I‘ve been meaning to read this one for awhile now. I‘m happy to crack it today.
I‘ve been meaning to read this one for awhile now. I‘m happy to crack it today.
An outstanding (and overlooked) history of armed self-defense within the African-American non-violent movement. Readers who enjoy this book will also enjoy "Pacifism as Pathology" by Ward Churchill.
Even blood was segregated by race during WWII, despite the fact that Charles R. Drew, the doctor whose research made blood transfusions possible, was an African-American.
Writing in 1957 about the Montgomery bus boycott, W.E.B. Dubois expressed great criticism about nonviolence: "No normal human being of trained intelligence is going to fight the man who will not fight back...but suppose they are wild beasts or wild men? To yield to the rush of the tiger is death, nothing less."