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Important Figures & Heroes of History

Liberators have always existed in human history. We live in the age of I-Pads, texting, blackberries, international communication, international traveling, computers, and advanced transportation. Yet, the truth is always real, consistent, inspiring, and glorious like God. God is Truth in fact. God is LOVE too. One famous one was the great prophet & the Son of the living God Yeshua ben Joseph of Nazareth (indeed, peace is upon his name). You will notice that he was born poor under the boot of Roman oppression. He never wanted accolades from universities nor sport sponsors. He was rejected by many of his own people for his dynamic words, and his testimony. His enemies falsely classified him as a rabble rouser, a troublemaker, and an insurrectionist, which are all false accusations. He or Yeshua violated unjust laws and unjust injunctions. Yet, he promoted the liberation of human beings from oppression. He praised the underdog & the outcast. Yeshua wanted folks to be free from sickness, sin, and poverty. He is a great hero to admire. The ethics of Jesus Christ is to oppose Empire, to speak up for the poor and the oppressed, and to send out the real Gospel to all of humanity. Saving souls and building up a better world are great goals to adhere to. To be a hero and a true leader, you have to serve mankind in a joyous, fruitful fashion. To serve means to sacrifice yourself in a capable fashion. You can be full of love and grace to serve without much wealth, much praise from the world, and serious education at all. Yet, there is nothing wrong with receiving a REAL education though. Revolutionary heroes fought battles for the freedom of the oppressed in America, Africa, Asia, Europe, and across the globe. Even the Canadian Prime Minister from 1961 to 1971 did amazing progressive works in Canada to cause a radical sense of human improvement inside of Canada. Henry Wallace (though a Mason and I don't agree with Freemasonry for religious & political reasons) publicly executed a lot of legitimate opposition to racial discrimination, lynching, economic exploitation & economic oppression. There are tons of revolutionary heroes who fought similar battles for freedom or liberation among the oppressed peoples of the world. These people include Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass, Kwame Ture, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,

Benito Pablo Jurez Garca, Cesar Chavez, etc. Ironically, some early Republican liberals during that time like including Abraham Lincoln (who woke up about a few things before he was assassinated in 1865) desired to do something about the bondage of slavery against black human beings. It was also the World War II generation that fought to liberate Jewish people (like Raoul Wallenberg who risked his life to save about 100,000 Jewish people from the Holocaust), the Poles, the French, the English, and others in Europe from Nazi and Communist tyranny. Back then, the reactionaries mostly wanted to not be involved in freeing human beings and let other nations fend for themselves (while genocide was taking place). Some of the reactionaries funded or aided the Nazis and Communists back then too. Thats historical and you can see evidence of that in Anthony Suttons books. Liberation comes from a place of love. Since, you need love for the neediest of people and understand their suffering in order to have the mindset of a revolutionary (or liberator). There is absolutely no need to maintain a system that permits record economic inequality in the world (not just in America). Its important to mention the following. I

have controversial views on the Republican field, but I dont hate these people. These people have the right to express and believe in their views. Also, I have the right to disagree with some of their views as well. All human beings are valuable in the eyes of God beyond being the worlds eighth wonder. You dont have to wear a fake Superman disguise. You can just be yourself. You are still special in how you talk, how you look, and how you carry yourself naturally. You are somebody. You can easily say to the hater: No, sir, I am somebody, full of dignity and full of worth. *Still, there is a time for peace and there is a time for our war against oppression. Reactionaries regularly exploit the views of Dr. King as an excuse to try to make blacks submissive or passive toward oppression (in loving Ayn Rands distortions or the status quo). Not to mention that that the reactionaries outline a couple of words of the I Have a Dream Speech to disagree with affirmative action. Yet, white females benefit most from affirmative action. Also, Dr. King used Operation Breadbasket and supported compensatory policies toward black Americans, which are similar to affirmative action programs. Dr. Martin Luther King even agreed with reparations. An explicit quota system alone has been banned by the Supreme Court. Not to mention that some affirmative action groups has worked to assist minority citizens in the USA. As far back as 1964, he was writing in Why We Can't Wait: "Whenever the issue of compensatory
treatment for the Negro is raised, some of our friends recoil in horror. The Negro should be granted equality, they agree; but he should ask nothing more. On the surface, this appears reasonable, but it is not realistic." In King's teachings, affirmative action approaches were not "reverse discrimination" or "racial preference." King promoted affirmative action not as preference for race over race (or gender over gender), but as a preference for inclusion, for equal opportunity, for real democracy. The agenda of the 99% includes social justice, while some of the agenda of the 1% includes oligarchy. The oligarchy killed millions of human beings throughout human history. We have the right to oppose this brutality, materialism, and cultural conformity going on in the world.

Now is the time to help our brothers and sisters suffering in the world and completely reject publicly a passive mentality. Also, we need to build too. Its fine to have a job and an income. Yet, long term, we should build schools, businesses, hospitals, manufacturing factories, and other institutions to help our own black community (plus

we need to control it for us. A black man has the obligation to stand up and be a free man. Likewise, the black woman has the right to be a free woman as well). This goal of power wont be easy since we are going to have to defeat white supremacy (whose extensions are the war on Drugs, mass incarceration, environmental issues, poverty, the war on terror aka neo-imperialism, etc.) in order for us to have real power. It is not just an economic deal; its mental deal. In other words, some brothers and sisters need to be mentally strong enough to respect their own heritage. Buildings up institutions will come by investments (& public/private resources) not by austerity. There is no evidence that austerity ended the Great Depression at all. Also, freedom should be given unto all human race of every background not just for my people. That mean we shouldnt sugarcoat our feelings about hating evil, hating injustice, hating bigotry, and hating narrow-mindedness. For in my life, I know a lot of black people, white people, Asians, Indians, Native Americans, Australian Aboriginals, and folks of every background that reject unjust hate and promote true justice in the world. We live in 2012, so our minds are being more attuned to progressive thinking. I respect the sanctity of human life (from the womb to natural death), but I reject depriving people of needed public services. I reject anti-poor rhetoric & union bashing, since I reject austerity measures in any society. Therefore, I am always pro-truth forever. I will never forget the struggle and I will act as a man for my people, my God, and all of humanity. Acting in grown man tactics is fine for us men to perform. Respecting women is great as well.

