"I say violence is necessary. It is as American as cherry pie"
About this Quote
Violence, here, isn’t pitched as an unfortunate last resort; it’s framed as civic tradition. By lashing “violence is necessary” to the cozy cliche of “as American as cherry pie,” H. Rap Brown performs a rhetorical hijacking: he takes a phrase typically used to sanctify harmless nostalgia and forces it to carry the weight of blood and power. The line is designed to offend polite liberals and expose what that politeness often conceals: the United States already runs on coercion, whether it’s revolution mythologized as founding glory, slavery enforced by law, or policing presented as “order.”
Brown’s intent is provocation with a purpose. In the late-1960s Black freedom struggle, the language of nonviolence had become both a moral banner and, in the hands of the state, a disciplinary expectation. “Necessary” is the key word; it argues that violence isn’t a moral lapse but a strategic response to a society that has routinely met Black demands with batons, bullets, and courts. The subtext is less “we want chaos” than “you’ve normalized violence as long as it’s not called violence.”
The brilliance of the cherry-pie metaphor is its double indictment. It accuses America of hypocrisy while daring the listener to admit what kind of country they actually live in. If “American” means comfort, innocence, and tradition, Brown insists that tradition includes riots, vigilantism, militarism, and state force. The quote doesn’t ask permission; it puts the burden of justification back on the nation that pretends its violence is exceptional, regrettable, or always righteous.
Brown’s intent is provocation with a purpose. In the late-1960s Black freedom struggle, the language of nonviolence had become both a moral banner and, in the hands of the state, a disciplinary expectation. “Necessary” is the key word; it argues that violence isn’t a moral lapse but a strategic response to a society that has routinely met Black demands with batons, bullets, and courts. The subtext is less “we want chaos” than “you’ve normalized violence as long as it’s not called violence.”
The brilliance of the cherry-pie metaphor is its double indictment. It accuses America of hypocrisy while daring the listener to admit what kind of country they actually live in. If “American” means comfort, innocence, and tradition, Brown insists that tradition includes riots, vigilantism, militarism, and state force. The quote doesn’t ask permission; it puts the burden of justification back on the nation that pretends its violence is exceptional, regrettable, or always righteous.
Quote Details
| Topic | War |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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