Freedom is diminished daily; the excesses of reaction and repression become larger and bolder; the unthinkable glows forth on our television screens each night, and the unspeakable flows glibly from the mouths of high government officials. Scores of… young black militants have been murdered, and hundreds more have been wounded and jailed. In Washington, the words “preventive detention” are no dirtier than equivalent phrases in Berlin were in 1936; resistance to desegregation is being openly led by the country’s chief legal official; and the President of the United States seems not the least bit ashamed to nominate to the Supreme Court a man who appears to be a bigot and racist. Every week brings a new piece of bad news as the courts become more outrageously political, the police more blatantly violent.
And the answer is…
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1971!
The passage is from the most dogmatic book I’ve read all year, William Ryan‘s classic Blaming the Victim.
P.S. The unedited second sentence begins, “Scores of Black Panthers and other young black militants,” which obviously would have given the approximate year away.
READER COMMENTS
OriginalSeeing
Aug 26 2019 at 10:43am
The word after “young black” still gives it away.
David Henderson
Aug 26 2019 at 11:07am
This is the one that gave it away to me, causing me to say sometime between 1969 and 1971:
the President of the United States seems not the least bit ashamed to nominate to the Supreme Court a man who appears to be a bigot and racist.
Steve S
Aug 26 2019 at 11:54am
I was the same as David, 69-71, and knew it wasn’t a current quote because of the line “resistance to desegregation”. That’s not really in the modern lexicon.
IronSig
Aug 26 2019 at 1:44pm
I should read carefully. I thought the question was “who wrote this?” and my guess was “Malcom X.”
Nixon strikes again.
Comments are closed.