Talk:Malcolm X
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Am I the only person to notice the picture of the monkey? Thats racist This page and others are currently undergoing repeated attacks from IP addresses belonging to TV Cable S.A. An ongoing Abuse Report on this can be found at WP:AbRep - Please report all vandal attacks from IP addresses starting 200.x.x.x and especially either 200.118.x.x or 200.74.x.x on my talk page User talk:Heligoland. If you leave a vandalism warning, please also consider adding {{ISP|TV Cable S.A.}} to try and deter further vandalism and/or checking other contributions from that IP address for other vandalism. Heligoland 20:57, 2 November 2006 (UTC) "El-hajj"Regarding "Shabazz" comment: To say that Muslims do not add "el-hajj" to their names because it is "no longer a symbol of prestige as it used to be" is not true. Most pilgrims do not add the name because the intention for the holy pilgrimage is marred with a sense of gaining worldy recognition; and for Americans it is simply too cumbersome to be practical. Hajj and Hajji are often used to address those who have made the Hajj; it can also be used as a term of respect without knowledge of one's status as a "haji." Taking hajj, incidentally, is required of all capable Muslims during their lifetime; it IS INDEED respected by all Muslims to be a Hajj or Hajji so I am unclear as to why someone would write that it's no longer a symbol of prestige. Among Muslims, it most certainly is prestigous to have done your hajj obligation (and many do so several times), but is not generally used as a marker of one's socioeconomic status. "Shabazz"There seems to be some confusion here -- Malcolm adopted the name "Malik Shabazz" long before he ventured to Africa or the Middle East. It seems he started using the name "Malachi Shabazz" for his correspondence, starting as early as his prison time (I may be wrong on the timing), but then Elijah Muhammad later gave him the name "Malik." He added the el-Hajj and the "el-" prefix to the Shabazz after his hajj (those additions are largely superficial though, nowadays most Muslims who perform the hajj don't bother putting the "hajji" or "el-hajji" or "el-hajj" prefix before there names because it's no longer a symbol of prestige as it used to be). But he did have the name Malik Shabazz long before that. Perhaps his use of "el-Hajj" had some personal significance. His pilgrimage to Mecca is generally seen as the point in his life that marked his transformation into an all-embracing mainstream Muslim. Wife's nameAutobiography, page 231, the maiden name of his wife is given as Betty X. Malcolm (and Betty) changed their family name to Shabazz after Malcolm's hajj and tour of Africa, perhaps to signify that he had "recovered" his African heritage. Her maiden name was Sanders...Malcolm used the name Shabazz in correspondence in 1953...Betty joined NOI NY Temple 7 in 1957... See Malcolm's FBI FOIA HTH --Nazikiwe 08:54, 3 Feb 2005 (UTC) Remembered as "militant"From reading his autobiography, he doesn't seem to be militant at all. Where does this come from? Is this NPOV?