Dr. Martin Luther King and other Supporters of Human Rights


During this day of January 16, 2012, its a time of reflection and action. Its a time of acknowledging the contributions of tons of human beings fighting for liberty. This day reminds us still that we have a long way we go in truly living in a society filled with authentic, transparent justice. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was one of the greatest leaders in human history. He was reluctant at first to be a great leader. On the other hand, he took on that role since radical times demand radical leadership. Radical leadership was purely necessary (decades ago) for legal Jim Crow segregation to be totally disintegrated from American history. The 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott was organized by black clergy and other civil rights heroes. Therefore, the activists wanted the buses in the city of Montgomery, Alabama to be integrated. Rosa Parks, Claudette Clovin, Mary Louise Smith, and others were arrested, because they refused to sit in the back of the bus. Thereby, these great black sisters opposed the status quo of discrimination. A human being has the right to seat in whatever part of the bus he or she wants. A racial caste system is racist since all human beings are created equal. All human beings (irrespective of the color of somebodys skin) should be given the same rights as another human being. The boycott is a legal, simple act that worked in times past. It worked in this occasion since black ridership on the buses was a crucial part of the economic vitality of the transportation services in Montgomery. In a little over a year, the Supreme Court called the segregation of Alabamas buses were unconstitutional. It was an early victory for human beings. Soon, the civil rights movement spread into sit-ins, boycotts, discussions, protests, and other forms of non-violent resistance. Dr. King believed that non-violence is the most effective method in getting effective social reforms accomplished in the USA. In Dr. Martin Luther Kings thinking, if you refuse to be violent to an oppressor (within the framework of a just cause), the oppressor has no moral basis. This can cause improvements since the oppressor would lack the moral high ground in continuing discrimination & bigotry. The Civil Rights Movement used television to present to the world how evil & demented segregation (including the violent acts of racists) was. As the civil rights movement made more gains gradually, racists used violence and other tactics. The racists wanted to stop the movement. The racists failed. In the 1960s, radical acts continued forward by civil rights heroes. You cant understand civil rights without understand Coretta Scott King. She was dignified, strong, and used intensive intelligence in order

to promote freedom and liberty for all people. As Dr. Kings ally, wife, and confidant, she was strong. The Sister Coretta Scott King on some levels was more progressive than Dr. King in the early years and during Dr. Kings life. She opposed nuclear proliferation back in the 1950s. She continues to advance social liberties for men, women, blacks, and all people of various backgrounds and orientations. With her opposition to war, she led anti-Vietnam war protests and was one big leader in the civil rights leader after Dr. Martin Luther King was assassinated. In later years, she became controversial, but this doesnt negate her true calling. Her true calling wasnt to enact political divisiveness. It wasnt to adhere to hatred. Her calling was to utilize her gifts and God-given eloquence to pronounce the words of opposition to injustice and promote that brotherhood & sisterhood for the entire human race. God would want us to do this since this is just. Regardless of what we think about controversial social issues,

we shouldnt engage in denigration, spreading offensive epithets, and bigotry. We should promote common cause, salvation of the worlds souls, and the fight against evils in the globe. Certainly, all humans having equal rights is just plain common sense.

The protests in Birmingham, Alabama dealt with civil rights leaders trying to allow black Americans to get civil rights, voting rights, and ultimately basic human rights. President John F. Kennedy (who previously took a more moderate tone on civil rights) made a speech on June 11, 1963. In the speech, the President called for a Civil Rights Act. The President proposed the bill in order for the government to prevent discrimination based on race, color, creed, or nationality. Its better to be late than never. The March on Washington in the summer of 1963 signified a multiracial coalition in promoting real freedom basically. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.s I Have Dream Speech was shown in the March on Washington. Bayard Rustin, A. Philip Randolph, John Lewis, and others organized the entire gathering. The I Have A Dream speech was one of the greatest speeches in human history. The speech gave both hope and a condemnation of present conditions of America (as the circumstances for black people in America caused black people to receive a bad check via oppression). The Southern Christian Leadership Committee, SNCC (made up of the young bloods), and a whole list of organizations worldwide worked in the civil rights movement. SNCC had Kwame Ture and H. Rap Brown in them. Kwame Ture modernized the Black Power movement. Kwame Ture was special. The reason is that Kwame Ture knew Dr. Kings arguments about nonviolence in an advanced way. He once supported nonviolence, but Kwame felt that American society lacked a conscience. Therefore, he believed that self defense was a legitimate strategy in order for Africans in America to have total liberation. Kwame Ture viewed black people responding to oppression in urban centers as rebellions. Kwame Ture would continue to work with the Black Panthers and the pan-African Movement. The brother Kwame True made pan-Africanism his life long political goal. His gift was to organize black people into a community of leaders. This is a part of African culture. African culture deals with creating a community, creating harmony among relatives, and promoting Umoja. The civil rights movement existed way back in the late 1400s and its still going on today by ordinary human th beings. Then, there came the bombing of the 16 Street Baptist Birmingham Church in September 15, 1963. 4 innocent young girls were murdered by Klan-inspired terrorists. Angela Davis and Condoleezza Rice knew the victims. Dr. King legitimately said that complacency is not an option when you have

innocent girls being murdered for what they are. Malcolm X and tons of folks were angered by the bombing too. The Civil Rights Act was passed by Congress and signed by President Lyndon Baines Johnson in 1964. LBJ admitted that he wanted to be like Abraham Lincoln. Even though he was a Southerner, LBJ was one of the most progressive Presidents in history excluding his pro-Vietnam War policies.

In 1965, Dr. King and Malcolm X agreed on the overall goal of equality for all of humanity. They disagreed on nonviolence, but they became more similar in ideologies than ever before by 1965. Each man wanted business opportunities for black people to transpire, they exposed the media for calling the victims evil and the oppressors good, they wanted Black Power, they believed in affirming black heritage, each had reservations about mainstream capitalism, and they opposed the war in Vietnam. Malcolm X evolved more and wanted gender equality among females and males. That is why Malcolm X placed females in leadership positions inside of his AAOU or the Afro-American Organization of Unity. Malcolm X was one of the first men to popularize the phrase of African American. I like the term African American myself.

Malcolm X was the first prominent American leader to oppose the Vietnam War 100 percent in 1964. Malcolm X also wanted rights to be given unto Australian Aboriginal peoples
(including Japanese Americans) and he desired to fight the cartel-capitalist system. Malcolm X also wanted the desegregation of public schools in New York City (that harmed African Americans and Puerto Rican students) in 1965.

