Lyrics Message To The Grass Roots - Malcolm X
During
the
few
moments
that
we
have,
We
want
to
have
just
an
off-the-cuff
chat
between
you
and
me—us.
We
want
to
talk
right
down
to
earth
in
a
Language
that
everybody
here
can
easily
understand.
We
all
agree
tonight,
All
of
the
speakers
have
agreed,
That
America
has
a
very
serious
problem.
Not
only
does
America
have
a
very
serious
Problem,
but
our
people
have
a
very
serious
problem.
America's
problem
is
us.
We're
her
problem.
The
only
reason
she
has
a
problem
is
she
doesn't
want
us
here.
And
every
time
you
look
at
yourself,
be
you
black,
brown,
red,
Or
yellow,
a
so-called
Negro,
You
represent
a
person
who
poses
such
a
Serious
problem
for
America
because
you're
not
wanted.
Once
you
face
this
as
a
fact,
Then
you
can
start
plotting
a
course
that
will
Make
you
appear
intelligent,
instead
of
unintelligent.
What
you
and
I
need
to
do
is
learn
to
forget
our
differences.
When
we
come
together,
We
don't
come
together
as
Baptists
or
Methodists.
You
don't
catch
hell
'cause
you're
a
Baptist,
And
you
don't
catch
hell
'cause
you're
a
Methodist.
You
don't
catch
hell
'cause
you're
a
Methodist
or
Baptist.
You
don't
catch
hell
because
you're
a
Democrat
or
a
Republican.
You
don't
catch
hell
because
you're
a
Mason
or
an
Elk.
And
you
sure
don't
catch
hell
'cause
you're
an
American;
'Cause
if
you
was
an
American,
you
wouldn't
catch
no
hell.
You
catch
hell
'cause
you're
a
black
man.
You
catch
hell,
all
of
us
catch
hell,
for
the
same
reason.
So
we
are
all
black
people,
So-called
Negroes,
second-class
citizens,
ex-slaves.
You
are
nothing
but
a
ex-slave.
You
don't
like
to
be
told
that.
But
what
else
are
you?
You
are
ex-slaves.
You
didn't
come
here
on
the
"
Mayflower."
You
came
here
on
a
slave
ship—in
Chains,
like
a
horse,
or
a
cow,
or
a
chicken.
And
you
were
brought
here
by
the
people
who
came
here
on
the
"
Mayflower."
You
were
brought
here
by
the
So-called
Pilgrims,
or
Founding
Fathers.
They
were
the
ones
who
brought
you
here.
We
have
a
common
enemy.
We
have
this
in
common:
We
have
a
common
oppressor,
A
common
exploiter,
and
a
common
discriminator.
But
once
we
all
realize
that
we
have
this
common
enemy,
Then
we
unite
on
the
basis
of
what
we
have
in
common.
And
what
we
have
foremost
in
common
is
that
enemy—the
white
man.
He's
an
enemy
to
all
of
us.
I
know
some
of
you
all
think
that
some
of
them
aren't
enemies.
Time
will
tell.
In
Bandung
back
in,
I
think,
1954,
Was
the
first
unity
meeting
in
centuries
of
black
people.
And
once
you
study
what
happened
at
the
Bandung
conference,
And
the
results
of
the
Bandung
conference,
It
actually
serves
as
a
model
for
the
same
Procedure
you
and
I
can
use
to
get
our
problems
solved.
At
Bandung
all
the
nations
came
together.
Their
were
dark
nations
from
Africa
and
Asia.
Some
of
them
were
Buddhists.
Some
of
them
were
Muslim.
Some
of
them
were
Christians.
Some
of
them
were
Confucianists.
Some
were
atheists.
Despite
their
religious
differences,
they
came
together.
Some
were
communists;
some
were
socialists;
some
were
capitalists.
Despite
their
economic
and
political
differences,
they
came
together.
All
of
them
were
black,
brown,
red,
or
yellow.
The
number
one
thing
that
was
not
allowed
to
Attend
the
Bandung
conference
was
the
white
man.
He
couldn't
come.
Once
they
excluded
the
white
man,
They
found
that
they
could
get
together.
Once
they
kept
him
out,
everybody
else
fell
right
in
and
fell
in
line.
This
is
the
thing
that
you
and
I
have
to
understand.
And
these
people
who
came
together
didn't
have
nuclear
weapons,
They
didn't
have
jet
planes,
They
didn't
have
all
of
the
heavy
armaments
that
the
white
man
has.
But
they
had
unity.
