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lidiya [134]
3 years ago
6

Nelson mandela weakness

History
1 answer:
REY [17]3 years ago
4 0

Explanation:

1 - Puppetry, being used by his former jailers and racists to push white interests and selling out his own people.

2 - Lack of vision. He was not a reformer. He failed to reform South Africa, the country’s cultural values, education system and so on.

3 - He failed to address the crime situation and endemic violence in the society.

4 - He failed to improve and expand the education system to everybody.

5 - He was not practical. He thought every crisis could be solved by talking peace, while the enemy is busy invading, raping and butchering civilians. Case in point, the DRC war. He opposed intervention in the war as 25,000 Ugandan and 6000 Rwandan soldiers advanced towards the capital. This is the kind of leader who would allow terrorists and invaders to cause mayhem, instead of countering the insurgency with military force.

6 - He was not much of a Pan Africanist. He took his orders from his western handlers. He was told what to say and do.

7 - He threw the struggle of black people under the bus, in favour of international celebrity status. Being feted by celebraties was more important to him than reforming his country.

8 - Results of Mandela's legacy can be seen today. A highly uneducated, destructive and violent population. Mass school dropouts. Highest crime rates in the world. Millions of people living in slums.

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Considering the context of its creation, the “Letter from Birmingham Jail” is remarkably restrained in tone. Throughout his career, many critics of Dr. King argued that he was too deferential to the white authorities that facilitated segregation and other racist policies, but the tone here seems to serve several purposes. First, it conforms to his ultimate purpose of justifying his cause as being in the name of justice. He does not wish to validate his audience’s deep-seeded fears - that the black movement is an extremist set that will engender violence. Therefore, by utilizing restraint, he earns a sympathetic ear to which he then declares his proud embrace of extremism and tension. His difficult arguments end up practically unimpeachable precisely because he has presented them through logos as well as through pathos. However, the restraint also allows him to reinforce one of the letter’s central themes, the interconnectedness of man. There are times when he distinguishes himself and his cause from that of his opponents, particularly in terms of race. However, he for the most part suggests that all men are responsible for all others, an idea that would not be as effective if the tone of the argument was too fiery and confrontational.

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Considering it was written in a situation so infused with racial issues, the “Letter from Birmingham Jail” is often strangely divorced from explicitly racial issues. Obviously, Dr. King cannot avoid the topic, but much of his argument, especially in the letter’s first half, is presented in universalist terms and through abstractions like “justice” and the interrelatedness of man. He argues that the clergymen, and his larger audience, should support his cause not because the victims are black but because it is the right thing to do. However, this passionate but restrained argument ultimately sets the stage for a declaration of what scholar Jonathan Rieder calls “a proclamation of black self-sufficiency” (94). Once he establishes the definitions of justice and morality, Dr. King argues that the black man will succeed with or without the help of white moderates because they operate with the just ideals of both secular America and divine guidance. Further, he implicitly suggests that by continuing to facilitate the oppression of the black man through moderation, his audience is operating in sin and will ultimately be on the losing side.

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