“Hail, hail Freedonia, land of the free!”
Groucho Marx (1890–1977) American comedian
Source: Groucho Marx
context (6) “One Comes Out Where...”
Stand on Zanzibar (1968)
“Hail, hail Freedonia, land of the free!”
Groucho Marx (1890–1977) American comedian
Source: Groucho Marx
Marcus Garvey (1887–1940) Jamaica-born British political activist, Pan-Africanist, orator, and entrepreneur
The Failure of Haile Selassie as Emperor in The Blackman, April, 1937.
Louis Jacolliot (1837–1890) French writer and lawyer
The Bible in India, as quoted in K. M. Talreja, Holy Vedas and Holy Bible: A Comparative Study https://books.google.com/books?id=9qkoAAAAYAAJ, New Delhi: Rashtriya Chetana Sangathan, 2000
Max Shachtman (1904–1972) American Marxist theorist
Race and Revolution p. 44, 1933
Calvin Coolidge (1872–1933) American politician, 30th president of the United States (in office from 1923 to 1929)
1920s, The Progress of a People (1924)
Context: The armies in the field could not have done their part in the war if they had not been sustained and supported by the far greater civilian forces at home, which through unremitting toil made it possible to sustain our war effort. No part of the community responded more willingly, more generously, more unqualifiedly, to the demand for special extraordinary exertion, than did the members of the Negro race. Whether in the military service, or in the vast mobilization of industrial resources which the war required, the Negro did his part precisely as did the white man. He drew no color line when patriotism made its call upon him. He gave precisely as his white fellow citizens gave, to the limit of resources and abilities, to help the general cause. Thus the American Negro established his right to the gratitude and appreciation which the Nation has been glad to accord.
J. B. S. Haldane (1892–1964) Geneticist and evolutionary biologist
Daedalus or Science and the Future (1923)
Frederick Douglass (1818–1895) American social reformer, orator, writer and statesman
The motive is not a desire to elevate the negro, but to humiliate and degrade those of mixed blood; not a desire to bring the negro up, but to cast the mulatto and the quadroon down by forcing him below an arbitrary and hated color line.
1880s, The Future of the Colored Race (1886)
Kuvempu (1904–1994) Kannada novelist, poet, playwright, critic, and thinker
Jaya Bharata Jananiya Tanujate (1930)