The constant interruptions are so distracting. He doesnt get the opportunity to truly flow through a complete thought. This man was a living legend at the time. Its incredibly unfortunate that the interviewer didn't recognize that and take better care of such an awesome occasion.
I agree. It’s actually disrespectful and she’s obviously someone who doesn’t have the capacity to empathize with a legend and at the very least respect him.
@@AfroMarxistYou're going to get to get Marxism eventually, don't worry. The powers that be have BIG plans for us. They're in the process of setting up a technocratic neo-feudal totalitarian world government. It'll be controlled by transnational corporations at the top, & the masses will live on a universal basic income at the bottom. Most of the economy will be run by AI & robotics. The people will be monitored at all times. Freedom will be a thing of the past. Travel will be very limited. People won't be allowed to own cars. Everybody will eat insects, because breeding mammals for food causes too much green house gas. &, you'll be implanted with a microchip to monitor your every move. That microchip will also be used in conjunction with a digital currency so they can monitor everything you buy. You'll also have a social credit score. If you do something the government doesn't like, you might not be able to leave the house or apartment you're living in for a month. & owning anything will be a thing of the past. We'll rent everything from the corporations. Including your home. That's what your Marxist dream is going to look like. Sound like fun?
i met him as a college student after he gave a talk at my school in nyc the same year this interview was made; i was struck with his perspicacity (clarity of understanding) both during the lecture AND during the couple of minutes we spoke
Thank you again, I have watched this video before. He spoke with the truth. The film 🎥 takes did not bother him.😊 He àlways had a beautiful smile with so much intelligence in his eyes. Today's date is August 22, 2024. With deepest appreciation and respect for Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, W.E. Dubois, Eugene Debs, Paul Robeson, James Baldwin, Dr. Martin Luther KingJr, Malcolm X, and Rosa Parks, plus Nelson Mandella amongst others, who stood for truth. AMEN!!! Shirley Chisholm was the first black woman to have been elected to the United States Congress. She served the 12th District of Brooklyn for seven terms from 1968 until 1982. Quote: The United States is a beautiful fraud that has been opposed on the people for years, whose practitioners exchange gilded promises for the most valuable thing their victims own, their votes. Thank you , Dr. Gerald Horne for all his books on Afro-American history, and he is still contributing with more writings of honor.
Me neither, but you can tell he’s used to it. most if not all documentaries like this are done in this fashion. Check out an abc interview of chairman Fred same format of questioning and editing. Still feels irreverent though.
Case Book 101 on Worse Interview Practices . Much to his credit, Kwame remained 'cool, calm & collected' & was a tolerant subject. May this grreat revolutionary strategest, rest in power.
I remember seeing the famous Black Power speech in Mississippi from a documentary when I was younger. I remember how powerful he was... I swear he looked 10 ft tall when I first saw that! Much respect to Kwame Ture Formerly known as Stokely Carmichael! A real Black Hero!!
This is rare... A black man admitting how he was intentionally disrespectful to the other men to get them to pull out of the March. I never heard that story before and even as he told the story he was unapologetic. He recognized they were young and this was the tactic he felt was necessary to get those men out of the way. It worked... No apology was necessary but having it on record is definitely necessary.
I'm not sure if this is the same one brother Ture's referencing (the title says 1960), but here is a link to audio of a debate between brother Malcolm and brother Bayard Rustin: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-YmVjIooLCe8.html
@@stephenwilson1622Yeah the dates are throwing me off. Perhaps Ture was mistaken and just mixed up the dates. I found the 1960 radio debate, and the live debate from the same year, but nothing from a later year
Kwame Ture, nació Stokely Carmichael (pronunciado stóukli karmáikl, Trinidad y Tobago, 29 de junio de 1941 - Guinea-Conakry, 15 de noviembre de 1998) fue un político y activista estadounidense.
Okay - no disrespect Baba - but I would've had the biggest crush on you!! It's all of the intellectual and historical knowledge and the unapologetic courage and fearlessness to be BLACK and FREE. You were one of the bravest revolutionaries evah.
Baba Kwame Ture was an amazing Pan Africanist who dedicated his life to Africans globally. Baba Kwame Ture was with Student Nonviolent Co-ordinating Committee, the Black Panther Party for Self Defence and All Afrikan People's Revolutionary Party. A remarkable individual who fought for our liberation to the death.
Reason why cuts were done was because there was no digital recording they put it on reels of y’all ain’t on that past…. Anyways this is an in depth mindset of the civil rights movement it’s powerful and real i can only respect it
There is no way we should be here, until you escape our only thoughts should be education and transportation. May Allah bless your righteous goals. One.
He was born in Trinidad, he was an American activist, he was a civil right leader in the states, member of the black panther movement, in 1969 left for Conakry Guinea( west africa) 🇬🇳 where he continued his work of panafricanisme, he formed an alliance with Guinea president Ahmed Sekou Toure whom he considered his mentor and Ghana president Kwame Nkrumah, 🇬🇭 where his named later came from, he eventually officially changed his name to Kwame Ture, his work still continued while living in Guinea, he travelled all over to fight for the liberation of black people and denounce racism he died in Conakry Guinea in 1998.
The PATIENCE, Passion, Humanity & Vision of this UniversalSoul, in the face of such an anxious Journalist ❗️ Too incapable of subsuming her own Career Agenda, to appreciate the Power of Wisdom & HISTORY right before her. *It’s called EDITING. Mercy: Peace Be Still. Let History Speak.* I pray maturity allowed more generosity of space & time, to Honor the Experiences that knit together the Stories of her sought-after Guests.
Why are they (the interviewers) are directing him what to say? It is very rude and disrespectful. It would have been better if they had all their questions prepared before the interview instead of cutting that stupid movie cut prop in front of his face every minute. Stokely Carmichael should have had a copy of all the questions before the interview. 🧐🧐
37:36 when doing events together Mississippi Politics: Left-leaning SNCC and CORE. Middle: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (and SCLC?) Right-leaning NAACP and Urban League.
He blended in with Black People though he’s foreign and lead them into a burning building! He never endured oppression until he went south but yet he speaks for them! Do your homework on him and his child hood before disagreeing with me!
Thanks for sharing. As Africans, we have similar experiences of colonization. Let's embrace our differences positively and help each other. Those brave men who fought for our freedom deserve respect. We should not reduce ourselves to just a color from a crayon box as our history is rich with culture.
@@shodges31 exactly. Everyone negro or negroid is not African. Black is not a race. It's a color. In and of itself, it's meaningless, yet many men of a certain color are exhorted, often by our women, to venerate so-called leaders whose platforms have enlisted them as pawns charged with misleading and sabotaging large groups of people under the guise of a "freedom struggle." To repeat the o.p. they "lead [us] into a building building It's an insidious intellectual switcheroo.