Black Uhuru Black Uhuru appears at the moment of Jamaica's perfect and ideal chaos, chaos, and difficulties. Throughout the late 1970s, the country and its citizens were faced with external imperialist threats, political violence, slowing economic instability, interference by hidden secrets by the United States, and angry political youth. Reggae music no longer reflects the change, it needs its own uprising. To see Black Ulur through one eye is the grace of salvation in this hopeless era.
In the spring of 1995, an article entitled "European Jewish Paradox" was reprinted in a special edition of the Black Student Journal Ufl of Kent State University (OH). This article accuses the Jews as "so far, the corruption, discoloration, cultural consolidation, slavery and genocide" of many people all over the world. This case is particularly troublesome as Uhuru's special issue is funded by the dean of the university. In October 1995, Colombian Black Student Organization Chairman posted a column on the Colombian Daily Observer and called the Jews "devil", "liars", "otters smoked blood from the black community". He wrote that the Jews "conceal their evils under the rabbi skirt and costume" and hid "billions of African blood" under their dome cap. (In order to talk about this incident in more detail, look at "Anti - Semitism of Black Student Group".)
If you see the original Star Trek series now, you may not be able to think about the team's cultural diversity twice. However, the diversity at that time was unprecedented, including Lieutenant Uhur (African), Lieutenant Sul (Asian), and Ensign Chekov (Russian). At this time, the civil rights movement came into full swing, the United States was also in the middle of the Vietnam War and the Cold War.
If you are currently watching the original series, you may not think twice about crew's cultural diversity. However, at the time, the diversity of crew members such as lieutenant Uhuru (black woman), lieutenant lieutenant (Asian), lieutenant Czechph (Russians), etc. had never existed. Looking at the times, the civil rights movement has become full-fledged, and the United States is also in the midst of the Vietnam War and the Cold War. In contrast, "Star Trek" is the closest to contemporary art in "Lost in Space" of "White and Cast". Star Trek is optimistic and will learn that in the future all of us will solve the differences and cooperate.