#TeamRhino #SaveTheRhino #SaveFive

Raising Awareness to protect our #WildLife, Please take the pledge: I would like to join #TeamRhinodotorg in the fight against rhino poaching to ensure a future for people and vulnerable wildlife on our planet: I will never buy or promote any products made of rhino horn, as I know that demand drives poaching. I will be a committed advocate to support rangers and others on the frontlines of rhino conservation. I will share my passion about rhino conservation and recruit my friends and family to become involved. I will urge my government to continue championing efforts to stop rhino poaching at home and abroad. I will stand with IRF to help save rhinos from extinction. teamrhino.org

Monday, September 12, 2016

#BlackIsBack, Have You seen The Numerous Vendors selling Dashiki? #Culture





The immaturity that plagues people of color communities is a bit overwhelming, makes me wonder if we will ever grow to be strong communities of people of color. i prefer the label people of color because we have not matured as a society able to appreciate our human existences or diverse cultures. i'm exploring people of color because i'm a mix breed of Native American, African American and the rape of European American taint my blood. i haven't felt connected to the world that i live in because the world that i live in is totally disconnected. i know who i am as a person, but don't agree with the American culture aka rape culture that has been placed on me or others like me in our society. So i search for ways to understand us and try to bring us all together while giving people of color who have endured the rape a space to break away from the colonized rape culture we have gotten so comfortable with.

Reading "MaRainey Black Bottom" by play write August Wilson, as part of a community partnership that i'm not going to be able to participate in fully if at all because my family doesn't understand being a family. Perfect example of the immaturity that plagues people of color communities. i enjoy life and growing in life but my growth is being halted because i feel obligated to my family who doesn't have the same respect for me. For some reason we don't pool our resources together. We don't plan as a family and that really sucks. My oldest son is so irresponsible, much like his father and i don't understand the neglect. How can you not put your children first and plan to spend time with them? Like why do i have to take on the unspoken responsibility of making sure my grands are properly cared for? Only to hear others say i'm better than them, no way would they keep my grands the way i do. When the truth is no one cared for them the way i do for my grands so they are not capable of giving the care that i provide. How have we lost our family and community culture? What does African Resistance Mean?

Reading "Merchants of Grain" by Dan Morgan as part of Black Communities Action SuSu community building efforts that i'm excited about. Love the book and how these powerful companies kept their business in house. Much like Grand Hank the scientist who puts on science shows with family being majority of the crew. What i'm learning about big business is that money is secondary, knowing the market and how to move your goods is what is sound business. Unfortunately there is always exploitation of the most vulnerable members of our society by big business much like the IRS did with Obamacare and 27,000 + taxpayers who was given the wrong premium and regardless of the IRS mistake the taxpayers lost their refunds and had to pay fines. Majority of those tax payers are people of color who are almost always swept under the rug by unaccountable nontransparent systems. 


People of color are having conversations all over various media forms; these conversations are helping us heal one by one in our own space and time. Examples of conversations: Teachers of color are expressing their constant battle to remain as educators in our public school system. They are secretly under attack and we as a community really need to stand up and have their backs.  Dr. Umar Johnson speaks about how people of color are competing with each other, a powerful video that can open eyes that want to be opened. Dr. Umar also advocates for independent schools and could use our support!! Yes independent schools are great but let's be honest and know that everyone in our communities can't afford private education and that is why we need our educators of color in our public schools also. Brother Yumy Odom with host Uptown Entertainment Development Corporation are having conversations about the deep poverty in North Philadelphia and how we can break the poverty cycle. Bringing these conversations and other issues to the corner and dinner table is what i'm looking to foster with North Philly Peace Park along with Black Communities Action SuSu and our community building plans (reporting that information as we develop).

Academic Holocaust: War Against Black Youth?

National Black Political Convention


The Uhuru Movement hosted in PHILADELPHIA––For two days, August 13th and 14th, Africans from throughout the U.S. convened at the First Unitarian Church to attend a historic conference.

This conference was the clearest demonstration yet that the struggle for our liberation has reached a new height.

Called by the Black is Back Coalition for Social Justice, Peace and Reparations, the conference was a preparatory meeting where African people defiantly established our own National Black Agenda for Self-determination.

It was a declaration of independence from the predatory Democratic Party and its partner in crime, the Republican Party.

The August 13th and 14th Preparatory Conference was a logical outcome of the seven-year history of the Coalition to win broad unity within our liberation movement with the politics of African self-determination and anti-imperialism.

The conference was attended by Africans from Pittsburg and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; New York City; Washington, D.C.; Huntsville and Birmingham, Alabama; St. Louis, Missouri; St. Petersburg, Florida; Newark and Jersey City, New Jersey; Wilmington, Delaware and a host of other locations where Africans are organizing to fight back against our oppression.

These cities and states represent part of an expanding network of African people determined to transform the growing, mostly spontaneous movement against police violence into a struggle for national liberation.