On February 14, 1965, Malcolm X said the following words: I want to thank you for coming out this afternoon -- this evening. I think it's wonderful that as many of you came out, considering the blackout on the meeting that took place. Also, [Milton Henry] and the brothers who are here in Detroit are very progressive young men, and I would advise all of you to get with them in every way that you can to try and create some kind of united effort toward common goals,

common objectives. Don't let the power structure maneuver you into a time wasting battle with others when you could be involved in something that's constructive and getting a real job done. Probably, one thing I should've pointed out to you, that once we formed our new organization, once we became identified with the orthodox Muslim world, we also formed a group known as the Organization of AfroAmerican Unity, which is designed to fight all the negative political, economic, and social conditions that exist in our neighborhood. It's a nonreligious organization to which anyone can belong who's interested in direct action. And one of our first programs is to take our problem out of the civil rights context and place it at the international level, of human rights, so that the entire world can have a voice in our struggle. If we keep it at civil rights, then the only place we can turn for allies is within the domestic confines of America. But when you make it a human rights struggle, it becomes international, and then you can open the door for all types of advice and support from our brothers in Africa, Latin America, Asia, and elsewhere. So it's very, very important -- that's our international aim, that's our external aim. Our internal aim is to become immediately involved in a mass voter registration drive. But we don't believe in voter registration without voter education. We believe that our people should be educated into the science of politics, so that they will know what a vote is for, and what a vote is supposed to produce, and also how to utilize this united voting power so that you can control the politics of your own community, and the politicians that represent that community. We're for that. And in that line we will work with all others, even civil rights groups, who are dedicated to increase the number of Black registered voters in the South. The only area in which we differ with them is this: we don't believe that young students should be sent into Mississippi, Alabama, and these other places without some kind of protection. So we will join in with them in their voter registration [Applause] and help to train brothers in the arts that are necessary in this day and age to enable one to continue his existence upon this earth.

There is still a lot of information about Malcolm X that numerous folks dont know about. Malcolm was set about to have his debate with Louis Lomax at the Chicago Civic Opera House. At the debate, before a crowd of nearly fifteen hundred, Malcolm proclaimed that in May 21, 1964 that: Separation is not the goal of the Afro-American. Nor is integration his goal. They are merely methods toward his real end - respect as a human being. In June 13, 1964, Malcolm X agreed with civil rights leaders to bring up the case of oppression against black Americans to the United Nations. This plan was to internationalize the civil rights struggle. This meeting was recorded secretly by the FBI. When Malcolm X traveled into Africa, Africans love him. They viewed him as Malcolms long lost son. Malcolm X knew about African culture and history in a cogent, advanced fashion. Kwame Nkrumah, Jomo Kenyatta, Julius Nyerene, Sekou Toure, and Prince Faisal praised Malcolm Xs efforts to promote the human rights of black people worldwide. Malcolm X met with Maya Angelou, Julian Mayfield, and others in Accra, Ghana back in November 1964. He talked with Shirley Dubois, who was the executive director of Ghanaian television. With Malcolm X visiting a lot of women in leadership positions in Africa, Malcolm X promoted gender equality (for he said that a society isn't progressive unless females have the right to get an education and to achieve their own personal livelihoods). In late 1964, he returned into America to see that Lyndon Johnson defeated Barry Goldwater in a landslide. LBJ captured 96 percent of the black vote. Malcolm X wanted U.S. race issues to go before the U.N. in order to make America accountable for its human rights violations of black Americans (these violations include lynchings, denying black people human rights, slavery, etc.). He worked with Shirley Du Bois, Julian Mayfield, and others of course to fight for human equality. He wanted the OAAU to grow in the African continent as well. He worked with Nana Nketsia too. Malcolm X discussed with Guinea President Toure about African self determination and pan African philosophy. He talked about black people in America in Paris at the Mutualite in Paris. This event transpired in November 23, 1964. He talked about nonviolence, history, and Middle Eastern matters. In November 24, 1964, he came into New York City. He was greeted by

Sister Betty Shabazz and well wishers with signs saying Welcome Back, Brother Malcolm. He told reporters in NYC that the U.S. government and the Congolese regime of Moise Tshombe were responsible in the Stanleyville slaughter. He accused the Johnson administration of financing Tshombes mercenaries. Later, Malcolm X wanted to heal the rift between the MMI (or Muslim Mosque Inc.) and the OAAU. OAAU stands for the Organization for Afro-American Unity. The OAAU was more progressive than the MMI. In other words, some of the MMI members were hesitant to embrace some of Malcolm X's new views, while the OAAU was more receptive to accept Malcolm X's changes in his ideologies. Malcolm X wrote diaries about his travels and his personal life. In December 12, 1964, Malcolm X told a local group called the Domestic Peace Corps (as in its Cultural Enrichment Lecture Series) in NYC that black Americans should form a coalition with the new independent African nations. He wanted blacks in America to migrate to Africa culturally, philosophically, and spiritually. MMI members were regularly harassed and assaulted by rogue, NOI thugs. Lynne Shifflett was a leading secretary in the OAAU. On February 5, 1965, Malcolm X condemned the Tshombe regime alone with the Johnson administrations ties to it, exposed the growing U.S. involvement in Vietnam, and talked about his disputes with Elijah Muhammad. Malcolm X worked with SNCC to speak in Selma in order for him to promote the national campaign for black voting rights in February of 1965. Malcolm X wanted America to pull out from the Vietnam War. He also opposed the ethnic and religious discrimination in the English working class town of Smethwick (against blacks and Asians in the UK).
Malcolm X died in 1965 and Dr. Martin Luther King expressed sadness about his death. Dr. King said that the oppressive environment of racism inspired Malcolm X to say the controversial things that he said (and that Malcolm X didnt have time to grow fully into allying more with the overall civil rights struggle). Martin Luther King worked more in the North and the Midwest by 1966 in Cleveland, New York, Milwaukee, and Chicago (to battle against de facto discrimination, to fight against poverty, to desire fair wages, to desire better health care for all people and to fight against slums). De jure segregation is the Jim Crow system or segregation that was promoted via unjust laws. De facto discrimination was segregation made by practice not necessarily by unjust laws. Dr. King wanted great housing too for human beings. He made great victories in Cleveland in 1967 and the victory wasnt big in Chicago though in 1966 (though something is better than nothing). Operation Breadbasket was Dr. Kings new activist organization, which was formed to fight for economic justice for human beings, especially black people. One of Dr. Martin Luther Kings controversial policies was his opposition to the Vietnam War. He opposed the Vietnam War since Dr. King saw the Vietnam War as an unjust war (the war was a civil war and the Americans supported the reactionaries in the 1950s including the anti-religious liberty tyrant Diem). Dr. King didnt just talk about his anti-war stance. He protested across the country, gave interviews, and continued to work to try to end the war. Dr. King still was involved in voting drives, business programs, and other pro-civil rights activities. Dr. Martin Luther King in his life talked the walk and walked the walk indeed. So, the President LBJ opposed Dr. King on the war issue. We know what Lyndon Johnson called Dr. King in his criticism of Dr. Martin Luther Kings anti-war statements. Dr. Martin Luther King said that the Vietnam War drained the necessary resources to fight a real war on poverty. In 1967 to 1968, Dr. King became more radicalized. He still believed in nonviolence until his dying day. Yet, he wanted reparations for black people; he supported Black Power, and he blamed white society for the conditions of ghettoes in the first place (while not blaming all white people for all of the evils in society). These views arent known by a lot of folks. King wanted an annual minimum income to help the poor. Hes right to say that its hypocritical for a nation to try to grant first class citizenship to the nd rd Vietnamese people, while making black people in America to exist in 2 class citizenship. 33 Degree Freemason & FBI head J. Edgar Hoover hated Dr. King when Hoover probably had some black heritage. J. Edgar Hoover hated Dr. Martin Luther King because of his ideological views (along with the obvious reason). Hoover couldnt stand the fact that the country was changing. America became more progressive. Hoover used COINTELPRO to slander King and other anti-establishment figurers (of