They
were
able
to
submerge
their
little
petty
differences
and
agree
On
one
thing:
that
though
one
African
came
from
Kenya
and
was
being
Colonized
by
the
Englishman,
And
another
African
came
from
the
Congo
and
was
being
colonized
by
The
Belgian,
and
another
African
came
from
Guinea
and
was
being
Colonized
by
the
French,
And
another
came
from
Angola
and
was
being
colonized
by
the
Portuguese,
when
they
came
to
the
Bandung
conference,
They
looked
at
the
Portuguese,
and
at
the
Frenchman,
And
at
the
Englishman,
and
at
the
Dutchman,
And
learned
or
realized
that
the
one
thing
that
all
of
them
had
in
Common:
they
were
all
from
Europe,
They
were
all
Europeans,
blond,
blue-eyed
and
white-skinned.
They
began
to
recognize
who
their
enemy
was.
The
same
man
that
was
colonizing
our
people
In
Kenya
was
colonizing
our
people
in
the
Congo.
The
same
one
in
the
Congo
was
colonizing
our
people
in
South
Africa,
And
in
Southern
Rhodesia,
and
in
Burma,
And
in
India,
and
in
Afghanistan,
and
in
Pakistan.
They
realized
all
over
the
world
where
the
dark
man
was
being
Oppressed,
he
was
being
oppressed
by
the
white
man;
Where
the
dark
man
was
being
exploited,
He
was
being
exploited
by
the
white
man.
So
they
got
together
under
this
basis—that
they
had
a
common
enemy.
And
when
you
and
I
here
in
Detroit
and
in
Michigan
and
in
America
who
Have
been
awakened
today
look
around
us,
We
too
realize
here
in
America
we
all
have
a
common
enemy,
Whether
he's
in
Georgia
or
Michigan,
Whether
he's
in
California
or
New
York.
He's
the
same
man:
blue
eyes
and
blond
hair
and
pale
skin—same
man.
So
what
we
have
to
do
is
what
they
did.
They
agreed
to
stop
quarreling
among
themselves.
Any
little
spat
that
they
had,
they'd
settle
it
among
themselves,
Go
into
a
huddle—don't
let
the
Enemy
know
that
you
got
a
disagreement.
Instead
of
us
airing
our
differences
in
public,
We
have
to
realize
we're
all
the
same
family.
And
when
you
have
a
family
squabble,
You
don't
get
out
on
the
sidewalk.
If
you
do,
everybody
calls
you
Uncouth,
unrefined,
uncivilized,
savage.
If
you
don't
make
it
at
home,
you
settle
it
at
home;
You
get
in
the
closet—argue
it
out
behind
closed
doors.
And
then
when
you
come
out
on
the
street,
You
pose
a
common
front,
a
united
front.
And
this
is
what
we
need
to
do
in
the
Community,
and
in
the
city,
and
in
the
state.
We
need
to
stop
airing
our
differences
in
front
of
the
white
man.
Put
the
white
man
out
of
our
meetings,
number
one,
And
then
sit
down
and
talk
shop
with
each
other.
That's
all
you
gotta
do.
I
would
like
to
make
a
few
comments
concerning
the
Difference
between
the
black
revolution
and
the
Negro
revolution.
There's
a
difference.
Are
they
both
the
same?
And
if
they're
not,
what
is
the
difference?
What
is
the
difference
between
a
Black
revolution
and
a
Negro
revolution?
First,
what
is
a
revolution?
Sometimes
I'm
inclined
to
believe
that
many
of
our
people
are
using
This
word
"revolution"
loosely,
Without
taking
careful
consideration
of
what
this
word
Actually
means,
and
what
its
historic
characteristics
are.
When
you
study
the
historic
nature
of
revolutions,
The
motive
of
a
revolution,
the
objective
of
a
revolution,
And
the
result
of
a
revolution,
And
the
methods
used
in
a
revolution,
you
may
change
words.
You
may
devise
another
program.
You
may
change
your
goal
and
you
may
change
your
mind.
Look
at
the
American
Revolution
in
1776.
That
revolution
was
for
what?
For
land.
Why
did
they
want
land?
Independence.
How
was
it
carried
out?
Bloodshed.
Number
one,
it
was
based
on
land,
the
basis
of
independence.
And
the
only
way
they
could
get
it
was
bloodshed.
The
French
Revolution—what
was
it
based
on?
The
landless
against
the
landlord.
What
was
it
for?
Land.
How
did
they
get
it?
Bloodshed.
Was
no
love
lost;
was
no
compromise;
was
no
negotiation.
I'm
telling
you,
you
don't
know
what
a
revolution
is.
'
Cause
when
you
find
out
what
it
is,
You'll
get
back
in
the
alley;
you'll
get
out
of
the
way.
The
Russian
Revolution—what
was
it
based
on?
Land.
The
landless
against
the
landlord.
