- Joined
- Dec 16, 2015
- Messages
- 45,236
- Reaction score
- 6,621
My god, this is right up there with anything I've ever seen for prolonged awkwardness. You're right, Eddie let Dick eat every second of it lol.
so @NoDak posted this in the interracial marriage thread:
which lead me to this one:
and holy shit is this hilarious.
the Host is bombing, so he ambushes Murphy with Nword discussion, Eddie plays it for laughs then proceeds to let the guy bomb deeper and deeper until the whole room doesn't know what to do.
somebody else has got to watch this
and holy shit is this hilarious.
the Host is bombing, so he ambushes Murphy with Nword discussion, Eddie plays it for laughs then proceeds to let the guy bomb deeper and deeper until the whole room doesn't know what to do.
somebody else has got to watch this
My god, this is right up there with anything I've ever seen for prolonged awkwardness. You're right, Eddie let Dick eat every second of it lol.
Yea, that was awful. He even references another low point of his show when he had a former racist governor on. Didn’t know it was him until he brought it up.
LOL, that's great. Reminds me of how an awkward PC white leftist would interview a guy like Dave Chappelle today...
Maddox actually opened with a pretty funny line. And Brown handled it with class. I sometimes forget how much remarkable poise Jim Brown had for being a black athlete in the 1970s.
Really, though, it's also remarkable to me that Maddox was more forthright and sincere in that discussion that 99% of conservative governmental officials today. He voiced his actual opinions about race preservation rather than regurgitating half-baked conservative talking points and merely dog whistling those beliefs.
Maddox actually opened with a pretty funny line. And Brown handled it with class. I sometimes forget how much remarkable poise Jim Brown had for being a black athlete in the 1970s.
Really, though, it's also remarkable to me that Maddox was more forthright and sincere in that discussion that 99% of conservative governmental officials today. He voiced his actual opinions about race preservation rather than regurgitating half-baked conservative talking points and merely dog whistling those beliefs.
Speaking of Muhammad Ali and race mixing...yeah it was a really good watch.
a part that Maddox never got called on, he had just got done saying he didn't want anyone to be forced to segregate or live together, then went right into being all for forcing Muhammad Ali into fighting the Vietnam War.
literally the very next topic
It's not remarkable at all, bud. This type of worldview is so deeply entrenched in our history, our society, the fabric of our country that major political figures openly advocating segregation is just a stones throw backward. And it's precisely his forthright nature, and the ensuing loss of rhetorical viability that reactionary social thinking suffered through the civil rights era, that lead to the dog whistling of today. His way of looking at things suffered a very forceful, public loss, which made embracing those ideas not only wrong, but also the ideas of a loser. It's losing rhetoric. But what about his kids? What did he teach them? I'd wager the same exact damn shit. But they grew up in a world where it was rapidly marginalized, so strategies for shelf space had to change.Really, though, it's also remarkable to me that Maddox was more forthright and sincere in that discussion that 99% of conservative governmental officials today. He voiced his actual opinions about race preservation rather than regurgitating half-baked conservative talking points and merely dog whistling those beliefs.
Speaking of Muhammad Ali and race mixing...
To be fair I bet he changed his mind on that issue. He was a black separatist in his youth and his split with Malcolm X was over the latter abandoning the NOI and its black separatism. IIRC Ali said later that turning his back on Malcolm was one of his greatest regrets.i agree with his Vietnam stance, and admire the consequences he was willing to endure for it
other than that, he was an massive asshole
It's not remarkable at all, bud. This type of worldview is so deeply entrenched in our history, our society, the fabric of our country that major political figures openly advocating segregation is just a stones throw backward. And it's precisely his forthright nature, and the ensuing loss of rhetorical viability that reactionary social thinking suffered through the civil rights era, that lead to the dog whistling of today. His way of looking at things suffered a very forceful, public loss, which made embracing those ideas not only wrong, but also the ideas of a loser. It's losing rhetoric. But what about his kids? What did he teach them? I'd wager the same exact damn shit. But they grew up in a world where it was rapidly marginalized, so strategies for shelf space had to change.
1970.... really not that long ago. Not long ago at all.
Sure, but productive for who? If you're the kind of guy that thinks segregation was great (*cough Greoric cough*), and you hold office, then you might want to try and do what you can to at least support the legacy... but the view itself is a total loser. It's got no gravitas with people that still agree. The conversation needs some sort of cover, pretext, whatever to compartmentalize the prejudice or it can't be legitimate as a topic of discussion. And without rhetorical legitimacy, translating words into disenfranchisement is harder to do, particularly under cover of false victimhood.I wasn't meaning "it's remarkable" as in "I can't believe these views exist."
I was meaning that it's remarkable how much more productive, for lack of a better word, the conversation is when it's actually about the key subject. Nowadays, even though such a politician would realistically derive their support from the same dog whistled beliefs, they posture themselves according to political positions that their supporters don't actually, or at least passionately, support and for which there aren't authentic reasons for support: lower taxes for the rich, hostility to union rights and economic regulation, etc. A Southerner will now be more likely to hedge their position with fear mongering about socialism, i.e. something that, historically, the South had supported.