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January 31, 2007

Muhammad Ali: The Brand and the Man

Dave Zirin in The Nation:

Alimuhammad22Muhammad Ali's brilliance was not that he was some kind of antiwar prophet. He wasn't Malcolm X or Martin Luther King Jr. in boxing gloves, debating foreign policy between rounds. But unlike the Ivy League advisers who made up the "best and brightest," Ali understood then that there was justice and injustice, right and wrong. He knew that not taking a stand could be as political a statement as taking one. This was Ali's code, and he never wavered.

In early 1966 the US Army came calling for Ali, and he was classified 1-A for the draft. He got the news surrounded by reporters and blurted one of the most famous phrases of the decade, "Man, I ain't got no quarrel with them Vietcong."

This was an astounding statement. As Mike Marqusee outlines in his Redemption Song: Muhammad Ali and the Spirirt of the 60s, there was little opposition to the war at the time. The antiwar movement was in its infancy, and most of the country still stood behind the President. Life magazine's cover read, "Vietnam: The War Is Worth Winning." The song "Ballad of the Green Berets" was climbing the charts. And then there was Ali. As longtime peace activist Daniel Berrigan said, "It was a major boost to an antiwar movement that was very white. He was not an academic or a bohemian or a clergyman. He couldn't be dismissed as cowardly."

More here.

Posted by Abbas Raza at 05:02 PM | Permalink

Comments

Sadly Ali's true radicality-- this opposition to Vietnam-- is consistently downplayed today now that he has been converted into a harmless global icon. Surely had he been in better health he would have been in open opposition to the Iraq War, as was only briefly hinted in his White House appearance when he gave the President the "crazy" twirl...

http://youtube.com/watch?v=yT9ZrJqIMSM

Posted by: Dan Quiles | Jan 31, 2007 5:12:25 PM

Ali was no saint; he humiliated opponents personally and brutally not just through his fists - business as usual of course - but through his public assaults on their dignity outside the ring. But yet I admire him anyway. Maybe assaulting the dignity of your opponents as he did to Frazier, Foreman and so many others is the only way you can muster the courage and will to prevail in this the most brutal, unsaintly of sports.

Posted by: Bruce/Crablaw | Jan 31, 2007 5:20:31 PM

His unabashedly racist characterizations of Frazier in particular are horrific to watch today. These have also been, excuse the term, whitewashed, in the service of converting Ali into a warm and fuzzy handicapped hero. In truth he was an embodiment of the deeply violent and difficult politics of the 1960s. What he should be most commended for is his fearless commingling of politics with sports, something that today seems unthinkable for an iconic athlete.

Posted by: Dan Quiles | Feb 1, 2007 7:59:19 AM

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