Send in the poets. Send in the seducers. Vulnerable people, not invulnerable drones who can mistake a wedding party for a terrorist cell. When those mistakes are made, that is how ISIS is born. – Saul Williams
Saul Williams) is a fiercely original, multitalented artist who burst on the scene as an actor and a slam poet in the 1998 film Slam), which won the Grand Jury prize at Sundance, and as a rapper/musician with the 2001 album Amethyst Rock Star), produced by Rick Rubin. He has since released four additional albums, five books of poetry, and starred in the Broadway musical Holler if You Hear Me, based on the life and poetry of rapper Tupac Shakur. His latest book of poetry, U.S.(a.)) captures some of his thoughts on this country and this moment in history after four years of living abroad in Paris.
This week on Big Think's podcast Think Again, Saul and host Jason Gots) respond to three surprise clips from the interview archives and go deep into everything from war to religion to whether Saul's art is "unpackageable". It's one of our most intense and engaging conversations yet.
Listen to the end for a special bonus –– "Horn of the Clock Bike)", a track from Saul's upcoming 2016 album Martyr Loser King
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