DEATH OF MALCOM X

  • 2 months ago
FROM JUDAHLYFE FLIMS
Transcript
00:00This is King Judah 23 of the Judah Life Podcast, and you're watching the Empire Network.
00:23Yo, Spotsu 100% gonna show y'all that he was not killed by who y'all think he was killed by.
00:28Malcolm X was indeed set up. Let's get into it.
00:31If y'all go back to the speech about Dick Gregory in Part 1, you're gonna hear him mention two men run up with sawed-off shotguns and shoot Malcolm X.
00:39But like he mentioned in the interview, and like what actually happened, that was not the case.
00:43The two men who apparently ran up and shot Malcolm X were exonerated from all charges.
00:48The two men are named Muhammad Aziz and Khalil Islam.
00:51So again, if these two men were exonerated, proven innocent, then who actually killed Malcolm X?
00:58Which brings me to my next point.
01:00Just a week after the two men were exonerated from charges dealing with Malcolm X's death,
01:04Malika Shabazz, along with the rest of the family of Malcolm X, decided that they want to reinvestigate the connection between the feds or the CIA with his death.
01:13So the day that the two men were exonerated from all charges dealing with Malcolm X,
01:17again, Malika Shabazz and her family heavily pursued the reinvestigation of the connection with the feds and her dad's death.
01:25Two days later, after the request for the reinvestigation and exoneration of the two men found innocent,
01:32Malika Shabazz was found dead in her New York apartment by her daughter.
01:36Medical examiners said that she died from natural causes, but we all know how that go.
01:41It's just so crazy that once she requested a reinvestigation with the connection between the CIA and her father's death,
01:47that two days later she died from natural causes.
01:50It's crazy, but it makes you think.
01:52What was actually the cause of Malika Shabazz's death?
01:55Alright, now go ahead and let me know what y'all think in the comments.
01:58The conspiracy goes all the way back to Alex, who didn't write Malcolm, nor did he write Roots.
02:08A white boy, the senior editor of Playboy magazine, Murray Fisher, wrote both them books.
02:16And as we stand here now, them two books makes about seven to eight million dollar royalty right now every year.
02:25Then how come when Alex died, they had to auction off his stuff, to pay off his bills,
02:32how come they didn't attach his royalties because he don't get no royalties?
02:37That's the game.
02:40Alright?
02:42Whole book's a lie.
02:45And if you look at Roots, and go get your federal documents,
02:49in federal court, a white boy by the name of Harry Colander, that wrote the affidavit, 1967,
02:57court documents show that fellow judge made all of them pay him $750,000,
03:04and in the records they chastised him, they not only lifted out the book, they didn't even change it.
03:10Then a white boy from England named John Robinson, that same judge made him pay him $150,000
03:18to get the game out of his hands.
03:21And then our sister, Walker, who wrote the Alex Jubilee, they threw her case out.
03:32And I knew that they could never release the movie until they killed Alex,
03:37and Alex Haley reviewed the movie one week and fell dead walking through the airport the next week.
03:44Y'all go on out there and play your games with this filthy, slimy, degenerate system.
03:49The head of the movement is the father of eight children by six different teenage girls
03:54who were his private personal secretaries.
03:57Four of them had one child apiece by him.
04:00Two of them had two children, and one of those two is pregnant right now in Los Angeles.
04:05I think that was the breaking point.
04:08That was pretty much Malcolm pulling out the very last card he had.
04:14And it was their fear that if I remained in the black Muslim movement,
04:19and this came into the knowledge of his followers, that they would leave him and follow me.
04:25You're about to witness the real reason why Malcolm X was assassinated.
04:32More than likely, my father was assassinated because he had the support of 33 African nations,
04:40and they were prepared to go before the UN and the Supreme Court to charge America and England
04:46with crimes against humanity for the kidnapping and the murder of hundreds of millions of Africans over the years.
04:56So it's something, Vlad.
