1. Have you ever been
to a labour exchange?
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2. You know, the last time
I went there,
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3. I was paid my money by a Sikh.
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4. A Sikh, sitting there with his
turban and a bangle
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5. on his hand.
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6. Now, I was three years
with the Indian army in India.
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7. I was three years in India
in civilian life.
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8. Erm, I got on well with
Sikhs, Hindus,
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9. the whole lot of them.
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10. But to walk into a British
labour exchange
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11. and find you're being paid
out your money by a Sikh...
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12. These are the people, that in my
small way, I helped train
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13. and educate...
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14. .. erm... To go into labour
exchange is not
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15. a very edifying experience at all.
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16. You know, you change into your
old clothes to go
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17. to the labour exchange, you know?
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18. But you've got to go.
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19. Edgar Mittelholzer had come
to England in the 1950s
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20. from British Guiana.
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21. But he had become
a best-selling novelist.
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22. What Mittelholzer wrote about
was violence...
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23. .. the violence and the racism
that had been at the heart
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24. of the European empires.
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25. Mittelholzer believed that
it still haunted the minds
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26. of those who had ruled the empires.
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27. One of his most famous stories,
My Bones and My Flute,
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28. is about a group of colonialists
who travel up a river
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29. into the jungle in Guyana.
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30. They're searching for the remains
of a giant slave rebellion
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31. in the past, guided
by an old manuscript.
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32. But anyone who reads the manuscript
starts to hear the distant sound
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33. of a flute...
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34. .. and they change.
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35. They become possessed by something
that is reaching out
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36. from the jungle and working its way
into their minds.
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37. It is the anger and the fear
of the slave owner who put
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38. down the rebellion.
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39. And it will not let them escape.
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40. And Mittelholzer himself became
angry with England.
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41. He saw it as a decaying,
corrupted country.
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42. I feel we've reached the stage,
you know, when we have become
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43. so soft, you know, so effete,
in other words,
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44. so effete, that we feel that,
well, even criminals...
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45. .. erm, must be mollycoddled.
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46. And you feel so strongly
that you are prepared to go
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47. as far as to say that... Yes.
.. there are human beings
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48. who should be categorised
as vermin.
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49. As vermin, exactly, quite.
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50. Anyone who is guilty of violence
on the human person and property,
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51. should be considered as human
vermin, and eradicated.
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52. I know it's a rather, it's a
violent thing to advocate,
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53. but I can't see any other cure
to the crime problem.
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54. Every evening, he sat with his wife
in his house in Surrey,
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55. listening to the music of Wagner.
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56. Until one night, Mittelholzer walked
up the hill by his house,
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57. poured paraffin over himself...
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58. .. and set himself alight.
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59. He burned to death.
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60. The anger and the fear had reached
out to the colonised too.
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61. In 1966, engineers monitoring
Chinese television
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62. from a mountain in Hong Kong, began
to realise that something unusual
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63. was happening in Beijing.
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64. China was sealed off from the
rest of the world.
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65. But what they saw were hundreds
of thousands of people streaming
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66. in from other cities
and the countryside.
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67. By August 11th, 1.5 million
people had assembled
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68. in Tiananmen Square.
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69. Most of them were students
or schoolchildren.
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70. Then, Mao Zedong appeared
on the balcony above them.
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71. Mao Zedong and his wife,
Jiang Qing, had unleashed
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72. a new force in China.
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73. These were what Mao called,
"The little devils of youth."
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74. He told them that they were going
to save the revolution.
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75. Their job was to go and seek out
the demons and the monsters
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76. who were corrupting the revolution.
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77. "No-one should be safe," he said,
"They should all be torn
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78. "down and smashed to pulp."
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79. The new revolutionaries gave
themselves a name,
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80. the Red Guards.
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81. Jiang Qing now had great power.
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82. She saw herself as equal to Mao.
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83. But she was convinced that the
threat to the revolution
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84. also came from inside
people's minds.
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85. She knew that even though China had
gone through a revolution,
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86. little had changed inside the heads
of millions of the people -
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87. including those in power.
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88. They still believed in a rigid
hierarchy.
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89. She had been scorned as a woman
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90. by the other revolutionaries
around Mao.
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91. They had done anything they could
to stop her.
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92. Jiang Qing had rewritten old Chinese
operas into epic melodramas
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93. about the need to challenge and
destroy the old order.
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94. All the old figures of authority
were banished.
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95. Instead, the ordinary people,
including women,
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96. took centre stage.
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97. They were performed to millions
of young Red Guards,
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98. and in talks before the
performances,
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99. Jiang Qing told the audience how
what they were about to watch
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100. were heroes awakening
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101. and realising that they could
take control.
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102. Till today, I still vividly remember
the first time
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103. I saw the revolutionary play.
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104. I was about 14 or 13 years old...
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105. .. and there was a rush of emotion,
of identity.
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106. I was so excited.
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107. Suddenly...
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108. I saw those plays after Jiang Qing's
talk that night.
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109. And suddenly what she was saying
made sense to me,
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110. that there was a fundamental
difference
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111. between the revolutionary art
and the traditional art.
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112. There was something in the play
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113. about the working-class emotions
and working-class world outlook,
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114. and just the flamboyance of the
working-class figure
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115. on stage, moved me.
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116. That is my society.
That's my life.
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117. That's the people I see.
That's the people I live with.
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118. And they're on stage.
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119. Mao and Jiang Qing suspended all
schools and universities,
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120. which released 120 million students,
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121. who were then sent out to find
and destroy
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122. the demons that were hiding among
those in authority.
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123. Our teachers were often
paraded through the streets,
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124. and we made them chant,
"I'm a demon, I'm a devil.
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125. "I deserve to die."
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126. That's the song, and they had to
sing it.
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127. And they all sang.
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128. Whoever didn't, got beaten up -
some very badly.
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129. We used our belts
to whip them.
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130. Some people used sticks.
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131. And the mother of this teacher
was pushed over a bridge
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132. and fell to her death.
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133. Horst Mahler had been born in what
was now East Germany.
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134. His father had been a fervent Nazi
and an anti-Semite.
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135. In 1945,
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136. his family fled across Germany from
the approaching Red Army.
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137. Then his father committed suicide.
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138. Mahler grew up in West Berlin,
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139. and everything was buried.
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140. Bitte, alle aussteigen.
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141. In 1964, Mahler joined a new group
called the APO -
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142. the Extra-Parliamentary Opposition.
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143. They knew that many of those
in charge of the country
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144. had been senior members of the
Nazi Party.
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145. But no-one talked about it.
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146. They wanted to expose the Nazi
crimes of those in charge...
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147. .. and challenge their control
of the country.
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148. There was the memory knocking
at the door,
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149. and we asked our parents and our
grandfathers,
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150. "What did you do all this time?
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151. "Did you resist or had you been a
little Nazi?
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152. "Or had you been an opportunist?"
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153. And...
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154. .. this discussion was blocked by the
elder generation.
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155. And so it became hostile.
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156. The student movement was astonished
by the violent reaction
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157. of the German government.
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158. And Horst Mahler and other radicals
began to think that the problem
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159. was far deeper than just
individual Nazis.
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160. That maybe the whole Nazi system
had also survived...
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161. .. and was hiding behind the facade
of modern capitalism.
