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Posted

I always thought Garvey looked ridiculous in that uniform.

 

I asked ChatGPT what Hubert Henry Harrison said about Garvey:

 

Hubert Henry Harrison, a prominent African-American intellectual and activist, was critical of Marcus Garvey. While both men were leaders within the Harlem Renaissance and advocates for Black liberation, they had significant ideological differences. Harrison saw Garvey's approach to leadership as problematic, particularly criticizing Garvey's authoritarian style, lack of transparency, and what he considered Garvey's unrealistic goal of establishing a Black empire in Africa.

Harrison also objected to Garvey's collaboration with white supremacist groups like the Ku Klux Klan, arguing that working with such organizations was counterproductive to the cause of racial equality. He believed that Garvey's promotion of African nationalism and the "Back to Africa" movement diverted attention from the immediate struggle for rights and improvements in the U.S.

Though both shared a vision of Black empowerment, their approaches diverged, with Harrison promoting a more secular, class-conscious vision of Black liberation focused on addressing the needs of the working-class Black population in America, while Garvey emphasized race pride and pan-Africanism.

 

59 vus

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Posted

I have read the two books by Harrison in Project Gutenberg. I knew that he did not like Garvey though he worked with him. There are only two or three sentences saying that he was shallow and egoistic.

Posted
30 minutes ago, umbrarchist said:

I always thought Garvey looked ridiculous in that uniform.


Garvey was a man of his time.

 

Hubert Henry Harrison died too young.

 

No one moved and organized Black people the way Garvey did. Not Obama, King, or Malcolm X.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
On 10/3/2024 at 10:22 PM, Troy said:


Garvey was a man of his time.

 

Hubert Henry Harrison died too young.

 

No one moved and organized Black people the way Garvey did. Not Obama, King, or Malcolm X.


The closest we've had in this nation so far would be Elijah Muhammad and the Nation of Islam under his leadership.
I don't believe that his official following was as large as Garvey's at one time, but his leadership was longer lasting....spanning decades...and the effects were longer lasting.

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