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[music]
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Narrator: The following program is from NET:
The National Educational Television Network.
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Debate, James Baldwin Vs William Buckley.
Subject, "Has the American Dream Been
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Achieved at the Expense of the American
Negro?"
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This debate was held recently at the
Cambridge Union, Cambridge University
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England, and was recorded for use by NET.
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Norman St. John Stevas, M.P:
Well, here we are in the debating hall
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of the Cambridge Union, hundreds of
undergraduates and myself waiting for what
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could prove one of the most exciting
debates in the whole 150 years of the
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union history.
It really... I don't think I have ever
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seen the union so well attended.
There are undergraduates everywhere.
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They're on the benches and on the floor
and on the galleries. And there are a lot
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more outside clambering to get in.
Well, the motion that has drawn this huge
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crowd tonight is this: That the American
Dream has been achieved at the expense
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of the American negro. The debate will
open with two undergraduates speakers,
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one from each side, and then we shall
have the first distinguished guest,
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Mr James Baldwin. The well-known American
novelist who has achieved a world wide
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fame with his novel "Another Country."
Then opposing the motion will be
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Mr. William Buckley, also an American.
Very well-known as a conservative in the
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United States. I must stress a conservative
in the American sense. Author of a book
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called "Up from Liberalism" and editor of
the National Review. One of the earliest
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reporters of Senator Goldwater.
Well, this is the setting of the debate,
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and at any moment now, the president
will be leading in his officers and his
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distinguished guests. He will take his
chair, and the debate will begin.
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[applause]
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The motion before the house tonight is
"The American Dream at the Expense of
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the American Negro." The proposer,
Mr. David Haycock of Pembroke College,
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and our opposer, Mr. Jeremy Burford of
Emmanuel College. Mr. James Baldwin
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will speak third. Mr William Buckley Jr.
will speak fourth. Mr. Heycock has the
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ear of the house.
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[applause]
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David Heycock: Mr. President, sir, it is
the custom of the house for the first
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speaker in any debate to extend a
formal welcome to any visitors to the
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house. I can honestly say however it is
a very great honor to be able to welcome
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to the house this evening Mr. William
Buckley and Mr. James Baldwin.
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Mr. William Buckley has the reputation
of possibly being the most articulate
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conservative in the United States of
America. He was a graduate of Yale,
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and he first gained a reputation for
himself by publishing a book called
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"God and Man at Yale."
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[laughter]
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Since then, he has devoted himself to
the secular, and this has included
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Norman Mailer, Kenneth Tynan, Mary McCarthy,
and Fidel Castro, none of whom have come
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out of their confrontations unscathed.
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[laughter]
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At present, his principle occupation is
editing a right-wing newspaper in the
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United States entitled
"The National Review."
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Mr. James Baldwin is hardly in need of
introduction. His reputation both as a
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novelist and as an advocate of civil rights
is international. His third novel
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"Another Country" has been published as
a paperback in England today. Mr. Baldwin
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and Mr. Buckley are both very welcome to
the house this evening.
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[applause]
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Imagine Mr. President a society which
above all values freedom and equality.
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A society in which artificial barriers to
fulfillment and achievement are unheard
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of. A society in which a man may begin his
life as a rail splitter and end it as president.
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A society in which all men are free in
every sense of the word. Free to live
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where they choose. Free to work where they
choose. Equal in the eyes of the law and
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every public authority. And equal in the eyes
of their fellows. A society in fact which
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intollerence and prejudice are meaningless
terms. Imagine; however, Mr. President, a
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condition of this utopia has been a
persistent and quite deliberate
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exploitation of one ninth of its
inhabitants. That one man in nine has
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been denied his rights, which the rest
of that society takes for granted.
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That one man in nine does not have
a chance for fulfillment or realization
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of his innate potentiality. That one
man in nine cannot promise his
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children a secure future and unlimited
opportunities. Imagine this Mr. President
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and you have, what is in my opinion,
the bitter reality of the American Dream.
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A few weeks ago Martin Luther King had
to hold a non-violent demonstration in
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Selma, Alabama in his drive to register
negro voters. By the end of the week
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of his demonstrations, he was able to
write quite accurately in a national
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fundraising letter from Selma, Alabama
jail "There are more negros in prison
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with me then there are on the voting
roles." When King wrote that letter,
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three-hundred and thirty-five out of
thirty-two-thousand-seven-hundred
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negros in Dallas had the vote.
One percent of the Dallas population.
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After a mass march to the court house,
two-hundred-and-thirty-seven negros,
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King among them, were arrested.
The following day, four-hundred-and
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seventy children, who had deserted
their classrooms to protest against
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King's arrest, were charged with juvenile
delinquency.
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[laughter]
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Thirty-six adults on the same day were
charged with contempt of court for
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picketing the court house while
state circuit court was in session.
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On the following day, a hundred-and
eleven people were arrested on the
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same charge despite their claim that
they merely wanted to see the voting
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registrar. Four-hundred students were
arrested and taken to the armory,
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where many of them spent the night
on a cold cement floor. The following
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date the demonstrations spread to
Marion, Alabama. In Marion, negros
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outnumbered the whites by eleven-and
a-half thousand to six-thousand people
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and yet, only three hundred are registered
to vote. Negros in Marion were anxious
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to test the public accommodations section
of the civil rights law. They entered a
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drug store and there they were served
with Coca Cola laced with salt and were
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told that hamburgers had risen to five
dollars each. After the arrest of fifteen
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negros for protesting against this
treatment, seven hundred negros
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boycotted their classes the next day
and marched in orderly fashion to the
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jail. There they sang civil rights songs
until they were warned by a state trooper
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that they would be arrested if they sung
one more song. Of course, they sung
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another song, and of course, all seven
hundred were arrested. American
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society has felt fit to use negro labor.