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162. They argued that the very system
of industrial rationality
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163. and bureaucratic control that had
made the Nazi state
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164. so efficient, had simply mutated.
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165. It had been taken up by
the victors -
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166. above all by America -
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167. and was now being used to run the
new global capitalism
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168. and the multinational corporations
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169. that were ruthlessly exploiting what
was called the Third World.
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170. Anything that stood in the system's
way was bombed or burnt...
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171. .. with weapons created by the same
rational industrial techniques
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172. that made the mass-consumer goods.
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173. But the people in the West
couldn't see this,
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174. because they have been led into
a dream world
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175. that used mass consumerism and
sexualized imagery
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176. to entrance and distract everyone.
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177. Und zauberhaft schon.
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178. Die randlosen Strumpfhosen...
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179. In reality, it was an iron cage
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180. designed to look like an open
and free welfare state -
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181. a full state of peace that was built
really on horror and war.
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182. We were convinced that our
situation here,
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183. the welfare state...
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184. ..is only possible - and a
result -
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185. - by the exploitation of the
Third World.
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186. And we said we must disturb
this peace,
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187. this false peace in our country
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188. in order to show the responsibility
of us,
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189. that it is our task to implement
sabotage
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190. in the centres of imperialism.
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191. Hey, black power.
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192. What's the reaction to your arrest,
Mr Brown?
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193. Of course, racist America has done
it again.
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194. But that's not going to end the
burning in Detroit, brother,
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195. because we built the country up and
we'll burn it down,
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196. honkies and all.
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197. Mr Brown, did you tell them to
burn down that school?
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198. Be serious, I ain't got to tell
black folks what to burn.
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199. Did you tell them to shoot
Lady Bird?
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200. Did I tell them to burn down
Detroit?
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201. Did I tell America to bring black
people here?
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202. Did you tell them to shoot
at Lady Bird?
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203. I say, if they give me a gun and
tell me to shoot my enemy,
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204. I might shoot you.
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205. Where have you been since the other
night, Mr Brown? OK, let's go.
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206. Oh, well.
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207. Nonviolence is OK,
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208. but you get nowhere with
nonviolence.
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209. I like violence.
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210. Malcolm X started but didn't
finish.
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211. Malcolm X said, you know, the idea.
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212. He rooted it in the minds of
many blacks.
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213. He really started the ball rolling.
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214. You feel that violence is necessary
in order to get rid of...
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215. .. what you would call the
oppression?
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216. It wouldn't get rid of it.
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217. But it will open, you know, some of
whiteys eyes to say,
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218. "Well, you know, we're not joking.
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219. "We really mean what we say."
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220. Do you find yourself really hating
white people?
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221. Hm, yes.
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222. Some people hold grudges,
and I do.
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223. Look how they treat...
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224. How many floors did my
great-grandmother scrub, you know?
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225. How many babies did she take care of
that weren't hers?
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226. You know, stuff like that.
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227. And I'm just one of those people
that holds things.
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228. Alice Faye Williams had been born
in North Carolina.
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229. She had run away from home
when she was young
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230. because she was frightened of her
violent father,
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231. and she came to New York
when she was 15.
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232. She managed to get a place to study
at the School of Performing Arts.
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233. Then, one day,
on 125th Street in Harlem,
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234. she listened to a speech by
Bobby Seale,
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235. one of the leaders of the
Black Panthers.
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236. The Black Panthers believed that
the only way to stop racism
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237. in America was for black people
to get power.
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238. Simply changing the law was
not enough.
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239. The anger and the fear
remained hidden away
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240. in millions of people's minds.
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241. The solution was Black Power,
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242. and the first person
to articulate this
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243. was Stokely Carmichael
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244. on a civil rights march
in Mississippi
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245. on one day when the more moderate
Martin Luther King was absent.
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246. So I just made a speech
building up to it,
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247. building up, building up,
building up,
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248. showing that it wasn't
a question of morality.
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249. It wasn't a question
of being good or bad.
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250. It was simply a question of power,
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251. and the way black people
had no power,
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252. and we had to have some power.
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253. Only type of power
we could have is Black Power.
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254. Black Power.
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255. We want Black Power.
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256. We want Black Power.
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257. We want Black Power. Black Power!
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258. We want Black Power.
We want Black Power.
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259. We want Black Power.
Black Power!
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260. We want Black Power. Black Power!
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261. That's right,
that's what we want, Black Power.
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262. They responded immediately,
in a healthy manner.
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263. Dr King came back the next day,
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264. but it was too late then.
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265. Black Power had been established.
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266. Alice Williams decided
to join the Black Panthers.
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267. She became a member of a new chapter
that had been set up in Harlem,
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268. and she changed her name
to Afeni Shakur.
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269. She later explained
what the Panthers meant for her.
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270. "For the first time," she said,
"there was now something I could do
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271. "with all this aggression
and all this fear inside me.
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272. "The Panther Party at that time
took my rage
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273. "and channelled it against THEM,
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274. "instead of against us.
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275. "They educated my mind
and gave me direction.
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276. "And with that direction came hope."
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277. We want justice!
We want justice!
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278. There's a line in there, now.
Fucking get her out of here.
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279. I'm trying.
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280. Watch out behind you now.
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281. You men!
He's trying to...
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282. See anybody?
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283. Oh, there were...
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284. I saw in the precinct
a number of men and women
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285. being brought in.
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286. I had contact with some of the women
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287. when we were in the precinct,
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288. and they were also beaten.
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289. Some had black eyes,
some had swollen lips and so forth.
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290. And from what most of them said,
they were just walking
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291. along the street and most of them
were pushed or hit with a club.
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292. And when they protested the fact
that they were being hit
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293. for nothing, then they were beaten
and arrested.
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294. We teach children
that the policeman is a friend.
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295. In Harlem, however - although
I know that there are policemen
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296. who are friendly and
kind and decent and fair -
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297. this type of policeman
is a rare thing.
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298. Eh?
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299. You don't scare me, mate.
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300. I do shows in aid
of people like you.
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301. Michael de Freitas
had been a gangster.
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302. He had worked as an enforcer
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303. for the notorious slum landlord
Peter Rachman.
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304. But now he wanted
to be a revolutionary.
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305. Then, one day, he met
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306. the American black leader
Malcolm X,
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307. who was on a tour of England.
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308. They began to travel
around the country together.
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309. When they arrived in Birmingham,
the hotel receptionist thought
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310. that Michael de Freitas
was Malcolm X's brother,
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311. and he called him Michael X.
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312. De Freitas decided that,
in the future,
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313. this was going to be
his revolutionary name
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314. and he was going to lead
a revolution in Britain.
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315. Michael X soon became famous.
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316. I would hate to be described
as a politician
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317. because they are all such liars
and thieves.
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318. If I'm going to deal in the realms
of that type of public relations,
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319. I'd rather think of myself in terms
of being a statesman,
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320. which is an art that this country
has long since forgotten,
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321. like we have no statesmen today.
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322. I'm probably the only one
in the country.
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323. Unfortunately, we find
that the people of pale pigmentation
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324. are people who are so barbaric -
like, for instance, right now,
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325. this country, which is run
by those type of people,
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326. have got more weapons of destruction
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327. to create... to destroy
the entire world.
