Malcolm X person
also: Malcolm, black Muslim leader, Malcolm Martin
Explore in graph → Export claims (CSV) ↓
Related entities (most co-mentioned)
Harlemplace · 4United Statescountry · 4New York Police Departmentorganization · 3Hotel Theresaplace · 3Los Angeles Police Departmentorganization · 3Raul Roa Corderoperson · 3Robert F. Kennedyperson · 3CIAintelligence service · 2FBIintelligence service · 2John F. Kennedyperson · 2Robert Kennedy assassinationevent · 2Assassination of Malcolm Xevent · 2American Society of African Cultureorganization · 2James Farmerperson · 2Philip Grahamperson · 1Jim DiEugenioperson · 1Washington Timesorganization · 1James W. Douglasperson · 1Time Inc.organization · 1Carl Rowanperson · 1Fortune magazineorganization · 1Martyrs to the Unspeakablebook · 1Sunday Review of Literatureorganization · 1Nation of Islamorganization · 1
Claims (5)
Malcolm X member_of
CFR book_quoted
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Live, Fortune Sports Illustrated. Malcolm M…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner The Invisible Government by Dan Smoot Part 6 II @ 13:14
Malcolm X headed
Newsweek book_quoted
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Live, Fortune Sports Illustrated. Malcolm M…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner The Invisible Government by Dan Smoot Part 6 II @ 13:14
Malcolm X recruited
Fidel Castro documented
“incapable of providing hospitality to world leaders, Castro fumed, perhaps the UN should be moved. But then Castro turned his humiliation into a propaganda triumph. And I'm sure this left all of them seething. As the Cuban delegation was pr…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner The Devil's Chessboard Part 16 @ 10:33
Fidel Castro spied_on
Malcolm X documented
“which accelerated after his split with the Nation of Islam in 1964 made him increasingly dangerous. And Corey, among others, was convinced that it led to his assassination in 1965. In 1960, Malcolm was the target of an intensive FBI surveil…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner The Devil's Chessboard Part 16 @ 24:00
Operation Gladio assassinated
Malcolm X guest_asserted
“What about those? Were those Gladio Ops as well? All of them.…”
▶ Colonel Towner-Watkins_ Operation Gladio (guest) @ 1:33:50
Mentions (21)
▶ 1:33:50
and Malcolm X and RFK. What about those? Were those Gladio Ops as well? All of them. And why those people that I just named and probably some others I haven't? So RFK was a very interesting, and I had not done a lot of research into it, but…
▶ 1:16:46
you know, relationship between CIA and LAPD, you know, because especially in this new book, which I really, really, really strongly urge everybody read, it's called Martyrs to the Unspeakable, the Assassinations of JFK, Malcolm Martin and R…
▶ 1:18:14
You know, that was in South America. But it was not simply Manny Pena and Hank Hernandez, you know, who were literally using CIA interrogation techniques on the key witnesses in the RFK assassination. But they had a lot of other people in L…
▶ 1:21:39
Those are right. Write an article. I'll help you write an article. I'll help you. Well, I have to order an attention span from Jeff Bezos, I guess, Colonel, but I appreciate your comments. So but just to finish that one last comment, it's s…
▶ 1:22:08
You are. Nobody will see you. And you're like, wait a minute. Malcolm X and the CIA says that's kind of left sounding, guys. That's like for me, that's the kicker. You know, if they're not even let an out, you know, if they're not going to …
▶ 2:28:53
Continuing through the 1968 RFK campaign is really, really important and relates to all of the major assassinations, including Malcolm X in a certain way. Although he's not affiliated with political campaigns, I mean, he did not accept the …
▶ 10:33
incapable of providing hospitality to world leaders, Castro fumed, perhaps the UN should be moved. But then Castro turned his humiliation into a propaganda triumph. And I'm sure this left all of them seething. As the Cuban delegation was pr…
▶ 21:44
The propagandist insisted it was from the very beginning, amounting a victory of sorts for Washington hardliners. But there was also a glow around Castro as he and his entourage settled into the Hotel Teresa. It was the dawn of the 1960s. T…
▶ 22:14
wearing a long black leather coat and tie, swept past the press pack in the hotel lobby and whisked to Fidel's suite on the ninth floor. Fidel invited Malcolm to sit next to him on the bed, the only comfortable oasis in the room. The revolu…
▶ 22:40
But as Castro lunged ahead with his uncertain English, they slowly found common ground. Fidel told Malcolm that the Cubans appreciated the warm reception in Harlem. I think you will find the people in Harlem are not so addicted to the propa…
▶ 23:09
Only a half hour turned out to be historically significant because it helped broaden the black Muslim leaders narrow racial parameters. Malcolm began to understand that blacks were not the only poor people that were oppressed and the strugg…
▶ 23:37
The meeting between Fidel and Malcolm sent shutters through U.S. security circles. There was a potential alliance between the Cuban revolutionaries and the militant black nationalists was seen as the stuff of nightmares at CIA. Malcolm's br…
▶ 24:00
which accelerated after his split with the Nation of Islam in 1964 made him increasingly dangerous. And Corey, among others, was convinced that it led to his assassination in 1965. In 1960, Malcolm was the target of an intensive FBI surveil…
▶ 24:27
who later reported back to the Bureau that the two men's conversation. According to a confidential FBI memo based on the source's report, Malcolm told Fidel that he was predisposed to like him because usually when one sees a man whom the U.…
▶ 13:14
Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Live, Fortune Sports Illustrated. Malcolm M…
▶ 1:28:02
Wait a second, you know, in LAPD CIA, and it's really hyphenated in that relationship where, you know, CIA had built basically a wing into LAPD. Yes, they did. And also NYPD, which they used in the Malcolm X assassination with a bossy unit …
▶ 1:05:36
to participate in CIA activities. Despite the misgivings about the imbalance between AMSAC's domestic and foreign programs, they sent eminent African Americans to Africa, especially after the black nationalist leader Malcolm X visited the c…
▶ 1:05:58
making a series of statements that were highly critical of U.S. and their race relations and foreign policy. So they had to go clean up his mess. In 1965, AMSAC funded a five-week African tour of a civil rights leader, i.e. an approved CIA …
▶ 1:06:57
which is the propaganda front for the CIA. African-American Carl Rowan, who looked forward to Farmer, quote, voicing the true aspirations of most Negro Americans as compared to what had been said in Africa by such spokesman as Malcolm X, un…
▶ 1:14:33
Why are they doing this? And I think, you know, that can depend on different circumstances, on different demographic groups. I'll give you an example. There's an article on the assassination of Malcolm X by a former Washington Post writer o…
▶ 1:15:57
So the other comment I wanted to make, I'm going to put that in the bubble. It's a it's a article by a former Washington Post writer on the assassination of Malcolm X. I also wanted to just make a kind of comparative point, if I could, on a…