04:58Did you know that Malcolm X and Martin Luther King both were killed at the age of 39?
05:06Do you know that a male matures at the age of 40?
05:11Why did they make sure that Malcolm was gone before he got to 40, and that Dr. King...
05:17Why are they gone before 40?
05:19It's because if they were given this much trouble to the wickedness of this world,
05:24and they hadn't even matured yet, what kind of soldiers would they have been
05:29had they been allowed to continue to live their life?
05:35I said, did y'all know that Malcolm X used to debate against Yale and Harvard students
05:39and would win time after time?
05:41Malcolm X was a critical thinker, so he would come off the top with quick responses and quick answers
05:46compared to the students that was going off of what was just taught to them.
05:50Because you can memorize all the knowledge in the world, but it takes true wisdom
05:54to transfer that knowledge into real action, and to actually be living it so much
05:58that you don't got to think anymore, because every time you speak, it's what you believe.
06:02Would you mind telling me what your father's last name was?
06:05My father didn't know his last name.
06:07My father got his last name from his grandfather, and his grandfather got it from his grandfather,
06:11who got it from the slave master.
06:13The real names of our people were destroyed during slavery.
06:16Was there any line of...
06:19Put Malcolm out before the world?
06:22Was Malcolm your traitor or was he ours?
06:25And if we dealt with him like a nation deals with a traitor, what the hell business is it of yours?
06:43You just shut your mouth and stay out of it.
06:49Because in the future, we're going to become a nation,
06:54and the nation got to be able to deal with traitors and cutthroats and turncoats.
07:01...and the sisters myself, because I was shook up,
07:04and they admitted to me that Elijah Muhammad was the father of their children,
07:08and I took it to him.
07:09And it was at that time he told me that he was Muhammad, the prophet,
07:13and that Muhammad had nine wives.
07:15He also told me that he was David, he was the modern David,
07:18and that he was the modern Solomon,
07:20and that it was meant for him to fulfill today all of the things that they did back then.
07:26And how many of these illegitimate children did he father with the sisters?
07:31Well, he made six sisters pregnant.
07:34They all had children.
07:36Two of those six had two children.
07:38One of those two is having a child right now.
07:42I am told that there is a seventh sister who is supposed to be in Mexico right now,
07:47and she's supposed to be having a child by him.
07:51...was killed because of another brother named Dipinto.
07:57A lot of people thought he was African, but he was East Indian.
08:02He was born in Nairobi.
08:05He's the one that changed Malcolm's head from black nationalist to Pan-Africanist,
08:11and made that connection from here to there.
08:15And the government said, we can't let this happen.
08:17He's the one that persuaded Malcolm when he went to Africa and stayed seven weeks
08:21and met with all the real leaders.
08:24And then he's the one that discussed with Malcolm
08:27of bringing racism to the doorsteps of the UN.
08:32And as Malcolm was being shot dead in New York City,
08:37Dipinto was being gunned down in Nairobi.
08:42All right. Same time.
08:45All right. Same time.
08:48What do you expect to get from killing Malcolm?
08:51Guilt.
08:52Do you think he would have been made a hero?
08:55Actually, at that time, to kill Malcolm,
09:01I wasn't thinking in terms necessarily of being a hero.
09:04I was thinking really in terms of doing what I felt had to be done
09:10as a member of the Nation of Islam, FOI,
09:16accepting the honor of Elijah Muhammad as a messenger of God.
09:18I felt that he was being slandered, cascaded at that time.
09:21And I felt that in doing what I did, participating in this like I did,
09:27I felt that it was only an act of my duty at that time.
09:31You've called people like Martin Luther King,
09:33who just got a Nobel Peace Prize, an Uncle Tom.
09:36Is this correct, first?
09:38Well, I'd rather say that in the States,
09:41there's a law that has recently been passed,
09:43or a decision handed down by the court,
09:45wherein if you call someone an Uncle Tom,
09:47they can sue you for libel.
