"The fact that he mentioned the word "love" 42 times in the [Oxford] speech really resonated with me. And I felt that he was very radical in his philosophy because it wasn't in keeping with the general trend of what people assumed was "good". People are told that greed is good, and being out for oneself is good, and getting ahead is better. But Michael Jackson really believed in faith, hope, and love. And I really love those concepts and I think that they made him a very dangerous person, because he was radically positive. He was radically good. He was intrinsically good. And I think that made him sort of a cultural threat. And gave him a certain level of power that he had through Thriller and his exposure to culture, that I always believed was kind of dangerous. And I think he knew that. He definitely knew."
-Elizabeth Amisu