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328. And they are so savage,
they are building even more.
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329. You see, the British
are such a strange people.
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330. Many of Michael X's supporters
were the young white radicals
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331. who had moved into Notting Hill,
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332. into the very houses that he
and the gangster Peter Rachman
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333. had run ten years before.
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334. Because Michael was an outsider,
the white radicals believed
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335. that he could see the system
for what it really was.
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336. Like all revolutionaries
before them,
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337. they had tried to appeal
to the white working class
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338. and get them to rise up
against the system.
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339. But no-one seemed to be interested.
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340. And what we've been talking
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341. about here today
is the problem of racialism
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342. and the problem
of the attack by the government
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343. and by the employers
on working people's conditions.
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344. The radicals decided that this was
because the ordinary people
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345. had been brainwashed by the media
and by consumerism
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346. and turned into what their theory
called one-dimensional creatures.
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347. Which meant that they were
the wrong kind of person
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348. to start a revolution with.
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349. Their whole mind is, you know,
like a cabbage. They're suppressed,
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350. they can't do
exactly what they want,
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351. they haven't got any freedom,
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352. they haven't got any freedom
to do exactly what they want
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353. under the system. I mean, we
certainly do. What is freedom?
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354. Well, being able to express yourself
in whichever way you feel is right.
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355. But I think it's not only the system
that's wrong.
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356. I think it's the people
that's wrong.
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357. Would you be interested in working
every night for me?
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358. Um... Yes, possibly
every night, yes.
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359. Fine. Well, you know, if you do us
well, we'll get the band to play it.
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360. Anything in particular
you'd like us to play?
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361. Anything at all. Anything at all?
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362. Would you? Yeah,
if you'd like to come...
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363. But one evening,
after making a speech in Reading,
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364. Michael X was arrested...
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365. .. and he was sent to prison
for ten months
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366. for inciting racial hatred.
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367. The MP Enoch Powell had also made
a speech at the same time,
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368. violently attacking immigrants.
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369. He wasn't charged
and he carried on being an MP...
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370. .. which Michael X said
rather proved his point
Copy !req
371. about the racism
underlying the country.
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372. YELLING, GUNSHOTS
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373. I'm telling you!
Don't make me come walking...
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374. Certainly no-one is going
to tell you not to think
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375. what you honestly believe,
but I think maybe...
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376. .. maybe you should re-examine
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377. a little bit
the things that you believe, huh?
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378. Think about it.
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379. In the Cold War,
the very idea of the individual
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380. and how the individual self
worked had become political,
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381. because it was what defined
the United States
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382. against the collective ideology
of Russia.
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383. I think maybe...
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384. .. maybe you should re-examine
a little bit
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385. the things that you believe, huh?
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386. What concerned
many psychologists, though,
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387. was that the Second World War
had revealed how frightening
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388. and deceptive human beings could be.
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389. Particularly in Nazi Germany,
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390. where ordinary people, who had
apparently been good citizens,
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391. had indulged
in the most terrible horrors.
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392. And psychologists started to
examine what really went on
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393. inside people's minds,
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394. trying to find ways of bypassing
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395. the conscious explanations
that humans gave,
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396. because those explanations
could be deceptive.
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397. They wanted to find a way
of getting directly
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398. at what was going on
inside the brain.
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399. One of the key figures
was a psychologist called
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400. Dr Eckhard Hess.
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401. He had begun his career
recording and analysing
Copy !req
402. animal behaviour on film.
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403. Now he did the same
with human beings.
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404. Dr Hess had discovered
that the pupils in the eyes
Copy !req
405. of individuals reacted dramatically
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406. when they were shown
different kinds of images.
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407. The changes had nothing to do
with the changes in the light -
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408. they came from
within the human being.
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409. And Dr Hess believed that
they gave you a way of seeing
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410. the hidden emotional responses that
were going on inside the mind.
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411. Feelings that the individual might
not want to tell you about...
Copy !req
412. .. or even be aware of.
Copy !req
413. You were looking directly
at the brain.
Copy !req
414. Really, since the...
Copy !req
415. .. the eye is very, very intimately
a part of the brain,
Copy !req
416. embryologically and anatomically,
Copy !req
417. it is almost the same as though
they were a piece of the brain
Copy !req
418. sticking out, behaving,
Copy !req
419. and all the world is there
to be able to see it.
Copy !req
420. And if that's so, what ought
to be reflected or mirrored
Copy !req
421. in the eye...
Copy !req
422. ..is really
the behaviour of the brain.
Copy !req
423. Jiang Qing was now the most
powerful woman in the world.
Copy !req
424. She was in charge of
giant cohorts of Red Guards
Copy !req
425. that she'd guided and told
who to attack and destroy.
Copy !req
426. High-up members
of the Communist Party were seized
Copy !req
427. and paraded in front of tens
of thousands of screaming people
Copy !req
428. and forced to confess
to thought crimes
Copy !req
429. against the revolution.
Copy !req
430. If they didn't,
they were beaten and killed.
Copy !req
431. But in reality,
Jiang Qing had lost control.
Copy !req
432. The revolution had never really
changed the structure of power
Copy !req
433. in China,
Copy !req
434. and what she and Mao Zedong
had unleashed was a vast anger
Copy !req
435. and resentment against the elites
that was now bursting out
Copy !req
436. and overwhelming the country.
Copy !req
437. In Beijing,
there were mass killings,
Copy !req
438. with bodies being thrown down wells
Copy !req
439. or intercommunal burial pits.
Copy !req
440. In Shanghai, hundreds of those
targeted by the Red Guards
Copy !req
441. committed suicide.
Copy !req
442. But Jiang Qing had become famous
Copy !req
443. in the West.
Copy !req
444. A feminist writer from America,
called Roxane Witke,
Copy !req
445. came to Beijing to interview her.
Copy !req
446. But as she talked to Jiang Qing,
Witke began to realise
Copy !req
447. that something else
was also going on,
Copy !req
448. that Jiang Qing
was using her new power
Copy !req
449. to avenge herself and all those
who had dismissed her
Copy !req
450. or patronised her in the past.
Copy !req
451. Jiang Qing also had a demon
inside her.
Copy !req
452. One of the main themes of her life
was avenging herself against men
Copy !req
453. who wronged her -
politically, mainly -
Copy !req
454. when she was in her 20s.
Copy !req
455. And she did not strike back
against them
Copy !req
456. until the time
of the Cultural Revolution,
Copy !req
457. some 20 years later.
Copy !req
458. They still had refused
to give her access to the masses
Copy !req
459. and to allow her to work.
Copy !req
460. And she finally destroyed them.
Copy !req
461. How?
Copy !req
462. They were removed from their posts,
Copy !req
463. they were humiliated
before the people,
Copy !req
464. placards were put over their chests,
Copy !req
465. they were dragged before the masses.
Copy !req
466. They were humiliated.
They were destroyed.
Copy !req
467. Jiang Qing also turned on everyone
who, in Shanghai in the 1930s,
Copy !req
468. had held her film career back.
Copy !req
469. Studio heads, directors
Copy !req
470. and journalists were dismissed
and beaten up.
Copy !req
471. But the worst was saved
for the film star Li Lili.
Copy !req
472. They had starred together
in Bloodshed On Wolf Mountain.