"Speaking as a black man from America, which is a racist society. No matter how much you hear it talk about democracy it's as racist as South Africa or as racist as Portugal or as racist as any other racialist society on this earth. The only difference between it and South Africa: South Africa preaches separation and practices separation. America preaches integration and practices segregation. This is the only difference. They don't practice what they preach. Or as South Africa preaches and practices the same thing. I have more respect for a man who let me know where he stands, even if he's wrong, then one who comes up like an angel and is nothing but a devil." -Our Holy Brother, Frater X:. Despite his change of view, he was most remembered for his anti-White speeches, which were emulated by other black nationalist organizations such as the Black Panthers. I wouldn't really consider the Black Panther Party to be anti-White (certainly not in the way Malcom X was during his NOI years), they had much more in common with X's post-NOI views. Saul Taylor 10:13, 6 Jan 2004 (UTC) There are sections for X's prison term and the Hajj, but nothing appears to occur between them. If this isn't the most important time in his life, it's one of the two most important. Note to self: create section named "Spokesman for the Nation of Islam" or something along those lines. Wife?I see no mention here whatsoever of his wife? --Golbez 03:24, Sep 28, 2004 (UTC) There is no link to the wikipedia article on "Betty Shabazz" yet. Meaning of X?Does the X signify something in particular? I assumed it didn't, until I saw the names "Norman 3X Butler, and Thomas 15X Johnson" in this article. I'm curious what the X's (and the numbers) mean. Back in the beginnings of the creation of the Black Muslims, they tended to use "X" instead of a last name because they claimed that their true African names had been stolen via slavery, and so they had no name to use. When there were several people in the same mosque with a name, they'd be John 2X, etc. As for the 3X Butler, etc., I can't answer that one. Nowadays, Black Muslims tend to take Arabic names and don't use the "X" so much any more. RickK 08:23, Oct 18, 2004 (UTC) Also, X stands for X-drinker, X-smoker, X-Christian, etc. This is stated in the main article. any doubts, "X" stands for unknown (as in mathematical excercises), since they couldnt really figure out what was their true last name, they prefered that it remained unknown. It also represents the unknown. In mathematics the letter x is used as a variable to represent the unknown. Since most African Americans were/are unable to trace back to our orginal name, the X was used in its' place. Brother Malcom stated this once before. To reiterate, the "X" means unknown and was used to indicate that the true surnames of one's ancestor was unknown and could never be known. The number before the "X", for example a person with the name "Donald 10X", would mean that there were 10 members of the same mosque with that first name. In such a case this individual would have been either the 10th person with that name to join the organization or the 10th person to drop his anglo-slave master name. NOTE: The meaning of the number could also represent the numberical value of the number generations of one's family known to have been held in bondage(e.g. "3X" means 3 generations of known slaves and no further information available). In practice typically the anglo-slavemaster surname was no longer used once the person "adopted" the new name so it would probably be incorrect to call someone "Norman 3X Bulter". It would be like calling Muhammad Ali by his birth name, Cassius Clay, so more than likely the source meant it as a backhanded insult (typical of the media in the 1960s). --If you peruse the official Malcolm X website--administered by his estate--you will find many references to so-and-so 10X so-and-so, including that same name formation for the two men who murdered him. It is also possible that source of mistakening it for a nickname or an alias. Therefore the source used the adopted name as a moniker and the person's legal name (Charles 'Lucky' Luciano). Again it was probably cited incorrectly by the source with the intent of being disrespectful. == Malcolm X stated in an interview that his surname was his slave name, handed down from generation to generation. The transition to X represented a kind of liberation and rejection (more of an rejection I would imagine) of that slave name. The Malcolm X documentry "Make it Plain" includes this interview and can be found on google video ==
In math, X could be solved by an equation. The ancestry of a african-american being "can never be unraveled", so therefore has no algebraic solution. Or does it? Recently, Oprah Winfrey's roots were partially traced back to her african tribe, though they didn't find her original last name. Is this the first step to finding the meaning of X? What exactly does the future hold?--Black and Proud 05:29, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
Link in article to Black Legion is wrong as far i can judge. -Svdmolen 20:46, 22 Dec 2004 (UTC) Created a disambiguation page for Black Legion and added a stub page for the Black Legion (murder cult). Read the FBI FOIA on the Black Legion and add to it if you can. --Nazikiwe 21:52, 2 Feb 2005 (UTC) Umrah or Hajj?Was Malcolm's Mecca experience a Hajj or an Umrah? (In other words, did it take place during Dhu Al-Hijjah, or some other time of year?) An anon altered the Umrah reference to Hajj, but I'm not sure which is correct. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 02:34, 27 Feb 2005 (UTC)
I am asking teh same question did he do the hajj or the umrah this information needs to be checked because hajj is hajj and umrah is umrah and we need accuracy. the title could be symbolic and the title is not a religious one so it has no factual relevance.--HalaTruth(ሀላካሕ) 07:06, 5 January 2007 (UTC) Pronunciation of XJohn X, Stephen X, Gregory X, Leo X, Innocent X, Clement X, and Pius X were popes, and when reading their names aloud, the X is pronounced "the tenth." Someone might say "Leo Eks excommunicated Martin Luther" as a mnemonic device, but usually, prononuncing the X in a pope's name as "Eks" is irreverent or derisory. With Malcolm X, the case is reversed: pronouncing his name as "Malcolm the tenth" is mockery. Since this article may be read for those who are learning of Malcolm X from reference material rather than oral tradition, and who might even be living during the reign of a future Boniface X, the article should make the correct pronunciation of Malcolm X's name explicit. -- Eustace Tilley Malcolm X's PositionsRight now, the article covers the events of Malcolm X's life, but only touches on what he advocated. I think we should have a section describing the positions he took during his life, with excerpts from his writings and speeches.
