Discover the untold stories of classic Hollywood stars who stood up against racism long before it was popular or safe to do so. From refusing to perform in segregated venues to fighting for the rights of Black colleagues, these legends used their fame to challenge injustice.
🎥 Featuring: [List a few key figures, e.g., Marlon Brando, Paul Robeson, Lena Horne, etc.]
✊ Stories of courage, solidarity, and change.
Hollywood’s Golden Age gave us glamorous icons, classic films, and red carpet legends — but behind the lights and legacy was a brutally racist system, built and protected by its biggest stars.
From blackface routines to white supremacist interviews, from segregation on set to celebrating the Confederacy on screen, these 15 figures didn’t just benefit from racism — they proudly upheld it.
In this video, we break down the truth behind Old Hollywood’s most iconic (and most racist) legends — and why their legacies still go unchallenged today.
➡️ Like, Comment, Share — and don’t miss our upcoming follow-up: The Stars Who Fought Hollywood’s Racism… and Paid the Price.
Excerpt from the documentary “Art Meets Science and Spirituality in a Changing Economy – From Fragmentation to Wholeness”
Artists, scientists, spiritual leaders and economists gathered in Amsterdam in 1990 to explore the emerging paradigm of a holistic world view and the implications for a global economy.
David Bohm (1917-1992) was an American theoretical physicist who contributed innovative and unorthodox ideas to quantum theory, philosophy of mind, and neuropsychology. He is widely considered to be one of the most significant theoretical physicists of the 20th century.
Bohm advanced the view that the old Cartesian model of reality was limited, in the light of developments in quantum physics. He developed in detail a mathematical and physical theory of implicate and explicate order to complement it.
Bohm warned of the dangers of rampant reason and technology, advocating instead the need for genuine supportive dialogue which he claimed could broaden and unify conflicting and troublesome divisions in the social world. In this his epistemology mirrored his ontological viewpoint.
He believed that the working of the brain, at the cellular level, obeyed the mathematics of some quantum effects. Therefore he postulated that thought was distributed and non-localized in the way that quantum entities do not readily fit into our conventional model of space and time.