect. That is why it is so powerful. The world we experience is the result of what we have made collectively. Seeing this, Donna and I have begun to choose differently. We are not saying our way is "the right way" for everyone. It's only right for us, given the circumstances we find ourselves in, at this particular point in time."

<--- Blame this lady for Nutty.

  

Printer-friendly copy


So I'm crying, watching Malcolm X [View all] , Nettrice, Thu Jun-23-11 11:56 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
I just caught it for the first time too.
Jun 04th 2006
1
read his autobiography penned by Alex Haley
Jun 04th 2006
2
Will do.
Jun 04th 2006
4
RE: Will do.
Jun 04th 2006
7
Interesting.
Jun 04th 2006
8
      RE: Interesting.
Jun 04th 2006
11
           RE: Interesting.
Jun 04th 2006
12
                RE: Interesting.
Jun 04th 2006
13
yeah alex haley the author of roots
Jun 04th 2006
9
I'm getting this book when I get a chance.
Jun 04th 2006
10
Just in case you were still wondering...
Jun 06th 2006
55
one of the only books I ever read front to back and thoroughly
Jun 05th 2006
19
      I looked for it today but couldn't find it.
Jun 05th 2006
40
RE: I just caught it for the first time too.
Jun 04th 2006
5
same here mayn
Jun 04th 2006
3
RE: same here mayn
Jun 04th 2006
6
auuuugh that fucking Sam Cooke part
Jun 05th 2006
16
me and you both
Jun 12th 2006
87
RE: same here mayn
Jun 05th 2006
18
and he's so optimistic...
Jun 05th 2006
36
That part got my mom too
Jun 11th 2006
82
"if you black and don't like this movie
Jun 04th 2006
14
It's so damn flawed, like most Spike movies........
Jun 05th 2006
15
I feel ya pain man...hearing the Euology at the end
Jun 05th 2006
17
I'm showing it to my students this summer
Jun 05th 2006
20
Very good
Jun 05th 2006
21
      I'm leaning towards showing the movie after we read the book
Jun 05th 2006
26
      yea you should do that.
Jun 05th 2006
38
      Question:
Jun 06th 2006
42
           My answer
Jun 06th 2006
44
           Because Malcom was evolving into a leader that would of
Jun 11th 2006
79
Its a masterpiece. Everytime I watch it over and over again....
Jun 05th 2006
22
I get too emotional to watch it over and over
Jun 05th 2006
29
      RE: I get too emotional to watch it over and over
Jun 05th 2006
30
           RE: I get too emotional to watch it over and over
Jun 05th 2006
31
none with that same power and depth, no.
Jun 05th 2006
23
RE: So I'm crying, watching Malcolm X
Jun 05th 2006
24
Thanks.
Jun 05th 2006
25
me and the lady watched it Sunday morning too
Jun 05th 2006
27
RE: me and the lady watched it Sunday morning too
May 07th 2007
92
so my roommate....
Jun 05th 2006
28
If you guys watch the movies
Jun 05th 2006
37
what flaws do people have with it?
Jun 05th 2006
32
the movies length and the musical elements are the ones i hear most
Jun 05th 2006
33
It doesn't feel that long and the music was great. The songs and...
Jun 05th 2006
34
      take it up with the people that have a problem with it.
Jun 06th 2006
49
           I don't have a problem with it. I know its a good movie. But because...
Jun 06th 2006
51
                i love the movie, but this...
Jun 06th 2006
56
gross simplification
Jun 05th 2006
35
I didn't know Baldwin had anything to do with the film...
May 07th 2007
94
I remember critics
Jun 05th 2006
39
Most critics believe the everything about the film is the director's res...
May 07th 2007
95
well, some of the factual errors are glaring
Jun 05th 2006
41
My main problem with the flick is
Jun 06th 2006
43
      RE: My main problem with the flick is
Jun 06th 2006
45
           RE: My main problem with the flick is
Jun 06th 2006
46
                RE: My main problem with the flick is
Jun 06th 2006
47
                     RE: My main problem with the flick is
Jun 06th 2006
48
                          RE: My main problem with the flick is
Jun 06th 2006
50
                               Wait a minute...
Jun 06th 2006
52
                                    RE: Wait a minute...
Jun 06th 2006
53
                                         Ahaaah!
Jun 06th 2006
54
                                              Good response
Jun 06th 2006
57
                                              Here we go...
Jun 07th 2006
58
                                                   RE: Here we go...
Jun 07th 2006
59
                                                   RE: Here we go...
Jun 07th 2006
61
                                                        RE: Here we go...
Jun 07th 2006
65
                                                             RE: Here we go...
Jun 09th 2006
76
                                                                 
                                                                       RE: Power of nightmares
Jun 11th 2006
83
                                                                            RE: Power of nightmares
Jun 12th 2006
85
                                                   Interesting...
Jun 07th 2006
60
                                                        RE: Interesting...
Jun 07th 2006
63
                                                             Now here goes the marathon. lol....
Jun 08th 2006
66
                                                                  This part
Jun 08th 2006
67
                                                                  Did you see "Malcolm X" the documentary with James Earl Jones...
Jun 08th 2006
68
                                                                       Nope didn't see it
Jun 08th 2006
69
                                                                            I'll post a clip of it later this evening.
Jun 08th 2006
70
                                                                                 Cool
Jun 08th 2006
72
                                                                                      Pefect Timing, my friend...
Jun 08th 2006
73
                                                                                      Thanks so much!
Jun 08th 2006
74
                                                                  No need for marathons...
Jun 11th 2006
78
                                                                       No marathon. More like the Tour De France. lol
Jun 11th 2006
80
                                                                            if i may add on to this convo
Jun 11th 2006
84
                                                                            this was probably the best exchange
May 06th 2007
88
                                                                                 indeed...that was quite a discussion
May 06th 2007
90
WE AGREE ON SOMETHING! :)
Jun 07th 2006
62
I disagree that we agree
Jun 07th 2006
64
In the movie, Malcolm actually had the right numbers
Jun 08th 2006
71
I broke down too and reading the book you see many things
Jun 09th 2006
75
X was just a damn good movie, period
Jun 11th 2006
81
I cant even front........
Jun 12th 2006
86
now i always tear up when i hear "A Change Gonna Come"
May 06th 2007
89
Has anyone actually read "One day when I was lost"?
May 07th 2007
91
I read it years ago during my serious Baldwin phase
May 08th 2007
101
just saw this this week for the first time.
May 07th 2007
93
My biggest fear about the film came alive in front of me...
May 07th 2007
96
RE: My biggest fear about the film came alive in front of me...
May 08th 2007
97
RE: excellent film
May 08th 2007
102
i usually dont like posting in long posts, but movie blows
May 08th 2007
99
THe movie was great tho and it gets people to read the book
May 08th 2007
100
      i think the
May 09th 2007
105
     
May 09th 2007
104
man, too true
May 09th 2007
106
archive?
May 09th 2007
108
RE: archive?
May 09th 2007
109

Lobby Pass The Popcorn Pass The Popcorn Archives topic #51864 Previous topic | Next topic
Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.25
Copyright © DCScripts.com