numerous backgrounds found in pro-labor groups, anti-war groups, the Black Panthers, etc.). Hoover believed that Dr. King was a Communist and a threat to America. Dr. Martin Luther King denied that he was a Communist. The reason is that he said that Communism believes in ethical relativism, a lot of it is pro-atheism, and Communist policies violate First Amendment rights. He said that Communism made man as a cog in the wheel of the state. Dr. Martin Luther King wasnt a communist. He just felt that democratic principles are important to invoke. Later, Dr. King desired democratic socialism as the way to achieve beneficial improvements in American society. Dr. Martin Luther King said the following in his 1967 Beyond Vietnam speech: These are revolutionary times. All over the globe men are revolting against old systems of exploitation and oppression and out of the wombs of a frail world new systems of justice and equality are being born. The shirtless and barefoot people of the land are rising up as never before. "The people who sat in darkness have seen a great light." We in the West must support these revolutions. It is a sad fact that, because of comfort, complacency, a morbid fear of communism, and our proneness to adjust to injustice, the Western nations that initiated so much of the revolutionary spirit of the modern world have now become the arch anti-revolutionaries. This has driven many to feel that only Marxism has the revolutionary spirit. Therefore, communism is a judgment against our failure to make democracy real and follow through on the revolutions we initiated. Our only hope today lies in our ability to recapture the revolutionary spirit and go out into a sometimes hostile world declaring eternal hostility to poverty, racism, and militarism. With this powerful commitment we shall boldly challenge the status quo and unjust mores and thereby speed the day when "every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill shall be made low, and the crooked shall be made straight and the rough places plain."

He fought in Memphis for sanitation workers to have labor rights and human rights. These workers are men and all men should be given dignity and true economic justice. This occurred in 1968. This was a part of his 1968 Poor Peoples Campaign. This campaign was about uniting people of color and the poor

(made up of blacks, Native Americans, whites, Hispanic people, Asians, etc.) to demand an end to poverty. Dr. King wanted poverty to end. Dr. King called for AN ECONOMIC BILL OF RIGHTS that would preserve the rights of the poor. He said that only the federal government using billions of dollars in his opinion could do it (along with other actions). The method in figuring out how just a nation claims to be is to see its poor. You have to understand that by 1968, the vast majority of Americans opposed Dr. Kings views on the Vietnam War along with other topics. Thats a fact. Dr. Martin Luther King publicly shook the hands of the brother Muhammad Ali as each man disagreed with the Vietnam War. He gave the On the Mountain Top speech that outlined his hope for, jobs, and justice. That speech was his last public speech he gave to the world. It summed up his views, it talked about Aristotle, and it described the present circumstances of American culture. The Promised Land is a metaphor of a world society where all humans are seen as brothers & sisters, war is gone, and justice prevails in society. Dr. King realized that a black man should have equality, but that man should not disregard his heritage in the process. In other words, a black people should exist in multi-ethnic society with his black cultural identity intact (as he said in 1968, which refutes the old canard that King wanted a society where black people should ignore their blackness). Dr. King in Cleveland, Ohio in 1967 said that a person shouldnt be ashamed of their heritage, their hair, their color, and their being. Dr. Martin Luther King always said that: BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL or I AM BLACK AND BEAUTIFUL ENOUGH SAID. Its also important for us (who are black) to have respect and solidarity with black people. So, I will never fall off. I will stick by my own black people. It is therapeutic psychologically for a person to have respect for their own people. That means, especially, if youre a rich brother or a rich sister (and if youre poor and middle class too), you should go into poorer communities and fight for the interests of your people. Now, thats real. Its not an excuse to refuse to act especially if youre rich. If youre rich, you have the access and resources to travel in multiple communities and multiple locations in order for you to help our people. In the final analysis, black people have the right to head their own organizations and businesses (without any outsider groups controlling these institutions) to benefit their own people. We know that colorblindness is fantasy. Although, promoting Black Power doesnt mean we hate people who are non-black. Many non-black human beings are in the world are just as much opposed to oppression, bigotry, militarism, and evil as anybody else is. So, I can easily love the human race and respect my black African roots at the same time. Dr. Martin Luther King admitted that he may not see the Promised Land, but his people will see it. The next day on April 4, 1968, he was assassinated by one bullet to his jaw in Memphis, Tennessee. His death was sad and emotional for us. It was wrong. *One of Dr. Kings greatest allies was his younger brother named Alfred Daniel Williams King. He lived from July 30, 1930 to July 21, 1969. A.D. King was just as militant as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was. It was just that Rev. A.D. King worked behind the scenes in order for him to create more freedoms for black people and the rest of the human race. Rev. A.D. King was a Baptist minister, who fought for

