The "Heroic" Black Power Fists of the '68 Olympics
Radical chic in a front-page news story.

Posted by: Clay Waters
4/1/2008 12:47:23 PM


Reporter Katie Thomas embraced radical chic near the end of her front-page story Tuesday on the prospect for political protests at the 2008 Olympics, hosted by China.

Perhaps the best-known examples are the American sprinters John Carlos and Tommie Smith, who at the 1968 Games in Mexico City raised their clenched fists on the medal podium during the playing of the national anthem in a salute to black power. The action enraged the Olympic organizers, and Mr. Carlos and Mr. Smith were soon ushered out of the country. Now, 40 years later, their action is celebrated as heroic.

Raising a "Black Power" fist in defiance of the national anthem is heroic? Radical Pan-African activist Stokely Carmichael, who coined the phrase, said of his movement:

"When you talk of black power, you talk of building a movement that will smash everything Western civilization has created."


 

 



      Eyeblast TV is here!
 TImesWatch RSS Feed
 
Elsewhere on the Web

Heather Mac Donald says a front page Times' story on an exclusionary Phoenix golf club is "compelling proof of the desperation of the women's grievance movement." See Article

The Times promotes leftist college kids making a fittingly sophomoric political statement by adopting Barack Obama's middle name, Hussein, as their own. See Article

Bruce Kesler ponders why the Times thinks Americans are using heart CT scans too often -- something to do with the paper's support of universal health care? See Article

Are eco-friendly homes the new Prada? The Times wants us to think so. The Business and Media Institute has the story. See Article

Archive



NewsBusted Comedy Show
New Episode! - July 1, 2008

video archive

 

MRC Take Action!

 

NewsBusters Blog

 

 

 

Copyright TimesWatch.org 2008