Copy !req
473. Jiang Qing had always believed
Copy !req
474. that Li Lili
had deliberately upstaged her.
Copy !req
475. Now, Li Lili and her husband
were seized by Red Guards.
Copy !req
476. Jiang Qing ordered them
to be tortured.
Copy !req
477. Li Lili survived...
Copy !req
478. .. but her husband couldn't bear it,
Copy !req
479. and he committed suicide.
Copy !req
480. We have warned every person
in the world
Copy !req
481. not to visit Palestine
Copy !req
482. because Palestine
is not a tourist attraction.
Copy !req
483. It's a battlefield,
Copy !req
484. and it is our land.
Copy !req
485. Anybody who'll get killed
or injured in Palestine
Copy !req
486. would be carrying
his own responsibility.
Copy !req
487. Horst Mahler and a group of
other German revolutionaries
Copy !req
488. secretly went to a Palestinian
training camp in Jordan.
Copy !req
489. They had decided to train
in urban guerrilla warfare.
Copy !req
490. But things didn't go well
from the very start.
Copy !req
491. One of the leaders of the group,
Andreas Baader,
Copy !req
492. insisted on having
mixed sleeping quarters.
Copy !req
493. Then the female members of the group
started to sunbathe on the roof.
Copy !req
494. The commander of the camp
told them to stop.
Copy !req
495. Overhead!
Copy !req
496. Baader argued with him.
Copy !req
497. The anti-imperialist struggle
and sexual emancipation, he said,
Copy !req
498. must go hand in hand.
Copy !req
499. The commander refused.
Copy !req
500. Baader put it more bluntly.
Copy !req
501. "Fucking and shooting," he said,
"are the same thing."
Copy !req
502. Then Horst Mahler found
that the fedayeen fighters
Copy !req
503. in the camp had brought
in pictures of Hitler.
Copy !req
504. They pointed at them
and said, "Good man,"
Copy !req
505. because he had killed the Jews.
Copy !req
506. "That was very hard for us,"
Mahler later said,
Copy !req
507. "because we had a feeling
of guilt about the Jews.
Copy !req
508. "We were very upset."
Copy !req
509. In the end, the Germans went
on strike because they weren't
Copy !req
510. being given enough bullets
each day to shoot with.
Copy !req
511. So the commander stormed their house
and threw them out.
Copy !req
512. They came back to West Germany,
Copy !req
513. helped by the East German Stasi,
Copy !req
514. who saw it as a way
of destabilising the West.
Copy !req
515. And the revolutionaries set out
to use their training
Copy !req
516. to force the West German state
to reveal its true fascist face.
Copy !req
517. Afeni Shakur was now
a full-time member
Copy !req
518. of the Black Panther chapter
in New York.
Copy !req
519. She was certain that
the only solution in America
Copy !req
520. was violent uprising.
Copy !req
521. She spent her time writing poems
calling for revolution.
Copy !req
522. But the problem was that
she and many of the others
Copy !req
523. in her cell didn't know
what to do to make this happen.
Copy !req
524. They watched enviously as other
Black Panthers on the West Coast
Copy !req
525. fought running battles with
the police and the military.
Copy !req
526. All we have to say is,
all power to the people,
Copy !req
527. and you can jail a revolutionary
Copy !req
528. but you sure can't jail
a revolution.
Copy !req
529. Baby, you're gonna have
some dealing to do,
Copy !req
530. cos niggers ain't gonna stop
until they either get freedom
Copy !req
531. or destroy everything
that they run across.
Copy !req
532. The question of who to attack
in New York
Copy !req
533. got more and more complicated.
Copy !req
534. Some of the Panthers argued
that they should target the ruthless
Copy !req
535. landlords who made them live
in rotting apartments,
Copy !req
536. and the bankers
who refused to lend blacks money
Copy !req
537. so they could never escape
from the slums.
Copy !req
538. These, they said, were the agents
of imperialist control.
Copy !req
539. But in New York,
Copy !req
540. the majority of landlords
and bankers were Jewish.
Copy !req
541. And we are being exploited
by people who are not...
Copy !req
542. ..do not live in our colonies,
you see, or in our communities,
Copy !req
543. who come into our communities
and exploit us every day, you see,
Copy !req
544. and they take the money back
to their communities.
Copy !req
545. So this is like
a colonial imperialism
Copy !req
546. in all content, you see.
Copy !req
547. And the people who exploit us
in our immediate communities,
Copy !req
548. particularly in New York City,
are Zionist Jews.
Copy !req
549. Afeni Shakur's group
came up with a plan.
Copy !req
550. They were going to plant bombs
Copy !req
551. in big department stores
like Macy's...
Copy !req
552. .. and they would also bomb
the Bronx Botanical Gardens
Copy !req
553. and attack local police stations.
Copy !req
554. But as they developed the plan,
Afeni Shakur began to worry.
Copy !req
555. She didn't want to kill civilians...
Copy !req
556. .. and she felt they were being
bullied into it
Copy !req
557. by one of their group.
Copy !req
558. He was one of the founder members
of the cell,
Copy !req
559. whose revolutionary name
was Yedwa Sudan.
Copy !req
560. And Afeni Shakur started
to be suspicious.
Copy !req
561. She wondered if he might really
be an undercover policeman.
Copy !req
562. Shakur told another member
of the group about her suspicions,
Copy !req
563. who then went
and confronted Yedwa Sudan.
Copy !req
564. Sudan immediately pulled out a gun,
Copy !req
565. fired two bullets into the table
in front of him and denied it.
Copy !req
566. He said that Afeni Shakur
Copy !req
567. was just being a typical
emotional woman.
Copy !req
568. And the group believed him,
not her.
Copy !req
569. When Michael X came out of jail,
Copy !req
570. he found that the world
had completely changed,
Copy !req
571. but not in the way he had hoped.
Copy !req
572. The middle-class radicals
who, only a year before,
Copy !req
573. had been
his most fervent supporters,
Copy !req
574. suddenly didn't want
to know him any more.
Copy !req
575. In Notting Hill, no-one talked
of violent revolution
Copy !req
576. or of bringing down
the corrupt power structure.
Copy !req
577. Instead, a new group had turned up.
Copy !req
578. They looked like young radicals,
Copy !req
579. but they had
a rather different agenda.
Copy !req
580. Hundreds of student volunteers
from all over the country
Copy !req
581. had come to do a massive survey
Copy !req
582. of everyone who lived
in Notting Hill.
Copy !req
583. It was the beginning
of what was called community action.
Copy !req
584. They were going to use the data
to create neighbourhood centres,
Copy !req
585. which they said would be a different
way of empowering the local people.
Copy !req
586. Parts of Notting Hill
are closed off
Copy !req
587. from the general mainstream
of society,
Copy !req
588. treated differently from society,
Copy !req
589. sometimes treated
as a social dustbin,
Copy !req
590. sometimes treated as a ghetto.
Copy !req
591. Hello.
Copy !req
592. Now, I think you've got...?
Copy !req
593. We've got the lighting,
we pay for it ourself.
Copy !req
594. And you pay for it yourself?
Yes, and the heating.
Copy !req
595. Cleaning. This doesn't really apply
to you, this applies to
Copy !req
596. other people...
