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The Champ Meets the Chump

By Dave Zirin, TheNation.com. Posted November 24, 2005.


When George W. Bush recently welcomed Muhammad Ali to the White House, the ailing Champ had one last rope-a-dope up his sleeve.
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The presidency of George W. Bush is collapsing under the weight of its own incompetence. The polls speak for themselves -- only 35 percent of us approve of his job performance. Fifty-six percent -- including one in four Republicans -- say the war in Iraq was not worth fighting, and more than half believe Bush intentionally misled the country to bring the United States into war. The response from the White House has been grimly predictable: Admit no mistakes and spin, slash or burn your critics.

On Monday Bush seethed, "Only one person manipulated evidence and misled the world -- and that person was Saddam Hussein." (Funny, I didn't know we were being "led" by Saddam Hussein.) Bush went on to accuse opponents of rewriting the past. But this Administration, which has redefined the word "Orwellian" for a new generation, respects history about as much as it respects the Geneva Conventions. In fact, they seem to relish assaulting and rewriting history for sheer sport.

This was seen quite clearly on November 9, when Bush hung a medal around the slack, immobile neck of former heavyweight boxing champion -- and the most famous war resister in U.S. history -- Muhammad Ali. Ali was one of a bevy of recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom at a White House ceremony. Bush, while Karl Rove and Donald Rumsfeld chuckled behind him, said, "Only a few athletes are ever known as the greatest in their sport, or in their time. But when you say, 'The Greatest of All Time' is in the room, everyone knows who you mean. It's quite a claim to make, but as Muhammad Ali once said, 'It's not bragging if you can back it up.' And this man backed it up... The real mystery, I guess, is how he stayed so pretty. [Laughter.] It probably had to do with his beautiful soul. He was a fierce fighter and he's a man of peace."

As I watched a video of the ceremony posted on the White House website, it was heartbreaking to see Bush, a chicken-hearted man of empire, bathe himself in Ali's glow and rhapsodize about "peace." To see the once-indomitable Ali, besieged by Parkinsons and dementia, eyes filmed over, hands shaking, led around by a self-described "war President" felt horrifying.

About the only thing Bush and Ali have in common is that they both moved mountains to stay out of Vietnam. The difference, of course, was while Ali sacrificed his title and risked years in federal prison, Bush joined the country club otherwise known as the Texas National Guard, showing up for duty every time he had a dentist appointment. But the Champ still had one last rope-a-dope up his sleeve. As a playful Bush moved in front of Ali, he apparently thought it would be cute to put up his fists in a boxing stance. Ali leaned back and made a circular motion around his temple, as if the President must be crazy to want to tangle with him even now.

This moment recalled the Ali who was never so beloved, so cuddly, so harmless. This was a fleeting glimpse of the Ali who once was able to say things that would have made John Ashcroft demand a federally funded exorcism. This was the Ali who said, "I ain't no Christian. I can't be when I see all the colored people fighting for forced integration get blown up. They get hit by the stones and chewed by dogs and then these crackers blow up a Negro church... People are always telling me what a good example I would be if I just wasn't Muslim. I've heard over and over why couldn't I just be more like Joe Louis and Sugar Ray [Robinson]. Well, they are gone and the black man's condition is just the same, ain't it? We're still catching hell."


Digg!

Dave Zirin is the author of What's My Name Fool? Sports and Resistance in the United States. Read more of his work at EdgeOfSports.com.

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I am not a fight fan, but I support this article's truth
Posted by: ShaSpirit on Nov 24, 2005 1:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You do not have to be a person of color to understand what Bush's little show with Ali really was. Our President is just stupid and there was no excuse for his behavior. He probably is more an elitist than a racist. Poor people just do not count.

Bob Woodward to America Bush was a smart man and gee, little did we know he was in bed with this administration. I am not sure where that is literally as well as metaphorically. Someone called him Rove's whore?

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The Greatest
Posted by: rkewen on Nov 24, 2005 5:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Muhammad Ali, like myself, was a "war resister," not a sleazy draft dodger like Bush and Cheney - to name just two of the chickenhawks promoting and implementing this shameful and incompetent war and foreign policy. Dubya had no problem with the war, morally, in fact supported the idea as did Dick Cheney. It's just that the playboy, cheerleader, flyboy and Dick "other priorities" Cheney were chickenshit about personally participating.

It is morally repugnant that these sleaze are now in a position to order other young men who undoubtably have "other priorities" risk death and commit war crimes.

Muhammad is truly the "Greatest," as an athlete and as a human being who stood and stands for peace and a world that values and fosters justice.