How
did
they
bring
it
about?
Bloodshed.
You
haven't
got
a
revolution
that
doesn't
involve
bloodshed!
And
you're
afraid
to
bleed.
I
said,
you're
afraid
to
bleed.
As
long
as
the
white
man
sent
you
to
Korea,
you
bled.
He
sent
you
to
Germany,
you
bled.
He
sent
you
to
the
South
Pacific
to
fight
the
Japanese,
you
bled.
You
bleed
for
white
people.
But
when
it
comes
time
to
seeing
your
own
churches
being
Bombed
and
little
black
girls
be
murdered,
you
haven't
got
no
blood.
You
bleed
when
the
white
man
says
bleed,
You
bite
when
the
white
man
says
bite
And
you
bark
when
the
white
man
says
bark.
I
hate
to
say
this
about
us,
but
it's
true.
How
are
you
going
to
be
nonviolent
in
Mississippi,
as
violent
as
you
were
in
Korea?
How
can
you
justify
being
nonviolent
in
Mississippi
and
Alabama,
When
your
churches
are
being
bombed,
And
your
little
girls
are
being
murdered,
And
at
the
same
time
you're
going
to
get
violent
with
Hitler,
and
Tojo,
and
somebody
else
that
you
don't
even
know?
If
violence
is
wrong
in
America,
violence
is
wrong
abroad.
If
it's
wrong
to
be
violent
defending
black
women
and
black
children
And
black
babies
and
black
men,
Then
it's
wrong
for
America
to
draft
us
And
make
us
violent
abroad
in
defense
of
her.
And
if
it
is
right
for
America
to
draft
us,
And
teach
us
how
to
be
violent
in
defense
of
her,
Then
it
is
right
for
you
and
me
to
do
whatever
is
Necessary
to
defend
our
own
people
right
here
in
this
country.
The
Chinese
Revolution—they
wanted
land.
They
threw
the
British
out,
along
with
the
Uncle
Tom
Chinese.
Yeah,
they
did.
They
set
a
good
example.
When
I
was
in
prison,
I
read
an
article—don't
be
shocked
when
I
say
I
was
in
prison.
You're
still
in
prison.
That's
what
America
means:
prison.
When
I
was
in
prison,
I
read
an
article
in
Life
magazine
showing
a
little
Chinese
girl,
Nine
years
old;
her
father
was
on
his
hands
and
knees
and
She
was
pulling
the
trigger
'cause
he
was
an
Uncle
Tom
Chinaman.
When
they
had
the
revolution
over
there,
They
took
a
whole
generation
of
Uncle
Toms—just
wiped
them
out.
And
within
ten
years
that
little
girl
become
a
full-grown
woman.
No
more
Toms
in
China.
And
today
it's
one
of
the
toughest,
roughest,
Most
feared
countries
on
this
earth—by
the
white
man.
'
Cause
there
are
no
Uncle
Toms
over
there.
Of
all
our
studies,
history
is
best
qualified
to
reward
our
research.
And
when
you
see
that
you've
got
problems,
All
you
have
to
do
is
examine
the
historic
method
used
all
Over
the
world
by
others
who
have
problems
similar
to
yours.
And
once
you
see
how
they
got
theirs
straight,
Then
you
know
how
you
can
get
yours
straight.
There's
been
a
revolution,
a
black
revolution,
going
on
in
Africa.
In
Kenya,
the
Mau
Mau
were
revolutionaries;
They
were
the
ones
who
made
the
word
" Uhuru".
They
were
the
ones
who
brought
it
to
the
fore.
The
Mau
Mau,
they
were
revolutionaries.
They
believed
in
scorched
earth.
They
knocked
everything
aside
that
got
in
their
way,
And
their
revolution
also
was
based
on
land,
a
desire
for
land.
In
Algeria,
the
northern
part
of
Africa,
a
revolution
took
place.
The
Algerians
were
revolutionists;
they
wanted
land.
France
offered
to
let
them
be
integrated
into
France.
They
told
France:
to
hell
with
France.
They
wanted
some
land,
not
some
France.
And
they
engaged
in
a
bloody
battle.
So
I
cite
these
various
revolutions,
Brothers
and
sisters,
to
show
you,
You
don't
have
a
peaceful
revolution.
You
don't
have
a
turn-the-other-cheek
revolution.
There's
no
such
thing
as
a
nonviolent
revolution.
The
only
kind
of
revolution
that's
nonviolent
is
the
Negro
revolution.
The
only
revolution
based
on
loving
Your
enemy
is
the
Negro
revolution.
The
only
revolution
in
which
the
goal
is
a
desegregated
lunch
counter,
A
desegregated
theater,
a
desegregated
park,
And
a
desegregated
public
toilet;
You
can
sit
down
next
to
white
folk...
