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The End of White World Supremacy
The End of White World Supremacy: Four Speeches | Malcolm X
2 posts | 4 read | 2 to read
The best examples of why, even in print, Malcolm X is a man to measure oneself against.The New York Times Book Review
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review
Robotswithpersonality
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Mehso-so

Subtitle is four speeches. Feels like a more descriptive subtitle would read: four sermons. There are some very memorable, recognizable quotes pulled from this collection. X makes some powerful arguments, and I recognize how much Islam was a part of this man's life for a crucial period of his life, but it felt like what he was attempting to communicate was so often throttled by his obligation to preach. 1/?

Robotswithpersonality I suppose, similar to Martin Luther King Jr., the role that religion played in people's lives was more likely to be prevalent at the time he was speaking, and so it was a natural connection to make, but at least for this modern atheist, it was a very alienating framing.
2/?
7mo
Robotswithpersonality 3/? Having read Peniel E Joseph's The Sword and The Shield, which touches on Malcolm X's history both within the Nation of Islam and subsequently outside of it, the choice of these speeches matched with who they chose to write the introduction and what they chose to focus on within the introduction, but looking at X's whole history, and representing this collection as focused primarily on the ending of white supremacy feels...off. 7mo
Robotswithpersonality 4/? The fact that that history also covers Malcolm's move from a more separatist to a more integrationist position later in his speaking career makes this selection even more jarring, because it's as much standoffish/isolationist as it is attempting to foster a better community. 7mo
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Robotswithpersonality 5/? He does a good job of calling people on their bullshit, identifying underlying structural racism that his interlocutors don't seem to have taken into account. I appreciate the emphasis on education, recognizing the injustice in the obfuscation of true history that would give power, confidence back to Black people. 7mo
Robotswithpersonality 6/7 If you could separate out his need to pontificate on his spiritual leader's behalf from his need to speak frankly to people about internalized racism, colonialism and white supremacy, I think these would be perennially, broadly relevant speeches, but a lot of it feels cult-like in its obeisance to the one individual human person Elijah Muhammad, and the overwhelming insistence on all the benefits coming from being Muslim. 7mo
Robotswithpersonality 7/7 I get that X had to fight very hard against Islamophobic propaganda, I'm just very repelled by all forms of proselytizing. 7mo
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quote
MissLiteraryAli

Today it‘s time to listen to nothing but naked, undiluted truth. And when you know the truth, as Jesus said: “The truth will make you free.” Abraham Lincoln won‘t make you free. Truth will make you free. When you know the truth, you‘re free.