Boston linkThe Boston link could do with updating to point to the appropriate Boston article, but I'm not sure which it is. --John 23:06, 11 May 2005 (UTC) Publication Date for "Autobiography of Malcolm X"The article says that the "Autobiography of Malcolm X" was published in 1972, but this cannot be true. This was on our reading list when I was a Junior in High School in 1969-70 and, at that point, it was available in paperback. The NY Times reported today (14-May) that it was published in 1965, which seems likely to be correct. There will most probably be different published versions of the book as it gets re published throughout the years, 1972 may well be a re print year?
Civil rights activistNow was he really a civil rights activist? I see very little if any similarities with X and say Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu etc. —mikko (speak) 14:48, 23 May 2005 (UTC)
This is absolute nonsense and clearly an indication of someone's views of Malcolm X. activist: adj : advocating or engaged in activism [syn: activistic] n : a militant reformer [syn: militant] Malcolm X advocated civil rights for AfroAmericans. A civil rights activist is not by definition required to advocate civil rights for more than one group, although many do. Nor are they required to participate in peaceful activism (note that some animal rights activists and anti-globalist activists participate in less than peaceful demonstrations). Your point, therefore, is duly ignored. Assassination"Angry on-lookers in the crowd caught and beat the assassins as they attempted to flee the Ballroom" - they caught them and beat them, and they were never charged for the murder? Not even their identity is mentioned in the article. (clem 11:46, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)) Spike Lee jointHmmm, no mention of the Spike Lee film... Should i put the poster of the movie somewhere in the article or create a sepeate article? Project2501a 23:50, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)
It would appear i need better spectacles, appologies ^_^ Project2501a 01:45, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Speaking of the movie, do any of you understand what was going on with the numbers game young Malcolm played with West Indian Archie? I understand that it was a lottery of some kind, but I do not understand the specifics, by whom it was run or why Archie was going possibly to kill Malcolm because he (Archie) had forgotten the number 281. Was Malcolm X a pimp or racketeer?
I often hear Malcolm in his hustling days referred to as a "pimp", but never found any reference to him doing any pimping in his autobiography; indeed, he suggests he wouldn't be any good at it. One of his best friends was a pimp, but I wouldn't really call that being "involved" with pimping. Also, what made him a "racketeer"? Was it the numbers game? - furrykef (Talk at me) 15:21, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
It ain't easy, but it's necessary. insanityI think we have a good compromise in the insanity reference. The anon, however, insists on removing the fact that Malcolm X claimed to have feigned insanity to dodge the draft. Does someone have a copy of "Autobiography" handy? It's in chapter 7 somewhere. At any rate, the anon has some interesting comments on my talk page. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 05:46, 11 September 2005 (UTC)
editingI have honest and good-intentioned hopes of editing this article. Is there a way to circumvent the edit-block? There are many typographical errors in this article that I would like to clean up. For instance, there is a link which reads "NOI's", which, obviously because of the possessive 's' included in the link title, does not connect to the NOI disambiguation page. I'd like to be able to correct the link, among others. Thanks. Refugee621 23:46, 24 September 2005 (UTC)
Well I can tell you without a doubt that nobody has. I mean maybe, just maybe, there is an angle here that everyone is just missing.
