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Ali was a great boxer and whilst I do admire him for refusing to allow himself to be drafted up, I do take issue with a number of his political and social stances. He was somewhat racist and his attitudes were demeaning to women.
I have no doubt that Ali is American and in turn I do think he is a hero of boxing. As a moral and social force, I think that it takes more than one principled stand against the draft to make a hero in those respects.
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True, even bad Mike Tyson has always given his dues to the greats that went before him. Ali was an uncouth pottymouth in that regard. He gave little respect to anyone and would say whatever he could get away with. A total twat in that regard and yet we all look at him as some kind of hero. Look at the stick Mayorga gets on the boards today for the things he says. In terms of rhetoric, Mayorga is no worse than someone like Ali.
Ali does appear to have been somewhat put on a pedestal and the unsavoury aspects of his life have been dusted under the furniture.
Yeah Tyson was very humble and respectful when it came to talking about the greats that came before him and that comes from Cus D'Mato really preaching the gospel of the greats to him and showing film of them.
One guy Ali did have respect for was Jack Johnson and I totally understand that because politics aside he was Ali before Ali ever took a breath much less stepped in the ring. Jack Johnson didn't have any agenda other than Jack Johnson...he was a real pioneer in that manner.
I am American, and although I personally only routed for Ali one time (vs Holmes), I can say he certainly IS an American hero.
Ali was a cult of personality and extremely popular due to the counter culture. Much like a certain President of a certain country, people projected views on Ali...and the big reasons he was popular with the counter culture were: he was loud, charismatic, black, against the war, and not a Christian it made him seem more exotic and spiritual to the group of people who strayed from their parents views and beliefs to the generation before Rocky Marciano was a hero: quiet, humble, hard working, and had more of a grind it out fighting style. Ali also had a more free loose style which also helped him stand out.
Contrary to popular belief I've got no issues with Islam...but "The Nation" is a bunch of crooks and thugs and they are bat shit crazy, crazier than Scientologists!
Yes...when their leader says he visited Elijah Muhammad on a spaceship hovering over the Earth...I say he's a bit out there.
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Hidden Content Bring me the best and I will knock them out-Alexis Arguello
I'm not God, but I am something similar-Robert Duran
He might be ones favorite boxer.......(not mine)
But American Hero? He is quite the opposite in every aspect imaginable.
Put it on the next presidential ballot so we can get everyones vote...I bet everything it would be a convincing NO....nothing American about the fuck
With Ali's current health condition being what it is, I know it's hard for me to feel any animosity toward him. Whatever "sins" he may have been guilty of in his youth should now be forgiven and long forgotten. I sincerely hope the man is able to enjoy what's left of his life in peace.
BTW, I think it's safe to say, if there is such a thing these days, Muhammad Ali is without any doubt, an American Hero, I know he is in my book.
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Question for the Americans.
It always puzzles me that a guy who chose a religion over fighting for his country , can be an American hero.
Some say it was against his NEW beliefs , many would find it hard not to think he was a coward.
I mean the guy chose the muslim faith which he wasnt even born into , then turned his back on his country.
The stuff of Hero's ?
No not for me , Joe Louis was a hero.
For me he will always be Cassius Clay.
Im interested in your views guys.
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What became the USA was largely initially populated by religious outcasts from Europe, the Pilgrims most famously, but also Roger Williams, William Penn etc. who all chose faiths other than those they were born into. So it was no surprise that the first clause of the Bill of Rights speaks to freedom of religion. From there springs a long American tradition of "conscientious objection." That is that people who seriously examined the issue of war and found on religious grounds they couldn't justify war could be exempted from military service. Such exemptions began during the American Revolution and have continued since. To give just one example of how widespread and accepted this tradition is in the USA, even during WWII over 10,000 men were exempted from service on grounds of conscience. So Ali was standing firmly in an American tradition when he did this. Now many believe he was merely a robot for the thuggish Black Muslims, but I'm convinced he was sincere. His ongoing search for the right branch of Islam for him through his adult life has convinced me.
But many people do think he betrayed the nation. I am not one of them. While I disagreed with his decision? The way he conducted himself throughout the process was exemplary in my view.
Sorry for the long-windedness.
Hidden Content Bring me the best and I will knock them out-Alexis Arguello
I'm not God, but I am something similar-Robert Duran
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So a hero is one who goes off to fight in an immoral and phoney war on the whims of the government? The ones who refuse to toe the line or keep to the manufactured script are not? I disagree with that line of thinking. I admire Ali for refusing to go to war and think that was actually a very heroic gesture. It might have also been a selfish gesture on his part, but as a stand I think it was quite apt and it is hard to interpret it as not also being a gesture of principle.
As much as I loath organised religion, I do think that is something that boils down to personal choice. If Ali believed that was what he wanted to believe then so be it. I don't understand how being a Muslim could make him anti-American either.
I think there are grounds for dismissing Ali and his views, but the war and being a Muslim are things that I find hard to condemn as anti-American. You could argue that Daniel Elsberg was unpatriotic, but I look at it on the other side of the coin. Those with vested interests and extreme levels of power are quite often themselves far from patriotic or just.
Ali was just an individual finding his way through life. Sometimes he seemed extremely misguided, but in other respects he seemed like a man with his own evolving values. Obviously there were contradictions, but you find that with any evolving intelligent being.
I am not American though, so shall step aside from the soapbox.![]()
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Let's be really clear about one thing. Ali wasn't then a "Muslim" in the ordinary sense. He was a Black Muslim, aka the Nation of Islam. An American whacko sect formed in the 1930's by a slick huckster named Fard and then taken over by Elijah Muhammad, another huckster. These guys believe things like a scinetist named Yakub created white men as devils, that a large spaceship carrying God had been launched from Japan in the 1920's and that a fleet of UFO's used by God are always around. Not exactly mainsteam Islamic belief huh? These jokers slaughtered Malcolm X for apostasy as well. While Islam may or may not be anti-American (it is certainly opposed to religious freedom), the Black Muslims advocate Black Separatism among other things. That is clearly not an idea consistent with American ideals.
Now Ali has long since broken with them and become a Sufi I believe.
As for Daniel Ellsberg? I think he committed Treason. It may have been what his conscience required, but it was still Treason.
Last edited by marbleheadmaui; 04-22-2011 at 08:19 AM.
Hidden Content Bring me the best and I will knock them out-Alexis Arguello
I'm not God, but I am something similar-Robert Duran
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