and when you and i here in
instead of us airing our differences in public, we have to realize we're all the same family. and when you have a family squabble, you don't get out on the sidewalk. if you do, everybody calls you uncouth, unrefined, uncivilized, savage. if you don't make it at home, you settle it at home; you get in the closet -- argue it out behind closed doors. and then when you come out on the street, you pose a common front, a united front. and this is what we need to do in the community, and in the city, and in the state. we need to stop airing our differences in front of the white man. put the white man out of our meetings, number one, and then sit down and talk shop with each other. [that's] all you gotta do.
i would like to make a few comments concerning the difference between the black revolution and the negro revolution. there's a difference. are they both the same? and if they're not, what is