Physical characteristicsI've temporarily removed the following from the first paragraph of "Biography":
It didn't fit with the rest of the paragraph at all. There's ample citation for it, but it needs to find a home elsewhere in the article. Anyone have suggestions for how we can work this in, or whether it even matters that we keep it? His red hair is a characteristic that's important to the article, since one of his nicknames was "Detroit Red", but I don't see how his height matters in the least.--chris.lawson 03:59, 2 October 2005 (UTC)
Right, and IMO, 75 inches isn't even that tall (says the 5-9 guy). He'd be a short guard in the NBA. :) If he were unusually tall, then it'd be notable, but it's not like Malcolm X was notable for his height. (In the context of height, I'd say it's only notable when it lies outside one standard deviation from the mean, or when height is relevant to a person's profession, like a basketball player, or Verne Troyer.)--chris.lawson 21:12, 2 October 2005 (UTC) Irish Roots?I'm sure many Americans must be sick of hearing this question asked of virtually every other famous American, but ... is it true that Malcolm was of Irish descent somewhere along the line (like Ali)? Thank you. Fergananim 17:34, 6 October 2005 (UTC)
one of his grandfathers was white, maybe he was irish? Colorfulharp233 03:12, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
LOL! are you guys idiots? His hair is redish because he relaxed his hair so much as a youth. Relaxing your hair can turn your hair many shades lighter over time. And its known that he did it many times as a youth.
-- Mik 17:10, 3 September 2006 (UTC) Profound RacismI know I am about to be bombarded with flames/death threats/whatever for saying this, but why is there no mention on this page of Malcolm X's publicly stated, profound racist views? Considering the language he used when referring to the "wicked race of devils" (ref: [1], [2], [3]), among other things. While it may be true that these positions had changed by the end of his life, I do not see why this aspect of his rhetoric, to which he returned repeatedly, and held as a core belief, is omitted from the article. He stated publicly that it was his belief that the Black Nation descended from God, but not the white population, and thus they were inherently evil, and incapable of acting as a force of good (as history shows, which is his claim). I believe that Wikipedia is fundamentally about being "factually correct" not "politically correct." NPOV dictates that whatever personal feelings one may have (even for a figure held in high regard by many) that it is important to bring objective truth. I am not saying that Wikipedia should attempt in any way to paint Malcolm X in a bad light, however if, as it seems, the notion of people without color being fundamentally and unredeemingly evil is pervasive throughout his public speaking, etc, then this should be included in the article, as it is highly relevant to his attacks against racism in the white community. Maybe there is a reason for this that I have overlooked, if so this is why it is on the discussion page, and feel free to enlighten me. - 19:35, 9 November 2005 (UTC)
Minor editsI just tried to make some minor edits, but someone reverted them. Apologies if I did them wrong; I'm a wiki novice. The edits I tried to make are: 1) Correct the spelling of Ossie Davis's name (it's spelled Ozzie in the article); 2) add a link to the entry on Ossie Davis; and 3) add a link to Mike Wallace's entry later in the same sentence. Temple?I'm trying to disambig the temple page, but don't know enough about the Nation of Islam. I assume it would be correct to have the reference to temple point to mosque, but am not positive. D-Rock 12:14, 13 December 2005 (UTC) NOI calls their places of worship and meetings temples and not mosques...this works out well because Muslims do not consider adherent to NOI to be Muslim because of their incompatible beliefs (i.e., Muslims do not believe there can be another prophet after Prophet Muhammad, Muslims believe in the unity of all Muslims--so no "black Muslim" status can exist, etc.). I agree with the change of temples to mosque due to that fact that after Elijah Muhammad went to Mecca and came back to America. He changed the name of temples to mosque. If you need a reference. I'll look it up in Malcolm X autobiography. Rello222 Conspiracy?No mention is made of a possible assassination conspiracy along the lines of MLK, RFK and JFK. Personally (since I think there was one) I think this shuld be added.