Copy !req
597. ..in other sorts of rented
accommodations.
Copy !req
598. We do that ourselves.
You do that yourself? Yes.
Copy !req
599. Also room service doesn't
really apply either, I imagine.
Copy !req
600. No.
Copy !req
601. But soon, many of the local
black residents who were involved
Copy !req
602. with the project resigned...
Copy !req
603. .. because power seemed to remain
firmly with the white professionals.
Copy !req
604. And we go in, in an orderly fashion
Copy !req
605. and no damage to the property
at all, please.
Copy !req
606. Well, what made me resign
is because I don't think
Copy !req
607. that enough local people
Copy !req
608. were being involved, is it?
Copy !req
609. And by local people,
I mean West Indians.
Copy !req
610. Students can't do much.
Copy !req
611. They're relegated to a role
Copy !req
612. of just getting information.
Copy !req
613. Isn't that worthwhile?
Copy !req
614. Well, I suppose it's worthwhile,
Copy !req
615. but it depends
on how the information
Copy !req
616. will be used afterwards.
Copy !req
617. The aim of Black Power
had been that people would organise
Copy !req
618. themselves so they could stand up
against those who ruled them.
Copy !req
619. Michael X realised that what was
happening now in Notting Hill
Copy !req
620. was the opposite.
Copy !req
621. People were being treated
as subjects,
Copy !req
622. to be counted and measured...
Copy !req
623. .. and managed.
Copy !req
624. He became increasingly cynical
about the liberals' real intentions.
Copy !req
625. These places always
have fantastic space.
Copy !req
626. Oh, this is a tremendous
place if you've got the money.
Copy !req
627. If you want to have a party
or something. A party, yeah.
Copy !req
628. A few years ago,
you were reported to have said
Copy !req
629. that whites who claim to help you
Copy !req
630. are out to kill you.
Copy !req
631. Do you, um, still believe that?
Copy !req
632. Yes.
Copy !req
633. I'm thinking, when I said that,
I was referring to people
Copy !req
634. who are described as white liberals.
Copy !req
635. They are some of the most vicious
Copy !req
636. people I find in this country,
Copy !req
637. for the simple reason... Anywhere,
not just in this country.
Copy !req
638. Because they're the kind of people
who come to black neighbourhoods,
Copy !req
639. ostensibly to help black people.
Copy !req
640. Michael X had come to believe
that the talk of revolution
Copy !req
641. had just been empty rhetoric
that disguised something else.
Copy !req
642. The new groups might look
like radicals
Copy !req
643. and dance to black music,
Copy !req
644. but really they were the children
of the colonialists
Copy !req
645. who had run the Empire.
Copy !req
646. And they had no intention
of giving up their power.
Copy !req
647. That old system of power
was simply mutating,
Copy !req
648. morphing into a new form
Copy !req
649. that camouflaged itself
in radicalism...
Copy !req
650. .. but still would
manage and control.
Copy !req
651. Michael X was an ambitious man
Copy !req
652. who had badly wanted
political power.
Copy !req
653. I don't see anything to be terrified
about, about powerful black people.
Copy !req
654. I'm a pretty powerful black man.
Copy !req
655. I'm the most powerful black man
in Europe.
Copy !req
656. But now he saw that
he was never going to get it.
Copy !req
657. So he decided that he, too,
would revert
Copy !req
658. to the old forms of power
that he knew well -
Copy !req
659. extortion and violence.
Copy !req
660. He set up a new organisation
called the Black House.
Copy !req
661. It deliberately excluded whites.
Copy !req
662. He still talked
of violent revolution,
Copy !req
663. but really it was a front
for taking over drug-dealing
Copy !req
664. in parts of London.
Copy !req
665. He also persuaded John Lennon
and Yoko Ono, who had shaved
Copy !req
666. off their hair, to donate it
and a large amount of money
Copy !req
667. to the Black House.
Copy !req
668. Michael X took the money
and pocketed it for himself.
Copy !req
669. Michael was putting every single
cent he could get in his own pocket.
Copy !req
670. He didn't care about black people.
Copy !req
671. What did they think of him
in the end, when it failed?
Copy !req
672. Well, they thought
he was just a cheap con man.
Copy !req
673. They... They...
Copy !req
674. .. lost faith in Michael
Copy !req
675. in the end,
Copy !req
676. but he was just playing
his games, you know.
Copy !req
677. And why do you think he did that?
Copy !req
678. Because Michael doesn't
Copy !req
679. believe in Black Power.
Copy !req
680. Michael is just on a power trip
Copy !req
681. for, you know, for his own benefit.
Copy !req
682. Michael doesn't like black people
Copy !req
683. because Michael is half white.
Copy !req
684. In a short time,
I'm going to ask you
Copy !req
685. to put your face up against
that face piece and look in this box
Copy !req
686. while I ask you to solve
some multiplication problems
Copy !req
687. in your head.
Copy !req
688. The problems
will be relatively simple.
Copy !req
689. They'll give be given
to you verbally,
Copy !req
690. and I will ask you to give me
the answer verbally back.
Copy !req
691. Give me only the answer.
Once you have given me the answer,
Copy !req
692. dismiss the problem from your mind
and we'll go on to a next one.
Copy !req
693. Many psychologists had begun
to take Dr Hess's experiments
Copy !req
694. with the pupils of the eye further.
Copy !req
695. They were fascinated by the idea
that there might be other forces
Copy !req
696. inside the mind that people
themselves weren't aware of.
Copy !req
697. One of them was a young
psychologist studying
Copy !req
698. in America, called Daniel Kahneman.
Copy !req
699. His fascination with the complexity
of the mind had come
Copy !req
700. from a moment of terror
when he was a child,
Copy !req
701. living in Nazi-occupied France
during the Second World War.
Copy !req
702. One day, he had been stopped
by an SS officer.
Copy !req
703. Kahneman was a Jew,
Copy !req
704. and the SS was in charge of sending
people to the death camps.
Copy !req
705. He was convinced that he was about
to be sent away to be killed.
Copy !req
706. But the SS man picked him up,
kissed him
Copy !req
707. and showed him pictures
of his own son in Germany.
Copy !req
708. Kahneman decided that the human mind
was very strange
Copy !req
709. and full of contradictory impulses.
Copy !req
710. 17 times 19.
Copy !req
711. Now, he, along
with other psychologists
Copy !req
712. inspired by Dr Hess,
studied the pupils in people's eyes
Copy !req
713. as they gave them
all kinds of problems to solve
Copy !req
714. while distracting them
with music and noise.
Copy !req
715. 223.
Copy !req
716. They were trying to probe further
into the human brain,
Copy !req
717. to see how it responded
to the world outside
Copy !req
718. in ways that the individual
wasn't aware of.
Copy !req
719. But as Kahneman and the others
watched the individuals
Copy !req
720. in their laboratories,
isolated from the society outside,
Copy !req
721. they were led down
a very strange path,
Copy !req
722. that in the age when the individual
self was going to become
Copy !req
723. the central focus, from politics
through to consumerism,
Copy !req
724. the scientists were going to
come to the conclusion
Copy !req
725. that maybe the conscious self wasn't
fully in control of what humans did.
Copy !req
726. 35 years later, Kahneman was going
to be given the Nobel Prize
Copy !req
727. for a theory that began
with his work in the 1960s.
