Prefaces
The Love Endures by Pamela Horowitz
Practicing Dissent by Jeanne Theoharis
Editor’s Introduction
CHAPTER ONE
The Atlanta Student Movement and SNCC
The Fuel of My Civil Rights Fire
The Conversation That Started It All
A Student Voice
Let Freedom Ring
Lonnie King Is Acid Victim
The Murder of Louis Allen
SNCC and JFK
Freedom Summer: What We Are Seeking
How to Remember the Atlanta Student Movement
SNCC: Alienated, Paranoid, and Near Collapse
SNCC’s Legacy
CHAPTER TWO
Vietnam and the Politics of Dissent
The Right to Dissent
I Consider Myself a Pacifist
Martin Luther King, Jr. and Vietnam
Elijah Muhammad and the 1968 Democratic National Convention
Eugene McCarthy and a New Politics
The Warfare State
Fighting Nixon
Rethinking Violence in America
Angela Davis Is a Political Prisoner
The Failure of Kent State
Lessons from Vietnam
CHAPTER THREE
Two Black Colonies
The Population Bomb as Justification for Genocide
Escaping from Colonialism
The United States Is a Colonial Society
Liberation in Angola and Alabama
South Africa: The Cancer on the African Continent
CHAPTER FOUR
Nixon and the Death of Youthful Protest
Nixon’s Black Supporters Should Shuffle Off
Uncle Strom’s Cabin: The Reelection of Richard Nixon
The New Civil Rights Movement
Nixon’s Racist Justification of Watergate
George Wallace Still Champion of the Politics of Race
Blacks and Jews
Why No Riots?
The Death of Youthful Protest
Politics Matters
CHAPTER FIVE
Uncle Jimmy’s Cabin
Carter Hides His Red Neck
Election 76—A Political Diary
Why I Can’t Support Jimmy Carter
SNCC Reunites, Carter Is Absent
Blacks Are Politically Impotent
Griffin Bell and the Right to Dissent
Blacks and Moral Suicide
Carter Ignores Blacks
Political Prisoners in the United States
Carter’s Misguided Fight Against Inflation
CHAPTER SIX
Civil Rights Milestones
Fannie Lou Hamer: Lady in a Homespun Dress
The Civil Rights Movement: The Beginning and the End
The Racial Tide Has Turned Against Us
King: Again a Victim
The 25th Anniversary of Brown: Time to Do for Ourselves
Roy Wilkins: A Reasonable Man
CHAPTER SEVEN
Our Long National Nightmare:
Reagan, Bush, and the Assault on Women
Reagan and South Africa
A New Social Darwinism: The Survival of the Richest
Reagan’s Justice
My Father and the Death Penalty
Nicaragua and Paranoia
The Break that Never Healed: John Lewis’s Painful Criticism
Operation Rescue Is No Civil Rights Movement
A Kinder, Gentler Nation?
My Case Against Clarence Thomas
The Need for More Civil Rights Laws
In Defense of the NAACP
Dear Michael: Advice for Running for Office
CHAPTER EIGHT
The Measure of Men and Racism:
Jefferson and King, Clinton and Dole, Farrakhan and Simpson
The Most Useful Founding Father
Remembering All of Dr. King
Bill Clinton and Hope for America
Failures: Gingrich and Dole
Clinton Against Dole
Gangsta Rap
Louis Farrakhan Is a Black David Duke
The Unsurprising Acquittal of O. J. Simpson
King Supported Affirmative Action
King and the Death Penalty
CHAPTER NINE
The George W. Bush Years:
The War on Terror and the Fight for
Poor Blacks, Women, and LGBT Rights
Racial Injustice in the Criminal Justice System
Social Security and African Americans
September 11 and Beyond
Slavery and Terrorism
Our Leaders Are Wrong About the War
The NAACP and the Right to Reproductive Freedom
Are Gay Rights Civil Rights?
AIDS Is a Major Civil Rights Issue
Why I Will March for LGBT Rights
In Katrina’s Wake
We Must Persevere
CHAPTER TEN
Barack Obama and Ongoing Bigotry
Civil Rights: Now and Then
What Barack Obama Means
Homophobia and Black America
Same-Sex Marriage: More than a White Issue
Religion-Based Exemptions Discriminate Against LGBT People
The Civil War and the Confederate Flag
Voting Rights: Which Side Are You On?