The black community’s Declaration and 19 Points

Unlike many of the individuals and groups that have been thrust into political consciousness and activism by the heroic working class resistance in Ferguson, Missouri following the brutal police murder of 18-year-old Mike Brown, the Declaration of the National Black Political Agenda for Self-determination was able to connect the police murders to a historic relationship we have with U.S. and white nationalist imperialism:

“Because the world capitalist system owes its existence to the enslavement of our people and the colonial domination of much of the world, capitalism rests uneasily on a fault line of oppression,” states the Declaration that goes on to say:

“The historical oppression of our people stems from this cruel fact of history: Like most peoples of the world we trace our current conditions of existence to the birth of the capitalist system at the expense of our happiness and human and material resources.

“We recognize the escalation of terror against black people that includes State and popular attacks and police and civilian murder.

“We understand that the prominent expressions of white nationalism revealed through the electoral process to select a new president of the United States are due to the growth of resistance among oppressed populations of the world and within the U.S.”

The 19 Points of the National Black Political Agenda for Self-determination, which speaks specifically to 19 core issues which the black community suffers from, deepens the Declaration.

The first point, for example, speaks to the special oppression that African women face:

Our Culture On The Come Back 


“With this National Black Political Agenda for Self-Determination, the entire black or African nation declares our commitment to facilitate the elevation of African women to full, equal partnership in our struggle to create a new world of freedom and socialist democracy for a united black community and a world shorn forever of bosses and workers and slaves and masters and where African women will share the power to guarantee that African women are adequately empowered as equal architects of our new world.”

Compiled by various members of the Coalition, such as Glenn Ford of the Black Agenda Report and Chairman Omali Yeshitela of the African People’s Socialist Party, the Declaration and 19 Points, thoroughly speak to the black community and should be viewed as the black community’s declaration.

This statement materialized itself during the Preparatory Conference as Africans had the opportunity to discuss and provide their input on the Declaration and 19 points.

The same cannot be said for the agendas of Democratic and Republican parties.

(Visit Blackisbackcoalition.org to read the full Declaration and 19 points.)

A powerful Preparatory Conference

The Preparatory Conference was a powerful display of Organizational unity between different African-led organizations and African individuals.

The event was characterized by fruitful discussions as solid plans were made to forward the work of the Coalition.

There were key presentations made by members of the Coalition’s Steering Committee which expounded upon the Declaration and 19 Points.

Lisa Davis, Vice Chair of the Coalition and Chair of the Health Care Working Group, gave a moving report on the state of African healthcare in the U.S. She outlined various health care statistics to illustrate the disparities which exist for African people.

Her report spoke to the 14th point of the 19-Point Declaration which demands: “Free, Universal, Quality Healthcare for All: by a public system that serves the health needs of entire communities, as well as individuals.

“Given that group health outcomes are closely linked to group political and economic status, past and present, a universal health care policy must provide both equal care to all, regardless of social and financial circumstances, and restorative care to historically oppressed communities, which require political self-determination to achieve social and biological wellness.”

Kamm Howard, Chair of the Reparations Working Group gave a video report on the necessity to carry out the verdicts of the Durban, South Africa 2002 Conference which reached a legal decision the the U.S. owe Africans reparations.

Kamm’s report spoke to point 17 of the declarations which demands reparations for all Africans.

Ralph Poynter, Chair of the Political Prisoners Working Group, gave a moving presentation which spoke to point four: “We reject the authority of the U.S. State to imprison persons whose imprisonment is rooted in their defense of Black people’s democratic and self-determination rights…”

Glenn Ford of the Black Agenda Report, a co-founder of the BIB Coalition, made an excellent closing remarks on the necessity for a Black Political Agenda.

He stated that “we are in a very auspicious political time.”

Indeed, this is a favorable time for the Black Political Agenda for Self-determination.

Mobilize your region with the State Conventions!

As a strategy to mobilize for the November 5th and 6th National Convention, the Coalition is calling on its participating organizations and individuals to organize state conventions in different parts of the country.

The Coalition is calling for state conventions to be held in Washington D.C., New York, Florida, Missouri, Chicago, and anywhere else where black people reside.

At these state conventions participants will have the opportunity to unite with the Declaration and 19 Points and bring it to members of their community so that they can unite with it as well.

It is critical that the black community forwards our own black agenda.

Black Is Back National Convention of resistance: The way forward

The Agenda will be presented at the National Black Political Agenda Convention scheduled by the Coalition for November 5th and 6th, two days before the U.S. presidential election to identify the chief imperialist spokesperson designated to rule the world.

The imperialist, white nationalist conventions of the Democratic and Republican parties were both conventions to consolidate a white nationalist imperialist agenda.

The Black is Back National Black Political Agenda for Self-determination Convention will be a convention of resistance that will begin with a massive rally at Malcolm X Park and a march on the White House on November 5th.

On November 6th, the Convention will convene at Howard University’s Blackburn Center, where the agenda will be formally adopted in a gala celebration that marks the beginning of a new era of independent black political struggle by Africans in the U.S. that is informed by our own selfish interests to build a future of freedom for ourselves and our children.

Forward to Washington, DC, November 5th and 6th!

Forward the Black Political Agenda for Self-determination!

For more information and to register to the Convention, visit BlackIsBackCoalition.org!
http://www.blackisbackcoalition.org/2016/09/09/black-is-back-forwarding-our-own-black-agenda/




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