Category Archives: History

Ahmad al-Mansur (1549-1603) Renaissance Diplomacy Moroccan Style

Abd al-Malik crushed the Portuguese at the Bat...

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The famous Battle of Three Kings (aka Battle of Alcazar) was a hard fought affair won by the Moroccans due in large part to the military exploits of Ahmad al-Mansur. Three Kings were killed; Portugal’s Dom Sebastian, Morocco’s current ruler Abd al-Malik (al-Mansur’s brother) and deposed former ruler al-Mutawakkil (al-Mansur’s nephew who fought alongside Dom Sebastian). Ahmad al-Mansur was suddenly a national hero, the living representation of Morocco’s strength and pride. He is also believed to have been the model for Shakespeare’s prince of Morocco character in The Merchant of Venice–the work that gave us the famous line: “All that glitters is not gold.” … More>>

Audio/Video: The 1960s Counter-Culture Scene

Chemical Structure of LSD (Lysergic acid dieth...

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Ken Kesey Interview – Jan 29, 1966

KMPX Radio Show on 1967-04-01

710 Ashbury Street House on 1967-07-01

Neal Cassady Raps

Seattle Be-in April 4, 1967

The Mind – Benders: LSD and the Hallucinogens

The Outer Limit of CIA Crime, LSD and Murder, H.P. Albarelli Jr on Talk Nation Radio

Audio/Video: Famous Speeches of Malcolm X

Malcolm X at Queens Court

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Famous Speeches of Malcolm X:  Includes Oxford debate 1964; House Negro and Field Negro; Revolution; Stop Singin and Start Swingin; Words from the Frontlines

The Life and Death of Malcolm X:  A collection of rare tv footage and speeches covering Malcolm X’s life and death (video)

The House Negro and the Field Negro:  Video

1964 Post-Hajj Interview: Just back from Mecca (video)

Race Relations in Crisis Video:  Guests: Malcolm X; Morrison, Alan; Walker, Wyatt Tee; Farmer, James

Brother Malcolm.net

The Ballot or the Bullet

1962 Diem Survives Coup Attempt

Madame Ngô Đình Nhu and Lyndon Baines Johnson,...

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In February 1962 South Vietnamese president Ngo Dinh Diem was unharmed as two planes bombed the presidential palace in Saigon. Republic of Vietnam Air Force pilots Lieutenants Pham Phu Quoc and Nguyen Van Cu tried to eliminate Diem and his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu by bombing and strafing the presidential palace. Both men escaped but Madame Nhu sustained a broken arm when she fell through a floor.

Lieutenant Quoc was arrested after his fighter-bomber crash-landed near Saigon. Lieutenant Cu fled to Cambodia, where he remained until November 1963.

The attack confirmed Diem’s conviction that his main adversaries were domestic. As a result, he retreated deeper into himself, delegating more authority to his brother Nhu, who set about eradicating dissidents–dozens of Diem political opponents disappeared, and thousands more were sent to prison camps. The coup attempt clearly elevated the level of paranoia in the Palace to new heights.

The Viet Cong were able to exploit the situation to their own advantage effectively and led the way in taunting and resisting the regime. The flames got even hotter in 1963– fanned by the Buddhists, their student supporters, the Viet Cong, and an impatient and conflicted White House– Diem and Nhu did not survive the heat. Then President Kennedy was killed three weeks later. Vietnam continued to spiral out of control. Only faster…