On
the
toilet.
That's
no
revolution.
Revolution
is
based
on
land.
Land
is
the
basis
of
all
independence.
Land
is
the
basis
of
freedom,
justice,
and
equality.
The
white
man
knows
what
a
revolution
is.
He
knows
that
the
black
revolution
Is
worldwide
in
scope
and
in
nature.
The
black
revolution
is
sweeping
Asia,
Sweeping
Africa,
is
rearing
its
head
in
Latin
America.
The
Cuban
Revolution—that's
a
revolution.
They
overturned
the
system.
Revolution
is
in
Asia.
Revolution
is
in
Africa.
And
the
white
man
is
screaming
Because
he
sees
revolution
in
Latin
America.
How
do
you
think
he'll
react
to
you
When
you
learn
what
a
real
revolution
is?
You
don't
know
what
a
revolution
is.
If
you
did,
you
wouldn't
use
that
word.
A
revolution
is
bloody.
Revolution
is
hostile.
Revolution
knows
no
compromise.
Revolution
overturns
and
destroys
everything
that
gets
in
its
way.
And
you,
sitting
around
here
like
a
knot
on
the
wall,
saying,
"
I'm
going
to
love
these
folks
no
matter
how
Much
they
hate
me."
No,
you
need
a
revolution.
Whoever
heard
of
a
revolution
where
they
lock
arms,
As
Reverend
Cleage
was
pointing
out
beautifully,
singing
"
We
Shall
Overcome"?
Just
tell
me.
You
don't
do
that
in
a
revolution.
You
don't
do
any
singing;
you're
too
busy
swinging.
It's
based
on
land.
A
revolutionary
wants
land
so
he
can
set
Up
his
own
nation,
an
independent
nation.
These
Negroes
aren't
asking
for
no
nation.
They're
trying
to
crawl
back
on
the
plantation.
When
you
want
a
nation,
that's
called
nationalism.
When
the
white
man
became
involved
in
a
Revolution
in
this
country
against
England,
what
was
it
for?
He
wanted
this
land
so
he
could
set
up
another
white
nation.
That's
white
nationalism.
The
American
Revolution
was
white
nationalism.
The
French
Revolution
was
white
nationalism.
The
Russian
Revolution
too,
yes,
it
was
white
nationalism.
You
don't
think
so?
Why
you
think
Khrushchev
and
Mao
can't
get
their
heads
together?
White
nationalism.
All
the
revolutions
that
are
going
on
in
Asia
and
Africa
today
are
based
on
what?
Black
nationalism.
A
revolutionary
is
a
black
nationalist.
He
wants
a
nation.
I
was
reading
some
beautiful
words
by
Reverend
Cleage,
Pointing
out
why
he
couldn't
get
together
with
someone
else
here
in
The
city
because
all
of
them
were
afraid
Of
being
identified
with
black
nationalism.
If
you're
afraid
of
black
nationalism,
you're
afraid
of
revolution.
And
if
you
love
revolution,
you
love
black
nationalism.
To
understand
this,
You
have
to
go
back
to
what
the
young
brother
here
Referred
to
as
the
house
Negro
and
the
field
Negro.
Back
during
slavery,
there
was
two
kinds
of
slaves.
There
was
the
house
Negro
and
the
field
Negro.
The
house
Negroes,
they
lived
in
the
house
with
master,
They
dressed
pretty
good,
They
ate
good
'cause
they
ate
his
food—what
he
left.
They
lived
in
the
attic
or
the
basement,
But
still
they
lived
near
the
master;
And
they
loved
their
master
more
than
the
master
loved
himself.
They
would
give
their
life
to
save
the
Master's
house
quicker
than
the
master
would.
The
house
Negro,
if
the
master
said,
"
We
got
a
good
house
here,"
the
house
Negro
would
say,
"
Yeah,
we
got
a
good
house
here.
" Whenever
the
master
said
"we,
" He
said
"we."
That's
how
you
can
tell
a
house
Negro.
If
the
master's
house
caught
on
fire,
The
house
Negro
would
fight
harder
to
Put
the
blaze
out
than
the
master
would.
If
the
master
got
sick,
the
house
Negro
would
say,
"
What's
the
matter,
boss,
we
sick?"
"
We"
sick!
He
identified
himself
with
his
master
More
than
his
master
identified
with
himself.
And
if
you
came
to
the
house
Negro
and
said,
"
Let's
run
away,
let's
escape,
let's
separate,
" The
house
Negro
would
look
at
you
and
say,
"
Man,
you
crazy.
What
you
mean,
separate?
Where
is
there
a
better
house
than
this?