Copy !req
728. He would come to believe
that what we think of as the self
Copy !req
729. is really just a small part
of something else
Copy !req
730. hidden inside our brains -
a much larger part of the brain
Copy !req
731. that actually experiences
the world outside.
Copy !req
732. But that experience makes no sense -
Copy !req
733. it is just an ongoing, chaotic rush
of biochemical data
Copy !req
734. that flashes up and fades away.
Copy !req
735. And what humans think of
as their self
Copy !req
736. is actually an accessory
that tries to make sense
Copy !req
737. of this chaotic mass
of incoming data.
Copy !req
738. But, to do that, it has to simplify
Copy !req
739. and turn that data into stories
that are sometimes so simplified
Copy !req
740. that they bear little relationship
to the reality outside.
Copy !req
741. It gives people the feeling
that they are in control,
Copy !req
742. but that is
just a comforting illusion.
Copy !req
743. Kahneman's theory was going
to have far-reaching influence
Copy !req
744. beyond psychology.
Copy !req
745. Because the implication
of what he was saying
Copy !req
746. was that you could never change
people's behaviour
Copy !req
747. by appealing to them rationally.
Copy !req
748. And, in a strange way,
Copy !req
749. Kahneman was saying the same thing
as the left-wing revolutionaries.
Copy !req
750. Human beings did live
in a simplified dream world.
Copy !req
751. But what he was saying
Copy !req
752. was that there was nothing
you could do about that.
Copy !req
753. And in an age of individualism,
Copy !req
754. when you could no longer
order people about,
Copy !req
755. the only solution was to keep them
in that dream world
Copy !req
756. and to make sure the dream world
was safe and happy.
Copy !req
757. The idea of appealing
to them rationally
Copy !req
758. and changing the world...
Copy !req
759. .. was pointless.
Copy !req
760. By now, China was in a state
of almost civil war.
Copy !req
761. Different groups of armed Red Guards
were fighting running battles
Copy !req
762. with each other
in all the major cities.
Copy !req
763. But Jiang Qing still believed
Copy !req
764. that real power
was almost within her grasp.
Copy !req
765. She had destroyed the one man
who was seen as Mao's successor,
Copy !req
766. Liu Shaoqi.
Copy !req
767. Red Guards took Liu from his house,
Copy !req
768. and he was beaten up
and imprisoned.
Copy !req
769. Everyone, including children,
Copy !req
770. were told that he, too, was a demon.
Copy !req
771. Then suddenly,
Mao turned on Jiang Qing.
Copy !req
772. At a public meeting
of those in charge
Copy !req
773. of the Cultural Revolution,
he told her,
Copy !req
774. "You are someone
who has grandiose aims
Copy !req
775. "but puny abilities,
Copy !req
776. "great ambition, but little talent."
Copy !req
777. Jiang Qing realised
that she was being dropped.
Copy !req
778. In her operas, Jiang Qing
had gone back into China's past.
Copy !req
779. Her aim had been to rework them,
to express a new kind of revolution.
Copy !req
780. But, in reality, she had reawakened
a dark and poisonous violence
Copy !req
781. that had lurked under the surface
of China for hundreds of years.
Copy !req
782. It was driven by a resentment
of the rigid hierarchies
Copy !req
783. that the revolution
had not really changed.
Copy !req
784. Mao had not given her or anyone else
guidance about what to do
Copy !req
785. with the fury
that she had summoned up.
Copy !req
786. And now she knew why.
Copy !req
787. He had simply been using her -
and the violence that she created -
Copy !req
788. as a way of destroying
all opposition to him.
Copy !req
789. He had no other vision of
how to solve the old divisions
Copy !req
790. and resentments in China.
Copy !req
791. His only aim had been to get rid
of all his rivals in the party.
Copy !req
792. Jiang Qing had been betrayed
yet again.
Copy !req
793. The members of the Red Army Faction
were now planting bombs
Copy !req
794. and robbing banks
all across West Germany.
Copy !req
795. They announced
that they had now become Maoists,
Copy !req
796. followers of Mao Zedong,
Copy !req
797. and they were going to awaken
the popular masses.
Copy !req
798. The government were desperate
to capture them,
Copy !req
799. and they turned to a man
who said he knew how to find them.
Copy !req
800. He was called Horst Herold.
Copy !req
801. He was the head of a tiny
federal crime investigation unit.
Copy !req
802. It had no real power,
Copy !req
803. because any national police system
was prohibited by law
Copy !req
804. to stop Nazism
from ever re-emerging.
Copy !req
805. But Herold insisted
that the only way
Copy !req
806. to catch the terrorists
hidden in the cities
Copy !req
807. was to reintroduce control
from the centre.
Copy !req
808. His solution was to use a computer,
Copy !req
809. because there was no law
to stop that.
Copy !req
810. Working day and night
inside a protected complex,
Copy !req
811. Herold created
a giant computer network
Copy !req
812. that monitored the movements
of millions of people.
Copy !req
813. He also fed into the computer
vast amounts of data,
Copy !req
814. not just about
the terrorists themselves,
Copy !req
815. but others who, in his words,
represented a danger -
Copy !req
816. individuals the data showed might
become terrorists in the future.
Copy !req
817. From all this, Herold created
what he called logical sequences -
Copy !req
818. patterns drawn from the data
Copy !req
819. that predicted where the terrorists
might be hiding in the cities.
Copy !req
820. What he had invented was
a new rational bureaucracy,
Copy !req
821. working from the centre,
in which information was control.
Copy !req
822. It was the start
of mass electronic surveillance.
Copy !req
823. And it caught the terrorists.
Copy !req
824. But Horst Herold was not
just an unthinking technocrat.
Copy !req
825. By studying all the data, he had,
he believed, come to understand
Copy !req
826. that the terrorists were just
a tiny part of something much bigger
Copy !req
827. that was happening
all across the world -
Copy !req
828. something that those in power
did not yet comprehend.
Copy !req
829. And, in 1973,
he made an extraordinary speech
Copy !req
830. that laid out
the world that he saw coming.
Copy !req
831. The violence and the horror that
the terrorists created, he said,
Copy !req
832. did not just happen
because of something evil or sick
Copy !req
833. inside their heads.
Copy !req
834. It was a reaction
to the new system of power
Copy !req
835. that was rising up
across the world.
Copy !req
836. It was the system that the radicals
had identified in the 1960s -
Copy !req
837. the new global networks
of multinational corporations
Copy !req
838. and international finance
Copy !req
839. that they believed were ruthlessly
exploiting the world.
Copy !req
840. If you want to get rid of
the terrorism, Herold said,
Copy !req
841. there are two alternatives.
Copy !req
842. You either use political power
Copy !req
843. to change and reform
that global system.
Copy !req
844. Or you decide to
systematically control the people,
Copy !req
845. and their anger
and their discontent.
Copy !req
846. But, to do that, you would have
to create surveillance networks
Copy !req
847. like the one he had built,
but on a global scale.
Copy !req
848. In Notting Hill,
all the politics had gone.
Copy !req
849. The counterculture
had transformed completely
Copy !req
850. into a new kind of consumerism,
with self-expression at its heart.
Copy !req
851. Michael X left London in disgust
and he went back to Trinidad.
