UPDATE: Tariq Nasheed pushed for $7Mil for Hidden History Museum; FBA supports Trump/Vance 2024

ghoststrike

Rising Star
Platinum Member
You remedial simpleton.

If you enter the title of the show into X, you will see that the trailer and all the frontally naked women in it exists.

Which refutes you, the coon quoted above you and your other squad of indigent fellow Blacks for Trump/TN fanboys + a cow in your shamelessly desperate pursuit of a non-existent gotcha moment.

The MAGA-land folks were trying to say the clip was from hardcore gay porn. Then, when confirmed that the rolling clip was from an HBO dating series (that has female and male nudity) and thus proven WRONG AF, they pathetically attempt to save face.
 

respiration

/ˌrespəˈrāSH(ə)n/
BGOL Patreon Investor
The MAGA-land folks were trying to say the clip was from hardcore gay porn. Then, when confirmed that the rolling clip was from an HBO dating series (that has female and male nudity) and thus proven WRONG AF, they pathetically attempt to save face.
Just like the "black" MAGA-land embarrassments in this thread. Imagine that.
 

Soul On Ice

Democrat 1st!
Certified Pussy Poster
You remedial simpleton.

If you enter the title of the show into X, you will see that the trailer and all the frontally naked women in it exists.

Which refutes you, the coon quoted above you and your other squad of indigent fellow Blacks for Trump/TN fanboys + a cow in your shamelessly desperate pursuit of a non-existent gotcha moment.
You trying to infect my computer with them gay cookies that yall eating with no handz like a pie eating contest?!

I'm all the way cool. I like my algorithm #faggotryfree.

Nice try bussy buddy.

:lol2:
 

Soul On Ice

Democrat 1st!
Certified Pussy Poster
Still cant get over the bussy bro trying to Agent Smith my laptop
:smh:



me%20too.gif
 

respiration

/ˌrespəˈrāSH(ə)n/
BGOL Patreon Investor
You trying to infect my computer with them gay cookies that yall eating with no handz like a pie eating contest?!

I'm all the way cool. I like my algorithm #faggotryfree.

Nice try bussy buddy.

:lol2:

Yall pushed a gaysex "documentary" "buck broken"
(whose graphic ad was a Blackman laid on the floor with his A** open(
which no-one asked for )on ur own computer but yes Roalnd Martin iPad had a tv show ad play on his iPad :roflmao2: :roflmao2: :roflmao2:
They are oddly obsessed with homosexuality. You see they love talking about it. They advocate for it so much, you have one making a devoid of facts "documentary" about male-rape and lying and saying it was a common tactic used by slavemasters. Then you have these gay-obsessed coons here cheerleading a Black woman Trump disciple as she lies on a Black man whom they weirdly and desperately want to be gay.

Meanwhile they keep reposting the imagery over and over that they claimed to be offensive just to have an excuse to continue to scrutinize one half second of a man's a**. :puke: One actually posted a screenshot so he and his fellow "sisters" can immortalize it.

Never mind that they could have seen enough beautiful full, frontal female nakedness in the actual trailer to create a 5-page post on BGOL. But beautiful naked women isn't their focus.

This is the best these barely-closeted down-low unpaid agents for white supremacy can manage. They live on social media and can't read a book to save their lives. Do nothing locally to build up their community or actually fight white supremacy. NEVER criticize Trump, MAGA, the right-wing or any white racists, only other Black folks.

And when they inevitably get overwhelmed by facts, they run back to faggotry talk. Real life "Sleep n' Eat" characters from Bamboozled merged with the homosexuals from Men on Film.
 

mangobob79

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
They are oddly obsessed with homosexuality. You see they love talking about it. They advocate for it so much, you have one making a devoid of facts "documentary" about male-rape and lying and saying it was a common tactic used by slavemasters. Then you have these gay-obsessed coons here cheerleading a Black woman Trump disciple as she lies on a Black man whom they weirdly and desperately want to be gay.

Meanwhile they keep reposting the imagery over and over that they claimed to be offensive just to have an excuse to continue to scrutinize one half second of a man's a**. :puke: One actually posted a screenshot so he and his fellow "sisters" can immortalize it.