human rights, not just civil rights. He had children at a younger age. In fact, Alveda King was the daughter of A.D. King. We know the Sister Alveda King very well and her politics. She is right that it is right to respect the sanctity of human life and that the black family is important to make more cohesive. Alveda King is very much correct to expose the Negro Project, sex selection abortions, and other likeminded issues. Alveda is wrong with allying with Glen Beck (a man who slandered the Presidents children like a punk and he was forced to apologized. He called the Katrina victims scum too. So, that Mormon Glen Beck has no admiration from me) and supporting many aspects of the reactionary agenda. She even supported Herman Cain and his regressive 999 economic plan. For respecting the unique value of unborn life is great (as Planned Parenthoods founder was a dedicated eugenicist who wanted infants to die. That agenda is shown by her words that I can quote easily. People like Margaret Sanger are an enemy), but to advance evil federal discrimination against a human being is unjust. It is still admirable to witness the Sister Alveda King to have a legitimate concern for her people, so I want to make that perfectly clear. I think shes deluded by collaborating with reactionaries that dont have our peoples interests at heart.

They want us (or black folks) to be controlled (socially & mentally) not liberated. If these Republicans and reactionaries have our (or black peoples interests) at heart, why dont they come into the black community to oppose violence, to support more funds for education, to support universal health care (these are the same GOP figures that dont even want a public health care option), to oppose white supremacy directly, etc. They dont do it since they want to deemphasize true discrimination (and racist oppression in the black community. Some of them deny racism in society outright) and emphasize the desire of corporate control of society. The same GOP crowd desire to fight for public funding for private schools, which is a violation of the establishment clause. Even people like C. L. Bryant and Lloyd Marcus (the respectable & acceptable men of the Tea Party movement. These people are very acceptable if you dig what Im saying. They dont play dead, but they sure know how to fletch from the rooms in the house. They surely love the house. See, Im not covert. Im purely overt with how I utilize my language) refuse to expose Wall Street corruption, the War on Drugs being bad for the black community, and the outrageous, unjust imprisonment of African American men and women. What we can do is support common ground and advance: universal health care, comprehensive (age appropriate) & medically accurate sexual education, use unique ways to decrease the abortion rate in America, use acceptable means to fight against STDs, and present emotional plus financial support for families with children. We shouldnt look to the left or to the right for our salvation. We should look up to the Creator for our salvation. Its always one love to real brothers and real sisters in the globe. Its one love to all of humanity to. ONE LOVE.

Now, A.D. King worked hard in the Birmingham campaign to give people human rights. A.D. King supported the philosophy of nonviolence wholeheartedly like his brother. A.D. King followed Direct action protests as a way for him to make reforms in the United States. A.D. King moved into Louisville, Kentucky to preach at the Zion Baptist Church. He fought for civil rights and was successful in a 1968 campaign for

an open housing ordinance. He worked for the Poor Peoples Campaign and other work on behalf of the SCLC after Dr. King was assassinated. He fought with alcoholism and depression in his life. After the

death of Martin, A. D. King returned to Ebenezer Baptist Church (in Atlanta, Georgia), where in September 1968 he was installed as co-pastor. He was praised by his father as an able preacher, a concerned, loving pastor. His death was ruled an accidental drowning in a swimming pool at his home. His legacy is that the promotion of human co-existence via peaceful means is a great calling (and that opposition to tyranny is an inspiring method in order for mankind to seek justice in the globe). A.D. King passed away in July 21, 1969.
Ralph Abernathy (or one of Dr. Martin Luther Kings closest friends) spoke of Dr. Martin Luther King in January 15, 1969 in these terms:

Many people thought he was out of his mind when he led an army, not armed with guns or bricks or stones, 50,000 strong in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1955, and said to his followers: "Love your enemies, pray for them that curse and despitefully use you." Some of us may have wondered about him when he led us without physical weapons in the battles of Albany, Georgia; St. Augustine, Florida; and Danville, Virginia. And we knew something must have been wrong with him when defenseless we stood before Bull Connor in Birmingham facing vicious and hungry dogs, fire hoses and brutal policemen. He was the redeemer of the soul of America. He taught the nation that "an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth," if followed to its ultimate conclusion, would only end in a totally blind and toothless society. He discovered that the most potent force for revolution and reform in America is nonviolence. He knew, as the eminent historian Arnold Toynbee has written, that if America is saved, it will be through the black man who can inject new dimensions of non-violence into the veins of our civilization
Fred Hampton was one of the warriors of liberation. He's an inspiration of black people. He's an inspiration of all people as well since he advocated power for all of the people. He lived a short life, but he made a wide impact in the world stage. He lived from August 30, 1948 to December 4, 1969. He was the chairman of the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party (BPP). He was born in Summit, Illinois and grew up in Maywood. His parents moved north from Louisiana. He worked in sports and graduated from Proviso East High School with honors back in 1966. He studied the law in order for him to be conversant with the law in defense against the police. He enrolled at Triton Junior College. Ironically, he was active in the NAACP to promote freedom and nonviolence for his community. He utilized his great organizational and leadership skills to improve educational resources for the impoverished black community in Maywood. He agreed with the Black Panther Party's philosophies. He started to ally with the BPP and adopted their 10 point program. He moved into downtown Chicago and joined the Party's Illinois chapter in November 1968. The Illinois chapter was created by SNCC (organizer Bob Brown in late 1967. In a short span of time from 1968 to 1969, he made significant achievements in Chicago. He made a nonaggression pact among Chicago's most powerful street gangs. He united factions of African Americans and Latino Americans, because both groups suffered poverty. He wanted to have a class conscious, multi-racial alliance between the BPP, the Young Patriots Organization, and the National Young Lords (under the leadership of Jose Cha Cha Jimenez). Others joined this coalition like the SDS, the Blackstone Rangers, the Brown Beres, and the Red Guard Party (of the Asian American community). In May 1969, Hampton called a press conference to announce that a truce had been declared among this "rainbow coalition," a phrase coined by Hampton and made popular over the years by Rev. Jesse Jackson (with his Rainbow PUSH Coalition). Fred Hampton had street smarts, book smarts, oratorical ability, and organizing skills. He was a threat to the corporate fascists. He supported the Free Breakfast Program. Fred Hampton was about to be appointed to the Party's Central Committee's Chief of Staff. At times, Fred utilized controversial language, but you have to realize what he been through. Folks were

