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Letter to george and other "haters"--ali (cont.)
Thank you to several of you who so eloquently responded to George and a few of the haters regarding Ali. I would like to skip over his boxing feats as well as the issue of refusing to go in the military to kill innocent non-white people and instead ask George and the other "haters" the following....Please take the multiple choice test below, representing a FRACTION of what he accomplished
*** Ali did the following ..which have you done???????????? ( if you did something even close , you can count it!!) a) Gone to Lebanon in 1985 and secured the release of 4 American hostages b) Go to Iraq in 1990 and secure release of 15 American hostages c) Raise over $120 million for Barrow Neurological Inst (Phoenix,Az) d) Go to NUMEROUS Children's hospitals (too numerous to list) e) Go to soup kitchens to help! f) Save a person on a window ledge about to commit suicide g) Brought 5 TONS of food , clothing and medicne to help Catholic nun's rescue efforts for Liberian refugees h) Supported Make-A wish foundation, Jeff Gordon Children's Foundation, Special Olympics, Beat Bullying, Buoniconti Fund for Paralysis, UNICEF, and dozens and dozens of others i) Honored by Amnesty Int'l, UN Messenger of Peace, Presidential Medal of Freedom ( among dozens of others!) j) After beating Foreman in Zaire, sits on porch stoop with children doing magic tricks for them k)HAND DELIVERED food and medical supplies to many many countries around the world! l) spontaneously gets on a bus carrying disabled children in '92 to sign autographs and make them laugh m) ALL OF THE ABOVE n) NONE OF THE ABOVE (hint--this is the correct answer for most of us, incl George) Ali--you were my hero, the greatest of ALL TIME! |
Everyone has a right to their opinion. All that this board asks is that you have a name next to it, so thanks Bill Lat.zko for the thought provoking post.
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Arguably one of the the most recognized/ known people to ever walk the face of the Earth. My score on the above questionnaire- 0
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Great man indeed. Not perfect but none of us are. Did more for other people than 100s of others put together would do in 10 lifetimes.
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For all the good he did he should have saved some of it for Joe Frazier. Ali was a great fighter and later a humanitarian but I never understood why Joe Frazier wasn't the beneficiary of any of it.
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to cliff bowman
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The only way I'll edit my post is to add to the list many more things that Ali did for humanity that you couldn't come close to in 5 lifetimes! |
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I am an Ali fan, so no disrespect meant. But the way that he treated Frazier has always given me some pause about Ali the person. Tom C |
to cliff bowman (from bill latzko)
"Just wanted to save that for posterity in case he edits his post and deletes that part."
I wouldn't edit anything I said except to add lots of things Ali did in one lifetime that you couldn't do in 5! I'll repeat it.." killing of innocent non-white people" .At a moment like this, when Ali's courage is talked about by most of the media, I would be unable to live with myself if I backed down from something I believe in and said! oops I thought my initial comment didn't post so I sorta repeated it again...sorry (for the repetition, not the comment!) |
Ali apology
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The wound to Frazier's psyche was deep. In the ensuing years, as Parkinson's syndrome limited Ali's speech and mobility, he has evolved into an almost saintly, ethereal force, the controversies of his past forgotten as his fame expanded and he raised millions of dollars for charity. But Frazier has searched for wider renown and struggled to shed his bitterness. Last week on the anniversary of his victory over Ali at Madison Square Garden, Frazier said, "Hey, man, just come on and give me a hug and let's get on with our lives." During an interview in a Midtown Manhattan hotel suite Wednesday, Ali said, "In a way, Joe's right. I said a lot of things in the heat of the moment that I shouldn't have said. Called him names I shouldn't have called him. I apologize for that. I'm sorry. It was all meant to promote the fight. "I like Joe Frazier," Ali said. "Me and him was a good show. It was a good traveling show." Frazier embraced the apology. "I accept that," he said in a telephone interview from Wildwood, N.J. "I'll accept it, shake his hand and hug him when I see him. We're grown guys. Why we been biting off bullets? We have to embrace each other. It's time to talk and get together. Life's too short." |
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Tom C |
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I think the world of Ali, but this part of his life I simply cannot get past. Tom C |
good point
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Ali
Lets continue this on Net54 Boxing site
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Aren't we glad we aren't all conscientious objectors? If we were, what language would we speak? Would we have organized sports? Would we have this forum? Would the Internet exist?
Mark Medlin |
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I don't think George Forman is going to read this .
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So if there were white people to kill he would have went into the military?
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Mark Medlin |
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Oh, just in case you forgot, we lost the Vietnam War. We pulled out and left South Vietnam to a fate we either could not or chose not to prevent. My step dad was an Air Force officer who spent several years over there in the early days of our involvement. To this day, he still doesn't understand what we were doing because he damn sure doesn't think we were trying very hard to win the war. But even though we lost, we still speak American English, play organized sports, have access to the internet, and even have the ability to post dumbass remarks on this forum from time to time. |
Oh wait I see what you're saying now. Never mind my original comment. I will just add the Mexican - American War and the Philippine - American War as wars that threatened US land interests directly.