Copy !req
852. He moved into a large house
hidden away in the suburbs.
Copy !req
853. He said that he was going to set up
a new radical organisation
Copy !req
854. called the University
of the Alternative,
Copy !req
855. but it was clear that he was
in a manic state of mind
Copy !req
856. and increasingly paranoid.
Copy !req
857. Then, one night,
the compound burned down,
Copy !req
858. and Michael X disappeared.
Copy !req
859. The police found a hidden grave
in the garden.
Copy !req
860. In it was the body of one
of Michael X's last disciples,
Copy !req
861. Gale Benson,
the daughter of a conservative MP.
Copy !req
862. She had discovered that Michael X's
real plan was to grow marijuana
Copy !req
863. and export it to the United States,
Copy !req
864. so he had ordered a group of his men
to kill her.
Copy !req
865. He told one of them, Steve Yeates,
Copy !req
866. that she was an undercover agent
from the CIA.
Copy !req
867. She was seized from behind
and stabbed several times
Copy !req
868. across the body with a knife.
Copy !req
869. She was struggling very violently.
Copy !req
870. And Steve Yeates, who wasn't even
supposed to be part
Copy !req
871. of this particular operation,
became impatient.
Copy !req
872. He grabbed a cutlass,
Copy !req
873. which in these parts is a long knife
used for cutting sugar cane,
Copy !req
874. and plunged it
straight into her neck.
Copy !req
875. Well, that was the fatal blow.
Copy !req
876. The men then piled stones
on top of her
Copy !req
877. and filled in the rest
of the grave.
Copy !req
878. Sometime later, Malik phoned the
house to see what the situation was,
Copy !req
879. and Steve Yeates simply told him,
"The tree is planted."
Copy !req
880. Michael X fled to Guyana.
Copy !req
881. He then headed south,
away from the towns,
Copy !req
882. down a small trail,
past mining camps.
Copy !req
883. His aim was to get to the river
Copy !req
884. and take a boat upriver
into the jungle,
Copy !req
885. where he would be safe.
Copy !req
886. It was the same jungle that
Edgar Mittelholzer had described
Copy !req
887. in his story about the ghosts
from the colonial past.
Copy !req
888. But there was one person
who was about to show that,
Copy !req
889. even in the growing mood
of paranoia and defeat,
Copy !req
890. an individual who believed
in the idea of revolution
Copy !req
891. could take on the power
of the state and defeat it.
Copy !req
892. One morning, armed police stormed
into Afeni Shakur's apartment
Copy !req
893. and arrested her.
Copy !req
894. All the other members of her cell
were also arrested.
Copy !req
895. They were charged
with what the government said
Copy !req
896. was a giant plan to destroy
"those elements of society,
Copy !req
897. "which the defendants
call the power structure".
Copy !req
898. It included
attacking police stations
Copy !req
899. and planning to bomb five
large department stores
Copy !req
900. and the Bronx Botanical Gardens.
Copy !req
901. They became known as the Panther 21.
Copy !req
902. Their trial was held
in a state of paranoia
Copy !req
903. about further attacks
by the Panthers.
Copy !req
904. But it also caused a sensation
Copy !req
905. when it was revealed that three
of the founding members of the group
Copy !req
906. had been undercover police officers.
Copy !req
907. What was stranger was that
some of those officers
Copy !req
908. seemed to have been unaware that
Copy !req
909. there were other undercover agents
in the cell.
Copy !req
910. They were also the most active
members of the group.
Copy !req
911. "We had to organise everything,"
Copy !req
912. one of the undercover agents
explained at the trial,
Copy !req
913. because everyone else
in the group was off doing
Copy !req
914. what they called "their own shit".
Copy !req
915. The prosecution claimed
that the group had been inspired
Copy !req
916. by violent revolutionary propaganda,
Copy !req
917. and in particular by the film
The Battle Of Algiers,
Copy !req
918. made about the Algerian struggle
against French colonialism.
Copy !req
919. They showed the film in the court.
Copy !req
920. Unlike all the other Panthers,
Copy !req
921. Afeni Shakur
chose to defend herself,
Copy !req
922. and at the end of the trial,
Copy !req
923. she cross-examined
the leading undercover agent.
Copy !req
924. He was the man
she had suspected from the start,
Copy !req
925. Yedwa Sudan.
Copy !req
926. His real name was Ralph White.
Copy !req
927. A journalist
who was in the courtroom
Copy !req
928. wrote a book
that described what happened.
Copy !req
929. She started
by getting White to admit
Copy !req
930. that, really, most of
the inspiration for the plots
Copy !req
931. came from the undercover agents.
Copy !req
932. Not only had they continually
pushed for the violence
Copy !req
933. and suggested the targets,
Copy !req
934. but they had also arranged
to buy the dynamite
Copy !req
935. off yet another undercover agent.
Copy !req
936. They had also arranged for the cars
to transport the dynamite.
Copy !req
937. That, really,
the plot to attack America
Copy !req
938. had been created and driven
by the American authorities.
Copy !req
939. But then Afeni Shakur went further.
Copy !req
940. She talked to White in the courtroom
not as a police officer,
Copy !req
941. but as a comrade
that she had spent 18 months with,
Copy !req
942. and asked him about the activism
Copy !req
943. that they had done together
in the community.
Copy !req
944. He said that he thought
what they had done
Copy !req
945. was "powerful, inspiring and,"
he said, "beautiful".
Copy !req
946. She asked if he had misrepresented
the Panthers to his police bosses.
Copy !req
947. He said yes.
Copy !req
948. She asked if he had betrayed
the community.
Copy !req
949. He said yes.
Copy !req
950. When the jury was sent out,
Copy !req
951. they talked for 40 minutes,
came back
Copy !req
952. and acquitted all the defendants.
Copy !req
953. It was a powerful example
Copy !req
954. of how an individual
could challenge those in power...
Copy !req
955. .. and win.
Copy !req
956. But, at the same time,
the revelations at the trial
Copy !req
957. of how the Panthers had been
penetrated and manipulated
Copy !req
958. fed the growing paranoia that was
tearing the radical movement apart.
Copy !req
959. Violent
by Tupac
Copy !req
960. All four - Jiang Qing, Afeni Shakur,
Copy !req
961. Michael X
and the German revolutionaries
Copy !req
962. had all set out
to try and confront their societies
Copy !req
963. and change the structure of power.
Copy !req
964. But all of them, in different ways,
had unleashed violence
Copy !req
965. that was lurking
underneath those societies.
Copy !req
966. The roots of that violence lay back
in the past,
Copy !req
967. in anger and resentment
against those in power
Copy !req
968. who had made their different
countries rich and powerful,
Copy !req
969. but to do that
had ruthlessly exploited others...
Copy !req
970. .. and had kept much of the spoils
for themselves.
Copy !req
971. The violence had burst out
in different ways
Copy !req
972. across whole societies,
among groups,
Copy !req
973. and inside
the revolutionaries' own heads.
Copy !req
974. But all of them became overwhelmed
by the paranoia and suspicion
Copy !req
975. and the horror that resulted.
Copy !req
976. And all of them
had failed in their aims.
Copy !req
977. Now, those in charge
of the societies
Copy !req
978. wanted to get rid of that violence,
to wipe it and hide it away.