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» RE: The Greatest Posted by: gltirebiter
The lowest blow.
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Nov 24, 2005 6:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is disgusting to see the very type of people who persecuted Ali mercilessly try to pretend that they are admiring friends. They also pretend to be Christians, but unprincipled people hate people that stand by their convictions.

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Ali got what he deserved. Soon Bush will get his!
Posted by: stoney13 on Nov 24, 2005 8:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ali deserved that medal! He deserved it long before he got it! He deserved it when he sent his own money to help Cuban huricane victims! He deserved it for standing up for what he knew in his heart was right, and standing against that which he knew in his heart was wrong! He deserved it for standing up to be a roll model for young people everywhere. Last but not least he deserved it for telling George Bush he was a fucking nut!!

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He's STILL 'The Greatest'...
Posted by: Voicedude on Nov 24, 2005 9:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I had the pleasure of meeting The Champ almost twenty-five years ago while performing at Century City's Playboy Club. It was an honor to stand near him even as his disabilities were coming upon him. I understand where he was coming from. As a FORMER Jehovah's Witness, I understood all too well the isolation and out casting felt by one who is threatened with incarceration just by opposing the war - many of my fellow JW's were ready to make such as sacrifice just as they had been doing since the early fifties and Korea. They did NOT flea to Canada, rather stood their ground and publicly denounced the war....ANY war. Ali took his sacrifice at least one step further by giving up his championship title and crown. Those who stripped him of it took part in one of recent histories most shameful hypocrisies: stripping away an honest man's (and beloved sports icon) freedom of speech and free will. He wouldn't take their compromised deal, and so 'The Man' kept him down - where they always wanted such a 'vocal upstart' to begin with. What they missed at the time was a real example of Patriotism in the spirit of our Forefathers.

To see the Poser In Chief attempting to bask in the glory of a man who lived his life the way he (W) would never condone nor attempt himself - and to see The Champ's most famous Free Speech piggybacked onto the Prez's re-imaging concerns - was beyond ironic: it was downright appalling.

Add to this the glaring fact that Dubya's handlers also are very aware that The Champ's current condition means that he won't be the verbal threat he once was. This makes their song-and-dance all the more thinly veiled and despicable.

I have shed yet another tear for Ali - AND for our country....

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What's wrong with pacifism?
Posted by: namewon on Nov 24, 2005 10:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At the tail end of a readable article by David Zinn on the brave stand of Mohammad Ali against the war in Vietnam, Zinn writes of the words of Ali and others, "These are statements not of pacifism but of the struggle to end war." My understanding is that pacifism is part of the struggle to end war. What have I missed?

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» RE: What's wrong with pacifism? Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: What's wrong with pacifism? Posted by: leighsure
» RE: Gandhi pt2 Posted by: aonghus36
Ali's not to blame...
Posted by: Nigelthebrit on Nov 24, 2005 10:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...for meeting with Bush, suffering as he is from Parkinson's disease. For my part, I wouldn't want to visit with Bush however well I was bribed to.

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So Richly Deserved and Yet So Horrifically Tainted
Posted by: gs15 on Nov 24, 2005 10:39 AM   
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Ali deserves this honor and countless others, but what a travesty it is that this potential swan song to such a grand legacy has to occur on Bush's watch. At least Ali himself seems to be well aware of such a tragic irony...

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The most digusting act yet!
Posted by: ftorres on Nov 24, 2005 4:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find it appalling to see the small man standing next to Muhammad Ali, one of the greatest American civil rights hero and the greatest champ of them all. To see Bush basking in the shadows of the glory this great American boxer once was only proves GW Bush is without shame.

But even with the champ deteriorating health, he made a gesture that the president of the United States was crazy as hell.

That, perhaps, is the high light of the presentation and the medal which was worthy of a true champion.

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Rev. Jeremy Tobin
Posted by: Jerry on Nov 25, 2005 6:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Having lived next to Muhamed Ali in Chicago for many years. I remember kids coming from 39th and 47th Streets gathering around him on the corner, idolizing this heroic Black Man who witnessed proudly to his people. David Zinn, keep on writing!!

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This Ironic Moment
Posted by: hotlipsin61 on Nov 25, 2005 2:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To parodize that old Drifters song-"This Magic Moment" into "This Ironic Moment"-was when Ali and Pres. Bush were posing for photo ops at the White House: Two men who came from different backgrounds, one who had to fight his way out of a Kentucky ghetto and the other man practically born into privilege.
It was a weird, ironic moment in American history when our Fuerher (W) decides to honor a man who objected to our involvement in Vietnam while trumpeting an illegal war against Iraq. Ali should have belted him one (LOL), but that would have landed him in jail.

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