Where
can
I
wear
better
clothes
than
this?
Where
can
I
eat
better
food
than
this?"
That
was
that
house
Negro.
In
those
days
he
was
called
a
"house
nigger.
" And
that's
what
we
call
him
today,
Because
we've
still
got
some
house
niggers
running
around
here.
This
modern
house
Negro
loves
his
master.
He
wants
to
live
near
him.
He'll
pay
three
times
as
much
as
the
house
is
worth
Just
to
live
near
his
master,
and
then
brag
about
"
I'm
the
only
Negro
out
here."
"
I'm
the
only
one
on
my
job."
"
I'm
the
only
one
in
this
school."
You're
nothing
but
a
house
Negro.
And
if
someone
comes
to
you
right
now
and
says,
"
Let's
separate,
" You
say
the
same
thing
that
the
House
Negro
said
on
the
plantation.
"
What
you
mean,
separate?
From
America?
This
good
white
man?
Where
you
going
to
get
a
better
job
than
You
get
here?"
I
mean,
this
is
what
you
say.
"
I
ain't
left
nothing
in
Africa,"
that's
what
you
say.
Why,
you
left
your
mind
in
Africa!
On
that
same
plantation,
there
was
the
field
Negro.
The
field
Negro,
those
were
the
masses.
There
were
always
more
Negroes
in
the
Field
than
there
was
Negroes
in
the
house.
The
Negro
in
the
field
caught
hell.
He
ate
leftovers.
In
the
house
they
ate
high
up
on
the
hog.
The
Negro
in
the
field
didn't
get
nothing
But
what
was
left
of
the
insides
of
the
hog.
They
call
'em
"chittlin'"
nowadays.
In
those
days
they
called
them
what
they
were:
guts.
That's
what
you
were,
a
gut-eater.
And
some
of
you
all
still
gut-eaters.
The
field
Negro
was
beaten
from
morning
to
night.
He
lived
in
a
shack,
in
a
hut.
He
wore
old,
castoff
clothes.
He
hated
his
master.
I
say
he
hated
his
master.
He
was
intelligent.
That
house
Negro
loved
his
master.
But
that
field
Negro—remember,
They
were
in
the
majority,
and
they
hated
the
master.
When
the
house
caught
on
fire,
He
didn't
try
and
put
it
out;
That
field
Negro
prayed
for
a
wind,
for
a
breeze.
When
the
master
got
sick,
the
field
Negro
prayed
that
he'd
die.
If
someone
comes
to
the
field
Negro
and
said,
"
Let's
separate,
let's
run,"
he
didn't
say
"
Where
we
going?"
He'd
say,
"
Any
place
is
better
than
here.
" You've
got
field
Negroes
in
America
today.
I'm
a
field
Negro.
The
masses
are
the
field
Negroes.
When
they
see
this
man's
house
on
fire,
You
don't
hear
these
little
Negroes
talking
About
"our
government
is
in
trouble."
They
say,
"
The
government
is
in
trouble."
Imagine
a
Negro:
"
Our
government"!
I
even
heard
one
say
"our
astronauts.
" They
won't
even
let
him
near
the
plant...
And
"our
astronauts"!
"
Our
Navy"...
That's
a
Negro
that's
out
of
his
mind.
That's
a
Negro
that's
out
of
his
mind.
Just
as
the
slavemaster
of
that
day
used
Tom,
the
house
Negro,
To
keep
the
field
Negroes
in
check,
The
same
old
slavemaster
today
has
Negroes
who
are
nothing
but
modern
Uncle
Toms,
20th
century
Uncle
Toms,
to
keep
you
and
me
in
check,
Keep
us
under
control,
keep
us
passive
and
peaceful
and
nonviolent.
That's
Tom
making
you
nonviolent.
It's
like
when
you
go
to
the
dentist,
And
the
man's
going
to
take
your
tooth.
You're
going
to
fight
him
when
he
starts
pulling.
So
he
squirts
some
stuff
in
your
jaw
called
novocaine,
To
make
you
think
they're
not
doing
anything
to
you.
So
you
sit
there
and
'cause
you've
got
all
of
That
novocaine
in
your
jaw,
you
suffer
peacefully.
Blood
running
all
down
your
jaw,
And
you
don't
know
what's
happening.
'
Cause
someone
has
taught
you
to
suffer—peacefully.
The
white
man
do
the
same
thing
to
you
in
the
street,
When
he
wants
to
put
knots
on
your
head
and
take
Advantage
of
you
and
don't
have
to
be
afraid
of
your
fighting
back.
To
keep
you
from
fighting
back,
He
gets
these
old
religious
Uncle
Toms
to
teach
You
and
me,
just
like
novocaine,
suffer
peacefully.