09:49So I never refer to them as Uncle Toms.
09:52I would say that Uncle Martin is my friend.
09:54Uncle Martin is your friend, yet you would disagree with his approach
09:58to what he wants to accomplish.
10:00Definitely. If his approach would bring about
10:03what the black man in America needs
10:05to completely eliminate the problem that we have,
10:08I would say well and good.
10:10But I very much doubt that anyone who adopts the approach
10:15that Martin Luther King has been teaching to our people in that country
10:18can point to any meaningful gains that has actually served to solve the problem.
10:22When the FBI studied Malcolm and when they studied Martin,
10:26one went and spoke and came back to the hotel and prayed
10:31and talked on the phone with his wife.
10:34And they don't have no dirt on him.
10:36The other one went and spoke and came back to the room
10:40and partied and fucked like a motherfucker in every town he went to.
10:44That was the Christian.
10:45How do you know that though?
10:46Because it's documented evidence.
10:48The FBI said that Malcolm X was a saint compared to the doctor.
10:52It's very well documented that Dr. Martin Luther King was just like any man.
11:00He was a whore mongering preacher compared to Malcolm,
11:03who has no documentation of doing anything such like the preacher.
11:07I don't want to be a religious man, but I have Christian values and beliefs.
11:11I believe in Jesus. I believe he's a son of God.
11:14I just don't take the title as a Christian. I just believe.
11:18So what are you, a believer that don't make you a Christian?
11:22Oh, no. Because I also like to sin.
11:25And most Christians don't admit that they like to sin.
11:28Most people can't admit to the sins that they do, that they like to do.
11:33See something we do. But we also got some secret ones that we like to do.
11:38When Malcolm, the civil rights bill is with us now. What will it mean?
11:43Well, I'm not very excited at all over the civil rights bill, primarily because it's a law.
11:48And the Supreme Court desegregation decision was also a law that was handed down by the highest court in the land 10 years ago.
11:56And they haven't been able to implement it even here in New York City or any other city in the north,
12:01much less try and implement it in the south.
12:03And if they can't implement this single law that was handed down by the highest court in the land,
12:09I'm very doubtful that they'll be able to enforce any of the laws that are now on the books in this recently passed civil rights legislation.
12:20You don't think it's even a step then?
12:23No, I don't think it's any step.
12:25The Constitution of the United States automatically is supposed to be sufficient to protect anybody who's born here who's a citizen.
12:32And if the Constitution includes all of those who are born here, I don't see why additional legislation is needed when it comes to the rights of the Negro.
12:42If the Polish people and the Hungarians and the Russians and others who come here as refugees don't need civil rights legislation in order to be recognized as citizens,
12:52why is it a farce to make Negroes think that civil rights legislation is needed to get us recognition as citizens?
12:58Well, what would you suggest be done then to let a Negro go wherever he wants to in the south and get all the other benefits that the bill provides him?
13:07You can't do anything by legislation. It takes education.
13:11The white man in this country needs to be re-educated so that his behavior pattern toward non-whites will change.
13:19And the black man in this country also needs to be re-educated so our behavior pattern and attitude toward ourselves will change.
13:26And once a little educating is done on both sides, you'll probably find that that in itself will do more to bring about the spirit of brotherhood than all of the legislation that's designed to force the two together.
13:37You can't legislate brotherhood. Brotherhood comes about through understanding, and understanding is created through education.
13:44Now Malcolm, on one side you're talking about brotherhood and education, and on the other side you're talking about guerrilla movements in the south. Where do you stand?
13:53Both of them are educational. We demand our right to have access to equality of opportunity to anything that this country stands for,
14:04as long as we're born here and come within the confines of the constitution that governs this country.
14:10Now, in line with that, we feel that we have the right to defend ourselves whenever we take measures to participate as citizens and unlawful elements like the Ku Klux Klan get in our way.
14:23We think the two positions are consistent. In fact, one complements the other.