Red hairMalcolm X had red hair when he was young - that seems to be well documented. But did the red hair change color or did he dye it? It seems I read in a biography that he dyed it. So my questions are:
I think this would be interesting for the Malcolm X article but maybe only to me. So I am asking these questions for an article about red-haired people where it is relevent. Thanks. --cda 01:37, 15 January 2006 (UTC) His hair was always reddish. Although he did "conk" his hair, there's nothing about him actually using dye to colour his hair. In his autobiography, he attributes his red hair and light skin to the fact that his grandmother was raped by a white man. In his autobiography, he also talks about how he hated the white blood in his veins. Hope that helps. Antihostile 20:27, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
current??Someone put the "current" tag on the article. What current event is it referring to? --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 01:53, 21 February 2006 (UTC) I don't see anything in the article that's a current event. Iwalters 02:57, 21 February 2006 (UTC) Yes I don't either. --a.n.o.n.y.m t 20:02, 21 February 2006 (UTC) This was probably tagged current because it is referenced on the Main Page because today is the anniversary of Malcolm X's assasination. Edwin Stearns | Talk 21:01, 21 February 2006 (UTC)
Current View of MuslimsUpon listening to the interview with herman blake in 11 oct 1963, found on the article, I have noticed that the current view of Muslims throughout the west is not much differnt when compared to that which is accounted by Malcom X towards the end of the clip. What's your view? Jackpot Den 20:25, 21 February 2006 (UTC)
".. But whites, speak of Muslims synonomously with violence, whenever Muslims are mentioned by them, violence is brought up, but it is not connected with any other group. This is the sort of problem, again the tactic, or what I would call "Psychological warfare" to, in some way make the image of Muslims in the country to have a violent image rather than a religous image" - Malcom X,interview with herman blake in 11 oct 1963 The view I mean is the view of the west on Muslims and the Islamic community. I believe that the quote by Malcom X, from over 40 years ago is still applicable to the western view on Muslims now. Jackpot Den 22:23, 21 February 2006 (UTC)
"Categories"Correct me if I'm wrong, but it doesn't appear that this article is part of any categories like "Black Americans" or "Civil Rights Leaders" or what have you. It doesn't seem to be contained in any categories at all. Is it an orphan?
Who Done It?I think the article might benefit from a short discussion of the competing theories as who who "really" done it. I've rarely seen an article about Malcolm X that accepted the convictions of Hayer, Norman 3X Butler, and Thomas 15X Johnson as the final word. There ought to be some discussion of whether or not the NOI had ordered the killings and, if so, if these were their assassins. Were law enforcement agencies involved (Malcolm X himself thought they might be setting him up)? Uucp 12:11, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
TensionsIn the first few lines, it says "he brushed the rummors aside" and "He talked to the secretary." Was that Malcolm or Ellih that did these things? I would fix it myself, but I don't know who it was.Minnesota1 05:11, 13 April 2006 (UTC)
The comment about Malcolm saying "Chickens coming home to roost never made me sad in fact it only made me glad" is false. I have a documentary with Malcolm denying he ever made any comment saying that. Plus, The Nation of Islam never allowed camara's OR audio tapes in at this point due Elljah Muhammad rejection of the media. So it's not any factual proof of Malcolm making that comment. Got out of Prison?Article doesn't mention he went to prison, when, or for what. Is there an assumption that if you get "involved in drugs, ..., and robbery" in New York you automatically go to prison? Trip to Great BritainThere is no mention in the link in the Great Britain section to the said Labor Slogan. Can someone please try to get an additional source for the quote other than the PDF buried in the said universities website. Constant request for citations?Does anybody else consider the rampant usage of "citation needed" in between every other word in this article a little passive aggressive? Or is it just me? - mixvio 15:06, 7 July 2006 (UTC)