Don't
stop
suffering—just
suffer
peacefully.
As
Reverend
Cleage
pointed
out,
"
Let
your
blood
flow
In
the
streets."
This
is
a
shame.
And
you
know
he's
a
Christian
preacher.
If
it's
a
shame
to
him,
you
know
what
it
is
to
me!
There's
nothing
in
our
book,
the
Qur'an—you
call
it
"
Ko-ran"—that
teaches
us
to
suffer
peacefully.
Our
religion
teaches
us
to
be
intelligent.
Be
peaceful,
be
courteous,
obey
the
law,
respect
everyone;
But
if
someone
puts
his
hand
on
you,
send
him
to
the
cemetery.
That's
a
good
religion.
In
fact,
that's
that
old-time
religion.
That's
the
one
that
Ma
and
Pa
used
to
talk
about:
an
eye
for
an
eye,
And
a
tooth
for
a
tooth,
and
a
head
for
a
head,
And
a
life
for
a
life:
That's
a
good
religion.
And
doesn't
nobody
resent
that
kind
of
religion
Being
taught
but
a
wolf,
who
intends
to
make
you
his
meal.
This
is
the
way
it
is
with
the
white
man
in
America.
He's
a
wolf
and
you're
sheep.
Any
time
a
shepherd,
a
pastor,
Teach
you
and
me
not
to
run
from
the
white
man
and,
At
the
same
time,
Teach
us
not
to
fight
the
white
man,
he's
a
traitor
to
you
and
me.
Don't
lay
down
our
life
all
by
itself.
No,
preserve
your
life.
It's
the
best
thing
you
got.
And
if
you
got
to
give
it
up,
let
it
be
even-steven.
The
slavemaster
took
Tom
and
dressed
him
well,
and
fed
him
well,
And
even
gave
him
a
little
education—a
little
education;
Gave
him
a
long
coat
and
a
top
hat
and
Made
all
the
other
slaves
look
up
to
him.
Then
he
used
Tom
to
control
them.
The
same
strategy
that
was
used
in
those
Days
is
used
today,
by
the
same
white
man.
He
takes
a
Negro,
a
so-called
Negro,
And
make
him
prominent,
build
him
up,
Publicize
him,
make
him
a
celebrity.
And
then
he
becomes
a
spokesman
for
Negroes—and
a
Negro
leader.
I
would
like
to
just
mention
just
one
other
thing
else
quickly,
And
that
is
the
method
that
the
white
man
uses,
How
the
white
man
uses
these
"big
guns,
" Or
Negro
leaders,
against
the
black
revolution.
They
are
not
a
part
of
the
black
revolution.
They're
used
against
the
black
revolution.
When
Martin
Luther
King
failed
to
desegregate
Albany,
Georgia,
the
civil-rights
struggle
in
America
reached
its
low
point.
King
became
bankrupt,
almost,
as
a
leader.
Plus,
even
financially,
The
Southern
Christian
Leadership
Conference
was
in
financial
trouble;
Plus
it
was
in
trouble,
period,
With
the
people
when
they
failed
to
desegregate
Albany,
Georgia.
Other
Negro
civil-rights
leaders
of
So-called
national
stature
became
fallen
idols.
As
they
became
fallen
idols,
Began
to
lose
their
prestige
and
influence,
Local
Negro
leaders
began
to
stir
up
the
masses.
In
Cambridge,
Maryland,
Gloria,
Richardson
in
Danville,
Virginia,
And
other
parts
of
the
country,
Local
leaders
began
to
stir
up
our
people
at
the
grassroots
level.
This
was
never
done
by
these
Negroes,
Whom
you
recognize,
of
national
stature.
They
controlled
you,
but
they
never
incited
you
or
excited
you.
They
controlled
you;
They
contained
you;
they
kept
you
on
the
plantation.
As
soon
as
King
failed
in
Birmingham,
Negroes
took
to
the
streets.
King
got
out
and
went
out
to
California
to
a
big
rally
And
raised
about—I
don't
know
how
many
thousands
of
dollars.
He
came
to
Detroit
and
had
a
march
and
Raised
some
more
thousands
of
dollars.
And
recall,
right
after
that
Wilkins
attacked
King,
Accused
King
and
the
CORE
of
starting
trouble
everywhere
and
then
Making
the
NAACP
get
them
out
of
jail
and
spend
a
lot
of
money;
And
then
they
accused
King
and
CORE
of
Raising
all
the
money
and
not
paying
it
back.
This
happened;
I've
got
it
in
documented
evidence
in
the
newspaper.
Roy
started
attacking
King,
And
King
started
attacking
Roy,
And
Farmer
started
attacking
both
of
them.
