Word: anti-imperialist
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Savimbi is a slick and opportunistic politician who seeks to present himself as a moderate and a mediator, the logical compromise choice to become the first president of Angola. He rejects the anti-imperialist rhetoric of the MPLA and FNLA as irresponsible: "Complete independence is impossible. The population must not be misled on this point by propaganda. We must wait long years to attain economic independence." Savimbi favors "democratic socialism" and wants to "build a socialist society in Africa--not one molded on China, Senegal, or Congo, but one that fits in with the history and realities of our country...
...national executive board (council or whatever) that the "NAACP has finally decided to do something concrete and call for this (May 17) action." Must one march over the concrete to do something "concrete"? Additionally, two national organizations, one a Marxist-Leninist group and the other a Third World anti-imperialist group, sent representatives to speak to Mr. Harper before the conference to "hear something other than what the YSA is saying." Is any more needed to explore the infamous "great pressure...
Hour of the Furnaces, An anti-imperialist film analyzing, "with great emotional intensity," colonial incursions into Argentina by Spain, England, and the United States. Part of the Latin American Film Series sponsored by the Chile Action Group, Series tickets are available scheduled for the coming weeks are Blood of the Condor, Lucia, The Traitors, and Mexico: The Frozen Revolution...
...scope," Malcolm was fond of saying. As he learned that the peoples of Asia, Africa, and Latin America were exploited by the same international economic system, and therefore faced a common enemy, he extended his black nationalism to the next logical stage: internationalism. He developed a Third World, anti-imperialist analysis...
...time of his historic "Message to the Grass Roots," one of his last speeches as a Muslim, Malcolm had already developed a Third World perspective. The content of the speech, carefully put into terms which he deemed acceptable to a militant black audience, was solidly anti-imperialist. He called for unity among all peoples of color "on the basis of what we have in common," namely, exploitation by the international capitalist system. By this time, Malcolm had long since discarded the race analysis of the Muslims, and realized that the enemy was not the white race...