lynched, the police were killing innocent human beings at will (with no accountability against the officers), and conditions in our communities were bad (as they are now ironcally enough). So, we know where Fred Hampton was coming from. He was murdered by the CPD and the feds in the morning of December 4, 1969. The FBI monitored Hampton and tapped his mothers phone in February 1968. The FBI used the traitor & informant William O'Neal to cause dissension and infiltration of the Black Panthers. The FBI sowed distrust and division by forging a split between the Panthers and the Rangers. The FBI used disinformation to lie about brothers and sisters involving the BPP too. This was a part of the COINTELPRO plan that would try to stop the rise of a "Black Messiah" to radically improve the conditions of the black community. COINTELRPO harmed labor leaders, civil rights activists, anti-war activists, and a wide spectrum of revolutionaries who disagreed with the establishment. The police first shot Mark Clark and he died instantly. One man of the Panthers fired a weapon and the rest of bullets fired were from the crooked Chicago Police Department. The FBI agent Clark placed drugs or barbiturates in the drink of Fred Hampton. Therefore, Fred Hampton couldn't wake up during the time of the shooting. Fred was lying on a mattress in the bedroom with his pregnant girlfriend. Two officers found him wounded in the shoulder, and fellow Black Panther Harold Bell reported that he heard the following exchange (of the police killing Hampton in the head to make sure that Fred Hampton was dead). The rest of the Panthers were assaulted, wounded, and arrested. They were accused of false charged and each were held on US $ 100,000 bail. This atrocity occurred less than 45 years ago. Fred Hamptons funeral was attended by 5,000 people. He was eulogized by Jesse Jackson and Ralph Abernathy (plus other). In his eulogy, Jackson noted that "when Fred was shot in Chicago, black people in particular, and decent people in general, bled everywhere." The coward William O'Neal committed suicide since he was responsible for his death like the other cops were. The families of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark stood strong and sued the city, state, and federal governments. The government was forced to pay the Hampton and Clark families for $1.85 million. If Fred Hampton was alive, he could of made not

only Chicago better in solving gang violence, drugs, violence in general, etc. He could of made America better, because of his great organization skills, charisma, intellect, and oratory abilities. Fred Hampton to us liberty lovers of every background was a freedom fighter and a
warrior for justice. He did a lot for his people. He was an inspiration for us to do what is right to improve the conditions at least for our family and people in our own communities.

One of the newest strategies of the elite is the privatization of all public schools. People want methods to fix public school without the need to privatize them. Many activists are trying their best to try to save public education. There has been a bipartisan, decades long campaign or effort to destroy, de-fund, discredit, and end public education. Even President Bush's Education Secretary mentioned that teachers unions were terrorist organizations. Barack Obama's man Arne Duncan believed that Hurricane Katrina was the best thing that ever happened to education in New Orleans, which is offensive and sick to say the least. Even in Atlanta, the Atlanta Public School Board voted to close 7 neighborhood schools. All of these schools are in mainly black neighborhoods. The school board proposed these closing in a few days before the words came about. They wanted to do this in order to prevent neighborhood parents from working together to protect their children and communities. The parents, teachers, and neighborhood resident said that the school board wanted charters and privatization. They feel in if the school board did this; the more successful students will go into the other school, while other children wouldn't receive the help that they desperately need. The corporate media loves school privatization and demonize the opponents of the School Board's proposals with misrepresentations and condescending rhetoric. With privatization, you have real estate developing trying to get lands and moving poorer people out of neighborhood to attract richer people. Privatization and Gentrification go hand in hand. Some people criticize standardized testing. This same policy is occurring in Atlanta, Chicago, Philadelphia, New York City, etc. Some schools are closes and resources are shipped to charter school operation. Even Arne Duncan never taught an hour in any classroom. Even I taught a classroom before for more than one hour. Arne was a pro-basketballer, he worked in the financial markets, and he was on Mayor Daley's staff. Atlanta's Enroll Davis was on the board of British Petroleum. This is why Duncan worked with Newt Gingrich and Al Sharpton in 200 to have a national tour to promote charter school, privatization, teacher merit pay, and other actions. That is why real people want to rebuild public education, democratize it, and

want education more sufficient in cities plus neighborhood nationwide. Privatization is a serious threat in our educational system indeed.

Of course, we have a lot of health problems in America. We dont have universal healthcare, because reactionaries love the status quo so much (along with other reasons). The Tea Party for the most part reject universal health care. Dr. King was right to say that: Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in

health care is the most shocking and inhumane. Martin Luther King Jr. in a speech to the Medical Committee for Human Rights, 1966. Our health care is only the 37th best health care in the world
according to the WHO. Many nations with better health care than us have universal coverage. We have rationing that occurs with our current system. The new health care law was very watered down from its true essence. With the water downed version of universal health care, the Republicans still feel that it goes too far. Thats how extreme the GOP has gone. Now, the law was created with the help of insurance CEOs and pharmaceutical executives. The law was made from the top. Every industrialized nation except America ensures its population to have access to basic healthcare. The United States is the only industrialized nation that doesnt guarantee access to health care as a human right. People from both major parties like Democratic Senator Max Baucus, John McCain, and Mitch McConnell received thousands of insurance dollars in order for them to promote the status quo. At least 22,000 Americans die unnecessarily each year since millions of Americans lack any health coverage. Its still taboo in America to call for singer payer, universal health care for all people. Now, the present new health care law is a mixed public/private health care system plan (it still leaves the current system to deny health services to workers and reap windfall profits for the healthcare insurance thugs). The mixed system has failed or has some problems in Washington, Minnesota, Massachusetts, and Maine. That is why a pure universal health care system is needed. We have issues of administrative costs. There are good items in the new health care law signed by President Barack Obama like covering pre-existing conditions and so forth. The new law makes subsidies available for the poor. It expands Medicaid to cover poorer citizens as well. The new health care law can make Medicare stronger. Younger people can stay on their parents health care until theyre 26 years old. This is a positive item. Even John Adams wanted public health for certain people in early America. A survey published in the April 2008 Annals of Internal Medicine showed that 59 percent of U.S. physicians support national health insurance. Polls prove that a majority of Americans favor some form of single payer healthcare system. Its a disgrace that pro-Ron Paul extremists believe charity alone can help the sick. I respect charity, but charity isnt the magic bullet. You need charity and more to help the sick. Many of the Democrats even reject a single payer system. The current healthcare law is very similar to the Massachusetts health care law. We have mover 300 million people in America. The elite view huge parts of the population as expendable. This is proven on how the elite use the prison industrial complex (causing big incarceration), the military industrial complex (forming never ending war), and the medical industrial complex (with its HMOs and Big Pharma) to harm the populace. We dont need massive amount of peoples being locked in poverty, prison, and have huge pollution. Still, health care is a human right. We should oppose the current administration promoting anti-civil liberty laws and using covert efforts in attempting to overthrow Latin American/African/Asian leaders (especially the democratically elected countries). You cant say I want health care reform and then you suppress discussions about a single payer system.