And
as
these
Negroes
of
national
stature
began
to
attack
Each
other,
they
began
to
lose
their
control
of
the
Negro
masses.
And
Negroes
was
out
there
in
the
streets.
They
was
talking
about
we
was
going
to
march
on
Washington.
By
the
way,
right
at
that
time
Birmingham
had
exploded,
And
the
Negroes
in
Birmingham—remember,
they
also
exploded.
They
began
to
stab
the
crackers
in
the
back
And
bust
them
up
'side
their
head—yes,
they
did.
That's
when
Kennedy
sent
in
the
troops,
down
in
Birmingham.
So,
and
right
after
that,
Kennedy
got
on
the
television
and
said
"this
is
a
moral
issue.
" That's
when
he
said
he
was
going
to
put
out
a
civil-rights
bill.
And
when
he
mentioned
civil-rights
bill
and
the
Southern
crackers
Started
talking
about
how
they
were
going
to
boycott
or
Filibuster
it,
then
the
Negroes
started
talking—about
what?
We're
going
to
march
on
Washington,
march
on
the
Senate,
March
on
the
White
House,
march
on
the
Congress,
And
tie
it
up,
bring
it
to
a
halt;
don't
let
the
government
proceed.
They
even
said
they
were
going
out
to
the
airport
and
Lay
down
on
the
runway
and
don't
let
no
airplanes
land.
I'm
telling
you
what
they
said.
That
was
revolution.
That
was
revolution.
That
was
the
black
revolution.
It
was
the
grass
roots
out
there
in
the
street.
Scared
the
white
man
to
death,
Scared
the
white
power
structure
in
Washington,
D.
To
death;
I
was
there.
When
they
found
out
that
this
black
steamroller
was
going
to
come
Down
on
the
capital,
they
called
in
Wilkins;
they
called
in
Randolph;
They
called
in
these
national
Negro
Leaders
that
you
respect
and
told
them,
"
Call
it
off."
Kennedy
said,
"
Look,
you
all
letting
this
thing
go
too
far."
And
Old
Tom
said,
"
Boss,
I
can't
stop
it,
Because
I
didn't
start
it."
I'm
telling
you
what
they
said.
They
said,
"
I'm
not
even
in
it,
much
less
at
the
head
of
it."
They
said,
"
These
Negroes
are
doing
things
on
their
own.
They're
running
ahead
of
us."
And
that
old
shrewd
fox,
he
said,
"
Well
If
you
all
aren't
in
it,
I'll
put
you
in
it.
I'll
put
you
at
the
head
of
it.
I'll
endorse
it.
I'll
welcome
it.
I'll
help
it.
I'll
join
it."
A
matter
of
hours
went
by.
They
had
a
meeting
at
the
Carlyle
Hotel
in
New
York
City.
The
Carlyle
Hotel
is
owned
by
the
Kennedy
family;
That's
the
hotel
Kennedy
spent
the
night
At,
two
nights
ago;
it
belongs
to
his
family.
A
philanthropic
society
headed
by
a
white
man
named
Stephen
Currier
Called
all
the
top
civil-rights
Leaders
together
at
the
Carlyle
Hotel.
And
he
told
them
that,
"
By
you
all
fighting
each
other,
You
are
destroying
the
civil-rights
movement.
And
since
you're
fighting
over
money
from
white
liberals,
Let
us
set
up
what
is
known
as
the
Council
for
United
Civil
Rights
Leadership.
Let's
form
this
council,
And
all
the
civil-rights
organizations
will
belong
to
it,
And
we'll
use
it
for
fund-raising
purposes.
" Let
me
show
you
how
tricky
the
white
man
is.
And
as
soon
as
they
got
it
formed,
They
elected
Whitney
Young
as
the
chairman,
And
who
you
think
became
the
co-chairman?
Stephen
Currier,
the
white
man,
a
millionaire.
Powell
was
talking
about
it
down
at
the
Cobo
[Hall]
today.
This
is
what
he
was
talking
about.
Powell
knows
it
happened.
Randolph
knows
it
happened.
Wilkins
knows
it
happened.
King
knows
it
happened.
Everyone
of
that
so-called
Big
Six,
they
know
what
happened.
Once
they
formed
it,
with
the
white
man
over
it,
He
promised
them
and
gave
them
$800,
000
to
split
up
between
the
Big
Six;
And
told
them
that
after
the
march
Was
over
they'd
give
them
$700,000
more.
A
million
and
a
half
dollars,
Split
up
between
leaders
that
you've
been
Following,
going
to
jail
for,
crying
crocodile
tears
for.
And
they're
nothing
but
Frank
James
and
Jesse
James
and
the
what-do-you-call-'em
brothers.
