Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Minister Farrakhan Reminds Black Detroit to Stick Together [View all]kwassa
(23,340 posts)107. I think you are wrong about Farrakhan's influence; he is an outlier.
The best thing you can do with Farrakhan is ignore him. He is quite old, has been in poor health, and when he dies the NOI will die with him.
He is about 80 now.
He was never able to put together a political movement that had a major impact in any election in this country.
http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/politics/1180/the_nation_of_islam_at_the_end_of_the_apocalyptic_age
(Farrakhan) is an eclectic and electric leader, said Walters. Electric because probably he could be the only person who could assemble that kind of crowd...
Eclectic because he could make profound change in the black community, but the trajectory wasnt followed through, Walters added. The Million Man March couldve influenced public policythere was so much momentum, especially right after the (1996 presidential) inauguration. But not another word was said about it. That gave many of us pause.
They didnt follow through on the Million Man March strategy for what to do, and alliances to build, Magida said. It revealed the shortcomings of the Nation and Farrakhans philosophy.
In the months following the March, 1.5 million black men registered to votean upsurge attributed to its influence. As well, community-based projects were initiated in the Marchs wake, including parenting classes and workshops on gender relations. Local members of the Nation ran for elected offices and after they didnt win, Walters said, they didnt persist. Walters added that three years after the March, many community projects had fallen away, but their impact was still apparent. Ten years after the March, its concrete legacy was negligible. The Million More March in 2005 was not as large as the one before it and was largely commemorative.
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
143 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
I'm black I like Farrakhan and what the NOI is supposed to stand for because more black people
craigmatic
May 2013
#3
Look man historically most of the presidents were racists even FDR, Truman,LBJ, Lincoln, etc.
craigmatic
May 2013
#70
LOL. I am dying. How much nerve do you have to have to feel you need to explain to a black person
Number23
May 2013
#132
Isn't there anyone else who's calling for more self-reliance in the black community?
KamaAina
May 2013
#73
Look I'm just going to be honest here if you're trying to make me disavow him you're wasting your
craigmatic
May 2013
#82
My whole point is that since when do outsiders get to tell a group who their leadership should be?
craigmatic
May 2013
#90
No but he's a politician who doesn't wanna rock the boat. How old is he like 70-something?
craigmatic
May 2013
#98
Exactly. What I see is a thread in which every black person posting in it has said
Number23
May 2013
#127
I am not going to tell anyone who to listen to, but I will call out racist pieces shit
cali
May 2013
#138
Then I will add that it's a very good thing that your opinion, on this issue and ANY OTHER
Number23
May 2013
#142
Sorry for the salty language, NOLALady. But this is exactly the kind of thing that makes me want
Number23
May 2013
#130
so no one should call out Israelis on their choice of leadership? Happens every day here in I/P
cali
May 2013
#137
first of all black people sure as shit aren't the only ones that have to disavow someone if they're
cali
May 2013
#131
Show me exactly where you got that from with a date and location of where the comments were made.
craigmatic
May 2013
#80
Your comparison is worthy of Mel Gibson. Kerry was a hero. Farrakhan is a bigot.
geek tragedy
May 2013
#86
Look at my other posts in this thread if you wanna know how I feel about his
craigmatic
May 2013
#105
nope. you said it. You didn't use the word conspiracy but you sure as shit said it.
cali
May 2013
#140
well, that sick shit. he's a bigoted piece of shit. and listening to him and excusing him puts
cali
May 2013
#8
He's a hate monger, a hate preacher, a worthless purveyor of ignoance and misinformation
Bluenorthwest
May 2013
#6
you mean you don't think blacks should stick together or band together to buy property in
HiPointDem
May 2013
#10
I've supported African Americans buying property and starting businesses for years
FrodosPet
May 2013
#11
sure. but denouncing it does little good when the issues that bring people to farrakhan are not
HiPointDem
May 2013
#12
I doubt anyone has to suffer, were revenues assessed & distributed equitably. By which I mean:
HiPointDem
May 2013
#16
it's not about a pocketful of money. it's about a more equal society. and yeah, more equality
HiPointDem
May 2013
#18
It's nothing to do with intelligence. If I gave you that impression, it wasn't my intention.
HiPointDem
May 2013
#26
noi is in no way analogous to the 1930s-era nazis. but interesting you'd claim it was.
HiPointDem
May 2013
#119
I have to spell it out for you? NOI is a black organization. Black people are a historically
HiPointDem
May 2013
#121
you like straw men? interesting. no, because NOI is a group based on the position of black
HiPointDem
May 2013
#123
they should be kicked off of DU just as anyone who supported David Duke would be kicked offf
cali
May 2013
#21
religion is crapped on here regularly, but islam in no way gets a pass. this thread is mostly
HiPointDem
May 2013
#27
that's both true and not true. yes, there are people here who give Islam a pass they don't
cali
May 2013
#29
no, it wouldn't be condemned by 100% of the people if it were about muslims. condemnation
HiPointDem
May 2013
#31
maybe if *you* said it. but what if some comparable public figure said it -- like obama, or the
HiPointDem
May 2013
#38
oh, i think we would. but we'll wait for a real life example, though perhaps 'satanic' is
HiPointDem
May 2013
#46
i'm devastated to hear that. but i'll continue to comment on posts that interest me nevertheless.
HiPointDem
May 2013
#47
farrakhan provides some people with an explanation of why their world is the way it is, something
HiPointDem
May 2013
#44
NOI has been saying the same things since it was founded. But it's still around, & highly visible.
HiPointDem
May 2013
#51
the government/elite is uninterested in Muslims, radicals, black people, etc.
onpatrol98
May 2013
#110
what is the table you're talking about? the whole point of the louis farrakhans of the world
HiPointDem
May 2013
#60
that's exactly what i meant, & i don't think it was unclear. there are certain posters that have
HiPointDem
May 2013
#59
If you were people would try to get you to do what you're trying to get me to do here.
craigmatic
May 2013
#93
Louis Farrakhan blasts emergency management, calls on blacks to buy up Detroit property
HiPointDem
May 2013
#77
I think many here don't understand Farrakan's historic appeal in parts of the black community.
kwassa
May 2013
#106