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I wonder how 1,000,000 conscientious objectors would have fared against a blitzkrieg? How about against the Russian army? Surely that would have stopped Tojo. Let's go back a little farther. Maybe the conscientious objectors could have slayed Gengis Khan.
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Some people thought that preventing communism was worth dying for, others didn't. |
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I respect everyone's right to fight or not fight, but I didn't see a lot of power behind Ali's decision. He was never in any type of danger, even if he did go fight. He was a celebrity. Do you think anyone ever took a shot at Elvis? It was more of a statement against the institutional racism of the time. That's why he used the moment to invoke how white people addressed him and how no Vietcong had ever said that to him. That's the power in the statement. Focusing on his refusal to fight I think misses the point of the moment.
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Mankind has proven time and again that many people and groups are ONLY stopped by force. Shangrila does not exist on earth. Unfortunate. |
I will drop from this good spirited debate now, before it becomes ugly. Interesting views.
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wow
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Muhammed Ali found no reason to fight for a people who had no love for him, nor did he have a reason to fight against a people who did not wrong him. He felt that the greatest injustice Americans were facing was at home and chose to stay and fight it. |
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gooks in the rice paddies
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Cheney and his charity
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By the way, name a war or intervention if it makes you feel better since WW2 that we have fought against white people; that's why I made the comment about killing non-whites. |
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Muhammed Ali fought a much more noble war at home than he would have fought overseas. He was already drafted into an army and fighting for the freedom of millions of Americans when Uncle Sam came knocking. I have no love for draft dodgers, nor do I have anything but the upmost respect for service men and women, but Muhammed Ali was doing a much greater service to mankind staying home. |
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people like you!!
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Richard Nixon right wing fool who just happens to collect baseball cards. People with YOUR mindset encumber our lives with war; It's lucky for me that people with MY mind set have protested against warmongers like you. Up against the wall, m________. PEACE OUT |
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In the Philippine-American War, we had just, and I mean just, gotten the Philippines from Spain after the Spanish-American War and we fought the same people who had been fighting Spain for Philippine independence the year before. They viewed it as a continuation of the same struggle for independence. We didn't. Again, who was the invader really depends on point of view. |
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With respect to Vietnam, I'm not sure anyone ever did that, other than to make sure that we kept those darn communists, who were already here by the way and therefore subject to our laws AND our constitutional protections (despite Joe McCarthy's efforts to the contrary), out of here. That obviously worked out well. :rolleyes: |
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Mark- just a reminder of your previous promise. Seems it's difficult for some of us to live up to their convictions even for the short term. Try to imagine how difficult it was to face the consequences of your decision - not running over the Canadian border or enrolling at Oxford as actual 'draft dodgers' did. Imagine instead standing by your decision and seeing the best years of your life being subjected to the kind of criticism that 'folks' like you continue to spew. I will not promise to 'drop out' of this discussion as I believe in defending true Heroes. . |
Mark,
You essentially asked...what would happen if a nation of objectors stood up to a nation of war, imperialism, and violence... The answer is you get India, the largest democratic republic in the world. Gandhi took a revolution of violence in the early part of the 20th century and turned it to a movement of civil disobedience eventually leading to the creation of India and Pakistan. Through strikes, mutinies, sit-ins, walk outs, etc. he created a movement that paralyzed the British. Also the notion that we do not need objectors is a very limited, and frankly, a very disturbing trend. The objector acts as a voice of opposition, a voice of conscience. People need to have that voice. It often leads to great outcomes. One of those great outcomes was the great nation you now live in and supposedly support. As someone mentioned above, you can both be an objector to war and still serve. Some of the first objectors were Quakers and Mennonites. They refused to fight in the Revolutionary War even through they were strong supporters of the Revolution itself (on grounds of taxes, freedom of thought and religion, freedom of movement, etc.). What did they do, they supplied the revolutionaries. Often with food, clothing, wagons, tools, etc. With out their help, what might have happened. The idea of objectors is necessary and often overlooked. I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Ali on several occasions at show signings and one notable run in at a hotel here in Los Angeles. I got to sit and speak with him and his daughter and he was personable, funny, and wanted nothing more than to make others around him feel comfortable. As much as he seemed to crave fame at the height of his career, he seemed, at least to me, almost shy about it at times and people came up to us and asked for autographs and photos. I never got his autograph but was much happier to shake his hand. I was younger then and did not appreciate the man and what he came to represent as much as I do now. I rarely wade into these frays but my hero, Jackie Robinson, respected him and was able to create a friendship with someone who held very different views. In fact, that is one of the things I have come to appreciate about Ali, his ability to engage with any culture, religion, race, etc. in a meaningful and respectful way...I wish we could all aspire and strive for that one character trait... Joshua |
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