Malcolm X And Lyndon B. Johnson True Term Paper

Malcolm X and Lyndon B. Johnson True and real equality of the African-American race: Opposing views from Malcolm X and Lyndon B. Johnson

In the history of the Negro's struggle to fight for his/her civil rights, two important political figures became prominent in advancing the Negro community's cause for equality and abolition of racial prejudice and discrimination: Malcolm X and former President Lyndon B. Johnson. Each political figure advocated for opposing sides of the civil rights movement, yet both had contributed to the development and promotion of giving equal opportunities for Negros, not only in socially, but also legally through the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Indeed, the passage and implementation of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 had been the primary contention in which Malcolm X and Johnson had argued for equality between the white and black Americans in all aspects of life. In promoting their respective views of this new legislation, both had created speeches that brought into fore the "fantasy theme" -- that is, putting forth their arguments on what strategy would best benefit the Negros in achieving equality and eliminating social prejudice and discrimination in the society.

The rhetorical analysis applied in this paper delves into identifying how Malcolm X and Johnson addressed the issue (or fantasy theme) of racial equality...

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The paper posits that each had opposing views about the achievement of racial equality: while Malcolm X that Negros had not truly achieved equality and can only do so if they resort to violence, Johnson believed that the passage of the Voting Rights Act would signal the true emancipation of Negros from racial prejudice and discrimination.
In Malcolm X's "The ballot or the bullet," he enticed his audience, his fellow Negros, to resort to violence in order to express their opposition against the oppressive nature of the Voting Rights bill and present social state of racial equality in American society. Contrary to positive assessments of the gradual decrease in incidences of racial prejudice and discrimination, Malcolm X revealed that this was hardly the case in reality. As he stated in his speech, "Your vote, your dumb vote, your ignorant vote, your wasted vote put in an administration in Washington, D. C ....And what a good president we have. If he wasn't good in Texas, he sure can't be good in Washington, D.C. Because Texas is a lynch state. It is in the same breath as Mississippi, no different..."

What Malcolm X tried to express to his audience was that the Voting Rights bill was just a ruse that the administration had created in order to alleviate protests from Negro…

Sources Used in Documents:

What Malcolm X tried to express to his audience was that the Voting Rights bill was just a ruse that the administration had created in order to alleviate protests from Negro citizens of the country. For him, the bill was just any other resolution that attempted to solve the problem of racial prejudice and discrimination in the country; unfortunately, this ruse had been uncovered early on by Malcolm X and his fellow Negros. Thus, he proposed that what Negros need was not a defective legislative system and a bill that purports to fight for equal rights in the country, but active participation in fighting the social plague that was prejudice and discrimination against Negros. Thus, from the assertion that "... The only thing that I've ever said is that in areas where the government has proven itself either unwilling or unable to defend the lives and the property of Negroes, it's time for Negroes to defend themselves ... " Malcolm X was not extending the fantasy that Negros can achieve equality; in fact, he tried to bring his audience back to reality, tried to downplay the hopes that the Voting Rights bill posed for his fellowmen. Indeed, his arguments had shown that Negros' social realities were a far cry from the peaceful and egalitarian state of society that the administration argues the 20th century to be.

This last assertion was subsisted to by Johnson, who, in his speech "We shall overcome," put up the hopes of Negros by proposing and expressing his desire for the passage of the Voting Rights bill. He put forth the 'fantasy' or ideal that, indeed, equality will be achieved and discrimination, eliminated. This fantasy was realized through the Voting Rights bill, which, he explicated as "[t]he bill that I am presenting to you will be known as a civil rights bill. But, in a larger sense, most of the program I am recommending is a civil rights program. Its object is to open the city of hope to all people of all races." This generalization was put forth despite criticisms against Malcolm X one year before the passage of the bill to become the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

While Malcolm X kept a pessimistic view of the Negros' welfare under the said legislation, Johnson relied on the bill's power and influence to unite American society, regardless of race, socio-economic status, or beliefs and values of people in life. From the analysis of Malcolm X and Johnson's speeches, it became evident that the former subsisted to a more real illustration of the Negro condition in the country, while the latter (Johnson) believed that a goal, achieved through the fantasy that American society would lead to the development of an egalitarian society, will help and provide opportunities for Negros to better their welfare in the society.


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