LBGT rights oppositionHe's listed as someone opposed to gay rights; can anyone source this? Ohyeahmormons 18:11, 14 July 2006 (UTC) Over-reliance on the AutobiographyI am concerned that this entry relies almost entirely for its content on the Autobiography of Malcolm X, as told to Alex Haley. This book is, in my opinion, very well written and insightful. However, it is also biased, discussing only those aspects of Malcolm's past that he wanted to discuss, presenting only those explanations for his behavior that he wanted on record, and mythologizing his own past and that of his family in some respects. I would like to see this entry become much better footnoted, so that people can see where each claim comes from. I plan to start inserting material from sources other than the Autobiography as well. I hope that others will join me in this. Uucp 11:28, 18 July 2006 (UTC) Article sizethis article is quite long. I am thinking of starting a new pages for some sub-headings. seeWikipedia:Article size Germany-Christianity quoteA quick Google search did yield this; beyond that, I'd defer to an expert on the subject, relating to the quote, "If Christianity had asserted itself in Germany, six million Jews would have lived." --Emufarmers(T/C) 11:51, 7 August 2006 (UTC) Why was he assassinated?Why did the nation of islam what him killed so badly? Quotationsi'm not sure about the wikipedia policy on this, but what's the point of having all those quotes if there's already a wikiquote page? Yiyun 04:17, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
If anyone can help me pin down the source of this quote, I would be very appreciative:
--1000Faces 22:29, 28 October 2006 (UTC) SexualityThere's an article in The Guardian website giving a case that Malcolm X may have been gay or bisexual. Check it out. [4]. Should this theory be included in the article? Stancel Spencer 02:54, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
I remember reading a book years ago by an old acquaintance/friend of Malcolm X's--can't recall his name; may have been Berry--in which the author asserts that Malcolm X was involved with transvestites. I can't recall whether it was for money or not, but I do remember that this guy said that Malcolm had told him excitedly "They [perform oral sex]!" Even if this is true, I don't think this necessarily means all that much. Just wanted to throw that out there Malcolm X is definately not 'gay'. Such a rumor about a strong black leader that spoke of freedom had a wife, didn't he? And children?didn't he have children?And for that article,i will have nothing to do with it. as far as i'm concerned, the author resulted to racism, and tried to attack the black community, based on his ridiculous story. I will leave it at that. --Black and Proud 04:34, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
PunishmentIs there any information what sentences killers of Malcolm X received? It should be included in the article. FBIIt seems to me like someone who is strongly against the FBI wrote the section Nation of Islam. Please I'm new to wikipedia, so tell me if I did this right. Snoopl3s 00:56, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
Intro needs urgent fixingThe last two sentences in the intro need rewording/or a strong citation:
I am no expert on the man but I have checked several reliable sources (E.g. "Malcolm X" Encyclopedia Britannica. 1990 Ed.) and they don't say anything about a government role. I am not saying that the viewpoint is untenable, but I don't think 'widely believed' is correct. If someone more knowledgeable on the subject doesn't do it in the next day or so then I will (I am hesitant to leap in as I imagine that this article can be controversial). Also, it's spelt Assassination (unless us Aussies are out of step with the rest of the world on that one – happens occasionally.) Joaq99 16:13, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
DefacementIts been fixed, but I noticed someone defaced the page making it sound like he was the founder of the KKK. Here is a quote. "Malcolm X, born Malcolm Little, also known as Black Evil and El Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Omaha, Nebraska, May 19, 1925 – February 21, 1965 in New York City) was a Muslim Minister and National Spokesman for the Nation of Islam. He was also founder of the UAZ and the KKK." Please report further incidents so we can keep track of it. Keithg 20:15, 19 October 2006 (UTC) Neutrality dispute?Midway down the article there is a "neutrality questioned" flag, saying somebody has nominated it as needing attention in this regard. There is a link to this talk page, where whoever placed the notice should have given some justification for throwing doubt on the legitimacy of the article. But I see no mention of "neutrality" in any of the stuff above. I think the article could be improved, but a quick reading reveals no hint of intentional bias to me. I do think, however, that the article is less than objective in the sense that it does not give due recognition to this individual's highest qualities and greatest contributions to American life. So, whoever put up the notice, let's have some specifics. P0M 08:04, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
VandalismThis page is constantly undergoing vandalism. Unless anyone has a better idea I would like to add semi-protection (i.e. editing of this article by unregistered or newly registered users is disabled) - Robogymnast 23:12, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
I saw that as well. I'm in agreement for the protection.JayPetey 04:30, 21 November 2006 (UTC) What do you expect, he is controversial.