It has felt fit to use the blood of the
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negro in two world wars. It has felt fit to
listen to its music. It has felt fit to laught
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at its jokes, and yet, as far as I am
concerned, it has never felt fit to
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give the American negro a fair deal;
and for this reason Mr. President,
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I will beg leave to propose the motion
that the American dream is at the expense
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of the American negro.
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[applause]
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Unnamed Individual: I now call Mr. Jeremy Burford of Emmanuel College to oppose the motion.
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[applause]
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Narrator: Now, we have Mr. Jeremy
Burford of Emmanuel College who
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is the first undergraduate opposing
the motion.
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Jeremy Burford: James Baldwin is well
known as one of the most vivid and
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articulate writers about the negro
problem in American. Mr. Baldwin
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had a difficult childhood, and he
has personally himself suffered
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discrimination and ill treatment
of a sort in American, and I would
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like to say at this time that it is
not the purpose of this side of
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the house to condone that in any
way at all. It is not our purpose to
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oppose civil rights. It is our purpose
to oppose this motion. [audience: here here]
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[laughter]
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Thank you, sir. Come and collect
your fee afterwards.
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[laughter and applause]
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This side of the house denies that the
American dream has in any way been
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helped by this undoubted inequality
and suffering of the negro.
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We maintain in fact that this has hindered
the American Dream, and if there had
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been equality, if there had been true
freedom of opportunity, the American
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dream would be very much more advance
then it is now. If the American dream has
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made any progress, and I think it has,
it has been made in spite of the suffering
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and inequality of the American negro and
not because of it. Now it is also implied
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in this motion that the American Dream is
encouraging and worsening the suffering
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of the American negro. This is emphatically
not the case. The American Dream,
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the American economic prosperity and
respect for civil liberties has been the
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main factor in bringing about the undoubted
improvement in race relations in America
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in the last twenty years; and Professor
Arnold Rose was the author of the "Negro
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in America" which is perhaps the definitive
word on the subject, who is also a
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contributor of what is called "The Freedom
Pamphlet". So I should imagine if he has
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any bias at all, it is in favor of the negro.
He's said that this improvement in race
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relations will be seen in years to come as
remarkably quick, and he has put it down
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to three main causes: increased
industrialization and technical advance,
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the increased social mobility of the
American people, and the economic
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prosperity. And I would put it to this
house that that industrialization and
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economic prosperity are two of the main
ingredients of the American dream and
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at the same time--again, I do not want to
say that the negro in America is treated
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fairly--but at the same time, the average
per capita income of negros in America
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is exactly the same as the average per
capita income of people in Great Britain.
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Now, I found that absolutely amazing.
I understand that some of you do as well;
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so, I've got the reference here from the
United States News and World Report
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of July the 22nd 1963, in which it points
out... [Man in the audience raises hand]
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This will have to be the last interruption
I take because time is running short.
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Audience member: Mr. Preston. Now a
point of information, is this being a talking
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of real income or money income?
[Audience: here here, applause.]
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I am talking of money income. I would not
wish to disguise that. I would also say that
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in terms of this, there are only five
countries in the world where the income
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is higher than that of the American negro,
and they do not include countries like
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West Germany and France and Japan.
Now, there are in America thirty-five
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negro millionaires. There are six thousand
doctors and so on. Now I do not by saying
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this wish to emphasize that the negro is
fairly treated. I merely wish to try and
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convey a more realistic and objective
account of the situation of the negro.
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I agree that there are negros who are
very poor indeed, such as the old
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gentlemen in the south who was talking
about some of his wealthier brethren
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saying "Yes. Some of these rich negros
they put on airs like the bottom
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figure of a fetch, and the bigger they try
to be the smaller they really are."
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I would repeat Mr. President in the
last minute that I have that this debate
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is not whether civil rights should be
extended to American negros or not;
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if it were it would be a very easy
motion to argue for and a very easy
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motion to vote for. The debate tonight
concerns whether the American Dream
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is at the expense of the American negro.
That is where the American negro has paid
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for the American dream with a suffering
or whether the American dream has
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furthered the negro inequality, and
I would deny those things to precept.
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I would say that negro inequality has
hindered the American dream, and
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I would say that the American dream
has been very important in the in
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furthering civil rights and in furthering
freedom for the American negro.
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Mr. President, sir, I beg to oppose
the motion.
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[applause]
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Unnamed Individual: It is now with very
great pleasure and a very great sense of
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honor that I call Mr. James Baldwin
to speak third to this motion.
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[applause]
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Narrator: Now we have Mr. James Baldwin,
the star of the evening, who has been
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sitting, listening attentively and getting
a wonderful reception here in the
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Cambridge Union. From members, enthusiasm
from all sides of the house for Mr. Baldwin,
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who has been listening to the arguments.
Now will bring the voice of actual
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experience to the debate.
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James Baldwin: Good evening.
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[laughter]
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I find myself, not for the first time,