Copy !req
979. And, in Germany, the revolutionaries
were going to help them do it.
Copy !req
980. In 1976, two of the remaining
German revolutionaries
Copy !req
981. helped Palestinians
hijack an Air France plane.
Copy !req
982. They flew it to Entebbe, in Uganda.
Copy !req
983. What happened next
shocked the world.
Copy !req
984. The terrorists took the hostages
into the departure hall.
Copy !req
985. Then they began to separate
the Israeli passengers
Copy !req
986. from the non-Israelis.
Copy !req
987. The Israelis were the ones
who would be executed
Copy !req
988. if the plane was stormed.
Copy !req
989. To the other radicals, watching
from inside prisons in Germany,
Copy !req
990. who dreamed of revolution,
Copy !req
991. it seemed as if those dreams
had now led them
Copy !req
992. to behave exactly
as the Nazis had done.
Copy !req
993. Was it frightening when you realised
that that was happening?
Copy !req
994. Yeah, of course.
Awfully frightening.
Copy !req
995. This... One of the main points
in the development -
Copy !req
996. the awareness
that we are from the same...
Copy !req
997. .. stuff as the fascists were.
Copy !req
998. We understood something,
Copy !req
999. we understood that fascism
Copy !req
1000. is a component in all of us.
Copy !req
1001. But we don't know
how to handle this contradiction.
Copy !req
1002. We don't have any way to live
with this evil part in ourselves.
Copy !req
1003. The Israelis mounted
a rescue at Entebbe.
Copy !req
1004. The hostages were saved,
but the terrorists were killed.
Copy !req
1005. But the Germans' behaviour
in the hijack
Copy !req
1006. had an incredibly powerful effect
on radicals and liberals
Copy !req
1007. all across the West.
Copy !req
1008. Three years before, the man
who had been chasing the terrorists,
Copy !req
1009. Horst Herold,
had argued that the violence
Copy !req
1010. did not just come
from inside them...
Copy !req
1011. .. that they were reacting
Copy !req
1012. to something
that was happening in the world.
Copy !req
1013. But now the revolutionaries
and many of their supporters
Copy !req
1014. began to argue that maybe
the violence was not in the system,
Copy !req
1015. it was inside them.
Copy !req
1016. A year later, a group
of their supporters captured
Copy !req
1017. and killed a leading industrialist
called Hanns Martin Schleyer.
Copy !req
1018. He had also been
a leading Nazi in the war.
Copy !req
1019. At the same time,
Copy !req
1020. three of the leading revolutionaries
killed themselves in prison.
Copy !req
1021. In an extraordinary moment,
on one day in October 1977,
Copy !req
1022. two funerals were held
in the same city, Stuttgart.
Copy !req
1023. One was for the revolutionaries.
Copy !req
1024. Hundreds of their supporters
flooded into the cemetery,
Copy !req
1025. watched by 1,000 armed police.
Copy !req
1026. The other was
for Hanns Martin Schleyer.
Copy !req
1027. The leaders of the industrial
and financial establishment
Copy !req
1028. came together at a church
in the centre of the city.
Copy !req
1029. It was a moment that dramatically
symbolised what had happened.
Copy !req
1030. The industrialists and the bankers
had come not just to mourn Schleyer,
Copy !req
1031. but to bury any idea
of radical change in Germany.
Copy !req
1032. And, for the radicals, it was
the moment after all the violence
Copy !req
1033. and all the failures
when pessimism finally took hold.
Copy !req
1034. It said this is what all radical
attempts to change the world
Copy !req
1035. inevitably lead to.
Copy !req
1036. And in the growing age
of the individual,
Copy !req
1037. it led to the conclusion
that the fault is inside you,
Copy !req
1038. the individual,
Copy !req
1039. not in society.
Copy !req
1040. Those who had wanted to change
the world now began to turn inwards.
Copy !req
1041. This distrust
was going to be reinforced
Copy !req
1042. by the growing influence
of the psychologists
Copy !req
1043. who said that human beings
were really irrational
Copy !req
1044. and lived in a dream world.
Copy !req
1045. Out of that was going to come
the modern system of power
Copy !req
1046. in which psychology would join
with economics and with finance
Copy !req
1047. to make sure that
that dream world was managed.
Copy !req
1048. It would be a wonderful world
to live in.
Copy !req
1049. But its weakness will be that,
at its root,
Copy !req
1050. was a pessimism about human beings
Copy !req
1051. and whether they should ever
be allowed any control.
Copy !req
1052. While outside the dream world,
Copy !req
1053. the things that the revolutionaries
had wanted to change so much -
Copy !req
1054. the inequalities, the racism
and the exploitation -
Copy !req
1055. would all remain untouched
Copy !req
1056. and would continue to grow,
unnoticed.
Copy !req
1057. But some of the revolutionaries
saw what was happening and adjusted.
Copy !req
1058. Eldridge Cleaver, who had been one
of the leading Black Panthers,
Copy !req
1059. set up his own fashion company.
Copy !req
1060. He designed what he called
revolutionary trousers.
Copy !req
1061. They had a flap at the front,
Copy !req
1062. which he said
would liberate the penis.
Copy !req
1063. While his fellow revolutionary,
Bobby Seale,
Copy !req
1064. became a celebrity chef.
Copy !req
1065. Featuring the founding chairman
Copy !req
1066. of the Black Panther Party
Copy !req
1067. and griller extraordinaire,
Bobby Seale!
Copy !req
1068. But one revolutionary
was still not going to give up.
Copy !req
1069. Jiang Qing now joined
with three others
Copy !req
1070. who had run the Cultural Revolution.
Copy !req
1071. They were determined
to seize power when Mao died.
Copy !req
1072. They were known as the Gang of Four.
Copy !req
1073. And Michael X
never made it to the river.
Copy !req
1074. He was captured and brought back
to stand trial in Trinidad.
Copy !req
1075. He was found guilty of murder...
Copy !req
1076. .. and hanged.
Copy !req
1077. And, in the future, the violence
and the anger would be played out
Copy !req
1078. in the artificial world of culture.
Copy !req
1079. It would be the images
and the words of revolution.
Copy !req
1080. But, in reality,
nothing ever really changed.
Copy !req
1081. And what was forgotten
in this new age,
Copy !req
1082. including by the psychologists
Copy !req
1083. who were exploring the self
by drilling ever deeper,
Copy !req
1084. was that what you are
and what you feel
Copy !req
1085. comes not just from inside you
Copy !req
1086. but from where you are
in the power structure,
Copy !req
1087. because that flows through you, too.
Copy !req
1088. When you see
an individual white boy,
Copy !req
1089. you're not afraid
of that individual white boy.
Copy !req
1090. What you are afraid of
is the power that he represents,
Copy !req
1091. because behind him
stands the local police force,
Copy !req
1092. the state militia, the Army,
the Navy, the Air Force...
Copy !req
1093. When you see an African,
there is no power behind him.
Copy !req
1094. There is no-one
speaking for his interests.
Copy !req
1095. There is no-one to protect him.
Copy !req
1096. The guerrilla studies.
Copy !req
1097. The guerrilla studies,
he doesn't rest.
Copy !req
1098. He studies and keeps his mouth shut.
Copy !req
1099. Study, children, study!
Copy !req