Soon
as
they
got
the
setup
organized,
The
white
man
made
available
to
them
top
public
relations
experts;
Opened
the
news
media
across
the
country
at
their
disposal;
And
then
they
begin
to
project
these
Big
Six
as
the
leaders
of
the
march.
Originally,
they
weren't
even
in
the
march.
You
was
talking
this
march
talk
on
Hastings
Street—is
Hastings
Street
still
here?—on
Hasting
Street.
You
was
talking
the
march
talk
on
Lenox
Avenue,
And
out
on—what
you
call
it?—Fillmore
Street,
And
Central
Avenue,
and
32nd
Street
and
63rd
Street.
That's
where
the
march
talk
was
being
talked.
But
the
white
man
put
the
Big
Six
at
The
head
of
it;
made
them
the
march.
They
became
the
march.
They
took
it
over.
And
the
first
move
they
made
after
they
took
it
over,
They
invited
Walter
Reuther,
a
white
man;
They
invited
a
priest,
a
rabbi,
and
an
old
white
preacher.
Yes,
an
old
white
preacher.
The
same
white
element
that
put
Kennedy
in
power—labor,
the
Catholics,
The
Jews,
and
liberal
Protestants;
The
same
clique
that
put
Kennedy
in
Power,
joined
the
march
on
Washington.
It's
just
like
when
you've
got
some
coffee
That's
too
black,
which
means
it's
too
strong.
What
you
do?
You
integrate
it
with
cream;
you
make
it
weak.
If
you
pour
too
much
cream
in,
You
won't
even
know
you
ever
had
coffee.
It
used
to
be
hot,
it
becomes
cool.
It
used
to
be
strong,
it
becomes
weak.
It
used
to
wake
you
up,
now
it'll
put
you
to
sleep.
This
is
what
they
did
with
the
march
on
Washington.
They
joined
it.
They
didn't
integrate
it;
they
infiltrated
it.
They
joined
it,
became
a
part
of
it,
took
it
over.
And
as
they
took
it
over,
it
lost
its
militancy.
They
ceased
to
be
angry.
They
ceased
to
be
hot.
They
ceased
to
be
uncompromising.
Why,
it
even
ceased
to
be
a
march.
It
became
a
picnic,
a
circus.
Nothing
but
a
circus,
with
clowns
and
all.
You
had
one
right
here
in
Detroit—I
saw
it
on
Television—with
clowns
leading
it,
white
clowns
and
black
clowns.
I
know
you
don't
like
what
I'm
Saying,
but
I'm
going
to
tell
you
anyway.
'
Cause
I
can
prove
what
I'm
saying.
If
you
think
I'm
telling
you
wrong,
You
bring
me
Martin
Luther
King
and
A.
Philip
Randolph
and
James
Farmer
and
those
other
Three,
and
see
if
they'll
deny
it
over
a
microphone.
No,
it
was
a
sellout.
It
was
a
takeover.
When
James
Baldwin
came
in
from
Paris,
They
wouldn't
let
him
talk,
'Cause
they
couldn't
make
him
go
by
the
script.
Burt
Lancaster
read
the
speech
that
Baldwin
was
supposed
to
make;
They
wouldn't
let
Baldwin
get
up
there,
'Cause
they
know
Baldwin's
liable
to
say
anything.
They
controlled
it
so
tight—they
told
those
Negroes
what
time
to
hit
Town,
how
to
come,
where
to
stop,
what
signs
to
carry,
What
song
to
sing,
what
speech
they
could
make,
And
what
speech
they
couldn't
make;
And
then
told
them
to
get
out
of
town
by
sundown.
And
every
one
of
those
Toms
was
out
of
town
by
sundown.
Now
I
know
you
don't
like
my
saying
this.
But
I
can
back
it
up.
It
was
a
circus,
A
performance
that
beat
anything
Hollywood
Could
ever
do,
the
performance
of
the
year.
Reuther
and
those
other
three
devils
should
get
an
Academy
Award
for
The
best
actors
'cause
they
acted
like
they
Really
loved
Negroes
and
fooled
a
whole
lot
of
Negroes.
And
the
six
Negro
leaders
should
get
an
Award
too,
for
the
best
supporting
cast.
1 1961 NOI Panel Discussion
2 Message To The Grass Roots
3 1965 The Last Message
4 1963 MSU Race Problem
5 1964 Harvard Law Forum
6 1964 NY Harlem Youth Forum
7 Bayard Rustin Debate
8 1964 Declaration Of Independence
9 1964 Boston Radio Speech
10 1963 Harlem Black Unity Rally
11 1963 University Of Cal Berkeley Speech
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