Voting Rights Again: The Most Pressing Domestic Issue Today
We All Must Protest
Our Journey Is Nowhere Near Over
Afterword by Douglas Brinkley
Acknowledgments
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Pursuing blurbs from Taylor Branch, Clayborne Carson, Marian Wright Edelman, Mary Frances Berry, Chad Griffin (HRC), Kwase Mfume, Ben Jealous, Jim Obergefell, Angela Davis, Elizabeth Warren, John Lewis.
Horace Julian Bond was a leader in the Civil Rights Movement, politician, professor and writer. In 1960, while attending Morehouse College in Atlanta, Bond was a founding member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, leading student protests against segregation. A founder of the Southern Poverty Law Center, he served as its president in the 1970s while sitting in the Georgia House of Representatives. In 1968, Bond led a challenge delegation from Georgia to the Democratic National Congress, where he became the first African American and the youngest person to ever be nominated for Vice President of the United States, though he was ineligible due to his young age. In 1975, after ten years in the Georgia House, he served six terms in the Georgia senate, after which he taught at numerous colleges including Drexel and Harvard. In 1998, Bond was elected Board Chairman of the NAACP and, after his term, remained active as Chairman Emeritus for eleven years. He is the author of A Time To Speak, A Time To Act, a collection of his essays, as well as Black Candidates: Southern Campaign Experiences. His writing has appeared in many magazines and newspapers. He remained President Emeritus of the Southern Poverty Law Center until his death in 2015.
Michael G. Long is the author or editor of numerous books on civil rights, religion, and politics, includingWe the Resistance: Documenting A History of Nonviolent Protest in the United States;Race Man: Selected Works of Julian Bond;I Must Resist: Bayard Rustin's Life in Letters;Marshalling Justice: The Early Civil Rights Letters of Thurgood Marshall; andFirst Class Citizenship: The Civil Rights Letters of Jackie Robinson.Long has written for the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune, ESPN's The Undefeated, and USA Today, and his work has been featured or reviewed in the New York Times, the Washington Post, Mother Jones, and many others. Long has spoken at Fenway Park, the Central Intelligence Agency, the Smithsonian, the Library of Congress, and the National Archives, and he has appeared on MSNBC, PBS, C-SPAN, and National Public Radio.
"Julian Bond's Race Man anthology offers a uniquely perceptive and cogent overview of the African-American freedom struggle during its heyday in the 1960s and the perilous decades that have followed."—Clayborne Carson, Director, The Martin Luther King Jr Research and Education Institute, Stanford University"The fight for civil rights has had many heroes, but, as these pages make clear, few have loomed as large as Julian Bond. Future generations will know Julian Bond as a warrior for good who helped conquer hate in the name of love. More importantly, they will live in a world that is far more just and far more equal because of him."—Chad Griffin, former President of the Human Rights Campaign "Bond was well aware of the Second Reconstruction being recreated in America, and the legal push to undo all of Johnson's civil rights legislation. He would have despaired at Trump's election and the way the courts are being packed with fellow travelers, chipping away at civil rights protections. Handing victory after victory to people on the side of the powerful and greedy. He also would have found ways to organize. This enormous-hearted, unflinching book gives readers a vision of how that can be done."—John Freeman, Lit Hub Executive Editor, LitHub’s "Most Anticipated Books of 2020""As the nation confronts another period of ethnic and racial backlash and upheaval, Michael G. Long has edited a wonderful collection of Bond’s own words in Race Man: Selected Works, 1960-2015. . . . Bond’s life of activism and service, including his work with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), his time in the Georgia legislature, and his long involvement with the Southern Poverty Law Center and the NAACP, offers a powerful example of servant leadership that could serve as a roadmap for Americans today. . . . Long has carefully arranged and compiled writings which demonstrate how Bond evolved on critical social issues. Nowhere is this more pronounced than in Bond's support of equal rights for members of the LGBTQ community."—Daryl Carter, Chapter 16"The San Francisco publishing house that produced books by Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn and Jack Kerouac gives us this complete collection of writings by the late Julian Bond. A compilation of speeches, interviews and articles for publications such as Ebony and The Washington Post, the book spans the Georgia congressman's career as a civil and human rights leader from his undergraduate days at Morehouse College, where he was a founding member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, until the end of his life, when he championed gay marriage. Topics include his opposition to Jimmy Carter and Clarence Thomas, the bitter end to his friendship with John Lewis, and homophobia among African Americans."—Atlanta Journal Constitution’s “10 Southern Books We Can’t Wait to Read in 2020”"The truly inspiring and illuminating book by the late famous Civil Rights leader and social activist Julian Bond. It's his collection of letters and essays that everyone in 2020 should read."—You Beauty’s “15 Books to Watch Out for in 2020”
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