

#13 – God’s Socialist, pt. 3: Head North, Then Turn Left
Jun 24, 2019
04:02:19
King's Courage
- King received threats during the Montgomery bus boycott, causing anxiety.
- Despite a bomb threat at his home, he preached non-violence.
Threats and Anxiety
- King faced constant threats and harassment, including a call warning of violence.
- His anxiety grew, and he prayed for strength during this difficult time.
King's Philosophy of Non-Violence
- King's response to attacks was not anger but a test of non-violence.
- He viewed each attack as another opportunity to prove his commitment.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app 1 chevron_right 2 chevron_right 3 chevron_right 4 chevron_right 5 chevron_right 6 chevron_right 7 chevron_right 8 chevron_right 9 chevron_right 10 chevron_right 11 chevron_right 12 chevron_right 13 chevron_right 14 chevron_right 15 chevron_right 16 chevron_right 17 chevron_right 18 chevron_right 19 chevron_right 20 chevron_right 21 chevron_right 22 chevron_right 23 chevron_right 24 chevron_right 25 chevron_right 26 chevron_right 27 chevron_right 28 chevron_right 29 chevron_right 30 chevron_right 31 chevron_right 32 chevron_right 33 chevron_right 34 chevron_right 35 chevron_right 36 chevron_right 37 chevron_right 38 chevron_right 39 chevron_right 40 chevron_right 41 chevron_right 42 chevron_right 43 chevron_right 44 chevron_right 45 chevron_right 46 chevron_right 47 chevron_right 48 chevron_right 49 chevron_right 50 chevron_right 51 chevron_right 52 chevron_right 53 chevron_right 54 chevron_right 55 chevron_right 56 chevron_right 57 chevron_right 58 chevron_right 59 chevron_right 60 chevron_right 61 chevron_right 62 chevron_right 63 chevron_right 64 chevron_right 65 chevron_right
Introduction
00:00 • 2min
The First Front in the Civil Rights Movement
01:38 • 4min
How to Let Go of Your Worry
05:15 • 3min
Martin Luther King's Prayers
07:51 • 5min
Segregation and Negroes
13:09 • 2min
The Triumph of Nonviolence
15:26 • 3min
King's Father Urged Him Not to Return to Montgomery
18:20 • 5min
Martin Luther King Jr.
23:36 • 3min
Love Your Enemies
26:11 • 6min
How to Train Negroes to Accept the Master's Code of Good Conduct
32:07 • 2min
The Importance of Being a Bully
33:53 • 5min
Living in the Officially Desegregated North
39:12 • 5min
The Roots of Black Radicalism
44:35 • 5min
Robert F. Williams - The One Man Factory of Anti-Americanism
49:52 • 2min
The Nation of Islam
52:03 • 4min
Malcolm X - Black Psychology
56:27 • 2min
Malcolm X and African Nationalism in Harlem
58:11 • 4min
SNCC - The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
01:02:02 • 2min
The Children of the Students of the 1960s
01:04:19 • 2min
The Young People of the Left-Wing Movement
01:06:06 • 4min
The Non-Violent Approach of the Civil Rights Movement
01:09:41 • 4min
SNCC and the Civil Rights Movement
01:14:01 • 2min
The Freedom Riders of Alabama and Mississippi
01:16:21 • 3min
A History of the Student Freedom Riders of the South
01:19:09 • 5min
SDS in the New Left
01:24:17 • 4min
The SDS Chapter at Michigan
01:27:54 • 5min
SDS and Socialism in the Early 1960s
01:32:47 • 2min
The Great Man Versus Trends and Forces
01:34:36 • 3min
Segregation and the 1960s and 1970s
01:37:12 • 4min
The Civil Rights Movement in the US
01:40:49 • 5min
We Can Never Be Satisfied
01:45:20 • 4min
Let Freedom Ring in America's to Be a Great Nation
01:49:41 • 4min
The Freedom Summer of 1964
01:54:06 • 2min
The Black Nationalism
01:55:47 • 5min
The White Man Is Without a Weapon
02:00:40 • 3min
We Hate Them Most of All
02:03:57 • 4min
The End of Malcolm X
02:08:24 • 5min
The Civil Rights Movement of 1965
02:13:28 • 3min
The Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s
02:16:26 • 6min
The Watts Riots of 1965
02:22:04 • 5min
Was It an Irrational Overreaction?
02:27:01 • 3min
The Dream of Martin Luther King
02:29:43 • 4min
Integration Is Not About Black and White Couples
02:33:27 • 2min
Ain't No Woman That Good?
02:35:23 • 1min
Martin Luther King and the Chicago Freedom Movement
02:36:25 • 5min
King's Civil Rights Campaign in the North Was Not an Attack on Outrageous Laws
02:41:27 • 5min
Martin Luther King's Nonviolent March in 1966
02:46:11 • 4min
SNCC and the Blacks
02:50:07 • 3min
The American Negro Is a Political Football
02:52:51 • 5min
The Black Negro Movement and Its Impact on the Civil Rights Movement
02:57:50 • 3min
Black Panthers in Memphis, Tennessee
03:00:47 • 5min
The Morality of Interracial Participation
03:05:42 • 2min
SNCC and Stokely Carmichael
03:07:58 • 3min
Black Power in the Summer of 1966
03:10:40 • 3min
The Name of the World Is the Name of the World
03:13:48 • 4min
The Black Panthers Are Just Americans Like Everyone Else
03:18:09 • 2min
How the New Panthers Got Away With Their Guns
03:20:29 • 5min
The Rise of the Panthers
03:25:29 • 5min
Rapp Brown and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
03:30:39 • 5min
The Black Panthers - A Black Panther's Story
03:35:54 • 3min
The Rape of Eldridge Cleaver
03:38:26 • 6min
The Black Power Cry
03:44:21 • 5min
Martin Luther King's Dissuasive Calls to Conscience
03:48:56 • 3min
The Story of Eldridge Cleaver
03:51:27 • 4min
America, America, I Wish I Was Deep in America Tonight
03:55:41 • 5min
In this episode I trace the trajectory of the civil rights movement through the 1960s, and the gradual shift in emphasis and leadership from the stoic southern marchers following Martin Luther King, Jr to the militant Black Power soldiers of the northern ghettos.
Support the show by subscribing to the MartyrMade Substack.