I am not an expert but from experience with running my home pc network i think (i am not sure) that someone may be going through the isp listed above network in order to have many ips to bug us. If i am wrong delete this but i am just posting what i think Jesse60905 06:33, 30 December 2006 (UTC) proposed malcolmite sectionthere is a term Malcolmite for those who follow X, such as Maulana Karenga. Also this can be a cat for those who are malcolmites. need research--HalaTruth(ሀላካሕ) 06:57, 5 January 2007 (UTC) missing section popular culturethis section is so needed it actually would have to be a seperate page, music from PE to Spike Lee, the X hats, the slogans the poster. Did you see his quote in V for Vendetta. this needs to be a stub here and a sep article.--HalaTruth(ሀላካሕ) 07:12, 5 January 2007 (UTC) Elijah Muhammad linksWhy are there six links at the very bottom of this article to a single site that is reverential toward "Messenger" Elijah Muhammad? They may (or may not) be appropriate for the article on Elijah Muhammad, but they are not appropriate here. Malik Shabazz 00:51, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
I could be wrong but...Wasn't Malcom X a rapper? Sunshine 17:06, 25 January 2007 (UTC)
Are you sure? I remember a couple years ago, a friend of mine took too many pills and started yelling a bunch of stuff. I'm pretty sure "Malcom X is a rapper" was one of the things he said. If rap wasn't around in the mid-60's, are you denying that the Beatles were one of the first great rap duets? Sunshine 17:17, 25 January 2007 (UTC)
I do not appreciate that. Doesn't you calling a fellow wikiuser a troll constitute a violation of the policy of no personal attacks? I am not a troll, I simply want to know the facts and eliminate any confusion that I, as well as other users, may have. Sunshine 17:28, 25 January 2007 (UTC) Even though you are extremely wrong, you have the right not to be called a troll. PS. tell your friend to get off those pills.--Black and Proud 04:38, 7 February 2007 (UTC) Re Sunshine: You're an idiot. But not a troll. Alpha sort in categoriesIn the various Wikipedia categories, Malcolm X is listed under "X". In most non-Wikipedia references (bibliographies, encyclopedias, dictionaries, etc.), he is found under "M". Malik Shabazz 17:14, 2 February 2007 (UTC) MALCOM XIM doing a report on Malcom X —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 209.66.200.64 (talk) 22:01, 21 February 2007 (UTC). Good for you...--Jayson Virissimo 21:26, 25 February 2007 (UTC) Conspiracy TheoriesI changed the reference from about the possibility of US Government involvement in Malcolm X's murder from 'Conspiracy Theories'to 'Theories'. The reason for this is beacuse by definition the fact that three people murdered malcolm X is in itself a conspiracy. The use of the term 'Conspiracy Theories'only serves to frame such theories in an unflattering light and lump them with some more ridiculous notions of conspiracy. john geraghty 23 February 11.47am GMT
Wrong CitationIt says for the "no realistic goal for a nigger" quote that it is from page 36 in the Autobiography, it is actually from page 38. I'm not going to change it until somebody else verfies
I'll keep it as is, I didn't realize there was more than one edition, the only ones I've seen are all the same. Thanks for the quick update. Opera: I think that Anthony Davis's "X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X" should be mentioned in the popular culture section. 72.200.75.111 23:11, 10 March 2007 (UTC) |
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