Veronica De La Cruz supports universal health care. I recently read some of her words. Theyve moved me, because her words were to the point and were emotionally charged. Her words and others motivate me even further to advance affordable, universal health care for all people in the USA. She wrote the following words:

agree that the Affordable Care Act is far from perfect. But I'm deeply thankful that our country finally made an overdue step toward equitable health care. It's important for those who supported the passage of health care reform to remember that the goal of equal and affordable access to health care is still several more steps away. To get there, our newly passed law must withstand all objections, criticisms and challenges -- fair or unfair -- or must be improved to become better. We must defend our new health care rights as vigorously as we fought to earn them, and then work to strengthen them further. A lot of progress has been made in a year. But for many people, more progress is sorely needed. Remaining active in supporting stronger health care rights, and the patients who need them most, is critical to our future as a nation, as a society and as individuals. For more information on health care reform, organ donation or helping those in need, like Sean Semon, visit the Eric De La Cruz Hope For Hearts Foundation at www.HopeforHeartsFoundation.org. Saving a life starts with a heart. And saving many lives -- with the implementation and improvement of health care reform -- will take patience

We can

*ON ECONOMICS: I do not agree with Communism, but it doesn't take a genius to figure out the weaknesses of capitalism either. Slavery, greed, death, and cruelty are products of laissez faire capitalism. Predatory corporate capitalism dominates our lives every day in Western society, especially in America. The fruit of the current economic system is apparent and abundant. We see its fruit in the imperialist wars. We see it in the economic crimes like the prime mortgage assaults against the American human beings, bank foreclosures, and the criminal theft of taxpayer money in the bailout of big banks and financial institutions. Some minds are brainwashed by the establishment into accepting a faulty reality. You can witness this for the past 100 years. All of us as human beings should utilize critical thinking, selfawareness, and intelligent decision making. These are the acts that can facilitate discernment and battle against oppression in the world stage. Today, we have economic and political problems. Also, we have an issue with too many human beings being anti-intellectual, harsh, anti-rational, and acting in the antithesis of strength plus compassion. Some individuals need to regain their critical consciousness. There is nothing wrong with reason and there is nothing wrong with disagreeing with torture, disease, poverty, war, slavery, and other ills in the world. The modern system advance great lies to harm not only workers, but also the rest of the human race. It is a lie that the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are essential to our national security. It is a lie to assume that some mystical, invisible hand of the free market can make

certain all people rich or poor can benefit from. That is why some delusively believe that capitalism is the only viable economic system possible and any alternative is equivalent to heresy. The reality is that as humans we have the right to reject egoism, selfishness, and greed to be more enlightened. One alternative is to have production for human use instead of production for sole profit. All humans can be provided with legitimate services. It is a lie that all criminals experience justice for their crimes in this society. Therefore, there is nothing wrong with hope and inspiration. Yet, we can't live in fantasy. Many in the mainstream media has been successful in allowing much of the public to accept the deception that self-pleasure and the obsession with wealth is necessary to function greatly in society instead of being critical thinkers and seek justice. Justice means that home foreclosures should have a moratorium and criminal banks who are complicit in the economic recession should never receive an economic bailout. Sometime is wrong with a culture and a system that exclusively seeks profit instead of the social betterment of humankind. It is the cartel-capitalist system that dominates Wall Street, the Federal Reserve System, much of the governments of the West, the military, the police, mainstream religion, and university interests too. Since 9/11, there are hundreds of other 9/11s in the Middle East too. Untold folks have been murdered, children have been massacred from the air, women have been raped by terrorists and some occupiers, and villages have been burned down. We know that America is still flawed and racism is still a serious issue in not only America, but throughout the Earth. We need a radical redistribution of economic and political power. We need a real structural change in the world. This evil war on terror is told to be a product of fighting for human liberation and national defense. Yet, the private central banking system, the fascist multinational corporations, and the military industrial complex have used greed and war as a means to dominate the lands of other human beings. We know that many of these laissez faire capitalists are terrorists by any definition since they use violence and war crimes all of the time. The war on terror is fascistic and predatory.

Dr. Martin Luther Kings memory should allow us to understand his life. Also, his memory should inspire us to be active to oppose unjust wars, fight for better education, fight for civil liberties, fight against poverty, and fight against any form of bigotry against any human being period. Organizing and activism are the key doctrines of Dr. Martin Luther King and his late wife Coretta Scott King. The young man from Atlanta, Georgia truly changed the world. I acknowledge the mans mistakes (as none of us are perfect), but I respect every single thing that he got correct. Dr. King was right that Jim Crow segregation is evil. Dr. King was right that the poor should have equity and funds to assist their daily lives. Dr. Martin Luther King was right to expose the Vietnam War as a criminal exercise of imperialism not an execution of prodemocratic values. What were Dr. Kings views on Zionism and the Middle East? You

must be thinking about that. Dr. King was a moderate on the issue like me. Some of my brothers are more radical than me on the Israel/Palestine question. Jewish
people and Arabic people lived in the land for thousands of years too. I believe that Israel should be a nation, yet the Palestinians equally have the right to have nationhood and have justice too. I think Dr. King havent witnessed a lot of the corruption in Israel today (remember, this is the 60s when few people in the USA knew about the radiation damage done unto Sephardic children, the oppression in Gaza, Deir Yassan, etc. To be fair, al-Husseini was an enemy of humanity, no doubt), so this is why Dr. King made those comments back in the 1960s. Fundamentally, both Israelis and Palestinians desire peace, equality, and justice throughout the region. If an Arabic person and/or a Jewish people want to do the right thing, then I dont hate that person at all. In the final analysis, black people are the original people, so the Jewish and Arabic peoples come from people that look like me. Black people are the first people on the face of the Earth. As a black man, I will not bow to a supremacist, nefarious culture. Still, any human

