Two times a year, a small group of folks
Two times a year, a small group of folks
July 4, 2012
Raynard Jackson
As we celebrate Independence Day here in the US, I wonder when the Black community is going to learn the true meaning of this day when it comes to politics.
Independence Day, or Fourth of July, is about freedom to think, be, imagine and to live. In the U.S., July 4, 1776 was the day we celebrate our freedom from Great Britain. Even though the adoption of the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 2, 1776, it is celebrated on the 4th.
Our desi
Mark S. Allen
Chairman Of The Board
Black Wall Street Chicago Organization
Chief of Staff To National Chairman Rev. Michael Carter
National Black Wall Street USA
4655 South King Drive, Suite 203
Chicago, Illinois 60653
773-392-0165
markallen@blackwallstreet.org
Mark S. Allen recently included in the 2012 Edition of Who's Who In Black Chicago as "one of Chicago's Most Influential Voices In The Black Community
MORALLY BANKRUPT FORCES ISSUING THREATS AT THE BORDER
MORALLY DEFICIENT FORCES CLAIMING MORAL AUTHORITY
USING FORCE TO PROMOTE AN ANTI-CREATION WORLD ORDER
FORCING GOVERNMENTS
to imprison people for plants
FORCING GOVERNMENTS
to make sodomy legal
and allow men to marry men
POWERFUL COLONIZING FORCES
BENT ON PERVERSION OF NATURE'S PRINCIPLES
So he has a problem with plants
BLAMING PLANTS FOR THE CONSEQUENCES THAT
CENTURIES OF HIS SLAVE-TRADING HAVE CREATED.
persecuting plants as the
October 6, 2011
Raynard Jackson
Howard University, in Washington, DC, is one of the elite Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) in the U.S. Howard students are quick to call their school the “real H U!” The reason is so they won’t be confused with another well know HBCU—Hampton University.
But after years of frustrating experiences with Howard University, I have come to the conclusion that they are truly the “real H U.” But, in this case, the H U stands for “Horrible University.
We Who Like It Hot Call It ‘Black August’ (Revised version)
By ‘bro. zayid’*
It is the month when our oppressors have nothing to celebrate.
It is the month where the nature of our oppression and the boldest expressions of our resistance to that oppression have been made most plain.
We who like it hot call it ‘Black August’…
As a concept of resistance, Black August has its beginnings in the mid 70’s with the prison justice movement. It was inspired by the courageous legacy of Black Panther pr