well, nina simone can come on a little strong, but i want you to think about the difference between the anger that she's expressingpressing anger are holding out the hope of change and reconciliation. someone like malcolm x before he left the nation of islam, mind you, is not holding out that kind of hope, so this is -- this is a very personal statement that needs to be viewed on its own terms and not necessarily -- i mean, there are connections between what nina simone was saying and what james baldwin was saying and what dr. king was saying, but i think we make a mistake if we lump expressions of anger into a monolithic category, and i think that point will be clear later on. the sncc freedom singers were part of this tradition of civil rights freedom songs, we shall overcome, a well-known version, but this one is a little more topical and reflects a man sent to the united states by the state department to show odinga that racial progress was being made, so sncc kind of takes him under their wing and in some ways the song, like, you know, nina simone just did, reflects sncc's frustration with the federal governm