being regardless of their background can achieve their goals and make society better if they fight for that prize. Dr. Martin Luther King made his views known about the Middle
East in the following quotation: On the Middle East crisis, we have had various responses. The response of some of the so-called young militants against does not represent the position of the vast majority of Negroes. There are some who are color-consumed and they see a kind of mystique in being colored and anything non-colored is condemned. We do not follow that course in the Southern Leadership Conference, and certainly most of

the organizations in the civil rights movement do not follow that course. I think it is necessary say that what is basic and what is needed in the Middle East is peace. Peace for Israel is one thing. Peace for the Arab side of that world is another thing. Peace for Israel means security, and we must stand with all of our might to protect its territorial integrity. I see Israel, and never mind saying it, as one of the great outposts of democracy in the world, and a marvelous example of what can be done, how desert land almost can be transformed into an oasis of brotherhood and democracy. Peace for Israel means security and that security must be a reality. On the other hand, we must see what peace for the Arabs means in a real sense of security on another level. Peace for the Arabs means the kind of economic security that they so desperately need. These nations, as you know, are part of that third world of hunger, of disease, of illiteracy. I think that as long as these conditions exist there will be tensions, there will be the endless quest to find scapegoats. So there is a need for a Marshall Plan for the Middle East, where we lift those who are the bottom of the economic ladder and bring them into the mainstream of economic security. This is how we have tried to answer the question and deal with the problem in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and I think that represents the thinking of all of those in the Negro community, by and large, who have been thinking about this issue in the Middle East (A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings and speeches of Martin Luther King) Today in 2012, we dont know what Dr. Martin Luther King would believe in on all controversial issues. We do know that Dr. King will still oppose militarism; he would support human civil liberties (with habeas corpus. So, NDAA and SOPA are things that I dont agree with. I agree with a free Internet), he would oppose police brutality & the prison industrial complex, he would oppose the assassination of American citizens without due process, and he would still fight for the interests of the poor. A real world revolution promotes self determination of people. Dr. Martin Luther Kings legacy still lives on.

In the Final Analysis, We Want America to win and Succeed.

Paul Robeson
Paul Robeson lived from April 9, 1898 to January 23, 1976. He was a famous hero. He was a pioneer in the civil rights movement and human rights movements for black people including other people worldwide. He was an American concert singer, recording artist, athlete, and actor. He was a political radical, but was progressive in his outlook in life. From 1917 to the early 1920's, he was an All-American athlete. He was treated very cruelty by the American government even his passport was stricken from him because of his political views. A man's political views are his right to embrace. A man ought not to be persecuted because of his political views at all. He is not known by a lot of people in the world, because the establishment wants his name & accomplishments stricken from the brother. Yet, this brother will be given thanks for his contributions to the African struggle for pure liberation. He was born in Princeton, NJ. His father named William Drew Robeson I. His father was descended from the Igbo people of Nigeria. Paul Robeson was so intelligent that he was elected as the 1919 class valedictorian. He promoted Negro Spirituals. He went into Britain to perform. His wife was named Eslanda. In the 1930's, he learned more about African history including Igbo, Yoruba, Zulua, Russian, and Hindi languages. He and his wife Eslanda Robeson were friends with national future Presidents Kama Nkrumah and Jomo Kenyatta. He visited the Soviet Union. You have to put this into context. Back in the day, many brothers and sisters legitimately found the American system so abhorrent that they felt that had no choice but to look to the Soviets for tranquility. I don't agree with the Soviet system (while it banned de jure, racial discrimination, which I have no issue with. Yet, the USSR created persecutions against millions of innocent human

beings), but I see where Robeson came from. Even in 1936, Robeson was in the Song of Freedom that promoted human rights against Western imperialism. He fought against the fascists during the Spanish American war. There are so many actions that he have done. He fought for the rights of the Japanese Americans from being imprisoned in America. He supported the Progressive candidate for President Henry Wallace. Wallace ran on an anti-lynching and pro-civil rights platform. He supported the rights of Aboriginal people. He talked with Malcolm X in having a new meeting, but Malcolm X was assassinated in 1965. In 1946, he opposed a move by the Canadian government to deport thousands of Japanese Canadians. Robeson accepted honorary life membership of the Japanese Canadian Committee for Democracy and gave a concert in Salt Lake City, then home to the Japanese American Citizens League. He opposed lynching and once supported the progressive candidate Henry A. Wallace (on an anti-lynching, pro-civil rights platform that caused numerous voices to support him). He passed away in Philadelphia by stroke complications.

Lorraine Hansberry worked with Paul Robeson in many ways. She was great in creating plays like Raisin in the Sun back in 1959. Of course, we know the movie Raisin in the Sun that starred Sidney Portier, Ruby Dee, and others back in 1961. She was ahead of her time in writing critically about history, feminism, abortion, and the issues of homosexuality way back in the 1950s. Regardless of what you think of her political views, she genuinely wanted liberation for human beings. All human beings deserve equality. Its just that simple. We can agree to disagree on some issues, but a person should have the right to pursue happiness. I am not a moral nihilist or a moral relativist, but it is immoral to persecute a man or a woman for who they are. It is immoral to slur a human being for what they are or to deny basic human rights from a person. Its still taboo in America to want equal treatment for all peoples. She lived her life in writing critiques in society and advocating justice and freedom for all peoples. She was a gifted writer and she was a writer in the black newspaper called Freedom under the auspices of Paul Robeson. So, the sister Lorraine Hansberry was very wise. She was born in NYC. She died so young. She was only 34. Lorraine Hansberry may have died young, but the sister stood strong. She inspired others with her words and actions. She passed away in 1965, because of pancreatic cancer. Paul Robeson gave her eulogy. The sister

Lorraine Hansberry was a key figure of the civil rights movement that many folks dont know about. She made great contributions in the fields of literature, art, theatre, and even movies to an enormous extent. It's easy to see that Paul Robeson wanted true human rights.

By Timothy

One important lesson in life is to strive for excellence. We can do more than speak out and write. We can be active to help humanity and exemplify excellence in our lives. There is no shame in that at all. Stagnation doesnt equate liberation, but perseverance, overcoming obstacles, and fighting for truth will equate into liberation.

Peace & One Love

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