Never mind that they could have seen enough beautiful full, frontal female nakedness in the actual trailer to create a 5-page post on BGOL. But beautiful naked women isn't their focus.

This is the best these barely-closeted down-low unpaid agents for white supremacy can manage. They live on social media and can't read a book to save their lives. Do nothing locally to build up their community or actually fight white supremacy. NEVER criticize Trump, MAGA, the right-wing or any white racists, only other Black folks.

And when they inevitably get overwhelmed by facts, they run back to faggotry talk. Real life "Sleep n' Eat" characters from Bamboozled merged with the homosexuals from Men on Film.
:money::bravo: on the money !
 

mcguyver

Rising Star
OG Investor
Still cant get over the bussy bro trying to Agent Smith my laptop
:smh:



me%20too.gif
"Bussy is a mash up of the words boy and pussy used to refer to a man's anus. While it is not clear who the original creator was, the word was coined and primarily used be members of the LGBTQ+ community and has been used since 1992."


More evidence exposing this faggit.
 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
Damn. So these ADOS clowns have now digressed to the point they're openly saying "Fuck Marcus Garvey"??? :eek: WTF???:confused:

Nothing new there. Garvey was a joke back then and true ADOS leaders called him out as a charlatan. And he was a pan-Africanist who never went to Africa and died in London, England. He was the original Dr Umar, which is why Umar embraces his legacy. The same tired hustle.

The "Garvey Must Go" Campaign

When Marcus Garvey first arrived in the United States in 1916, he quickly found his way to many of New York's most prominent black radical activists and intellectuals. And, at least briefly, Garvey enjoyed their support.

But by 1920, A. Philip Randolph and other black leaders, some of whom had supported Garvey after his arrival in the United States, came to believe that Garvey's program for black advancement was unsound, and that Garvey himself was a charlatan. Though they admired his skills as a propagandist, these prominent black critics derided Garvey's proposed solutions for the problems of African Americans. They believed that his plans for black progress, including the Black Star Line and the establishment of a pan-African empire, were unrealistic and ill-advised; they considered the Universal Negro Improvement Association's grandiose titles and military regalia to be preposterous; and they thought Garvey, with his assumption of a regal posture under the title "Provisional President of Africa," to be little more than a self-aggrandizing buffoon. A. Philip Randolph, who had introduced Garvey to his first American audience on a Harlem street corner, said Garvey had "succeeded in making the Negro the laughingstock of the world."

Federal investigations into the finances of the Black Star Line, along with a blistering analysis of the shipping line by W.E.B. Du Bois in the NAACP's Crisis magazine, gave fuel to Garvey's black critics. Randolph personally critiqued the economic feasibility of the Black Star Line in The Messenger , an influential magazine he co-edited with Chandler Owen, and accused Garvey of squandering the hard-earned money of his hard-working, poor supporters.

Black opposition to Garvey coalesced into what came to be known as the "Garvey Must Go" Campaign. Supporters of the campaign, known collectively as the Friends of Negro Freedom, intended to unmask Garvey as a fraud before his black supporters. They also appealed to the federal government to step up investigations of irregularities in the Black Star Line, and to look into alleged acts of violence on the part of Garvey's inner circle.

The "Garvey Must Go" Campaign gained momentum after Garvey held a secret meeting with Edward Young Clarke, the leader of the Ku Klux Klan, in June 1922. Immediately afterward, Randolph and Owen's Messenger magazine published an article entitled "Marcus Garvey! The Black Imperial Wizard Becomes Messenger Boy of the White Klu Klux Kleagle." Black leaders were further infuriated when they learned that Garvey, at a speaking engagement in New Orleans, remarked that because black people had not built the railroad system, they should not insist on riding in the same cars with white patrons.

The Messenger vowed to begin a vigorous editorial campaign against Garvey, and promised to "[fire] the opening gun in a campaign to drive Garvey and Garveyism in all its sinister viciousness from the American soil." The campaign from this point on was characterized by vitriolic personal attacks on both sides, and by escalating threats of violence. "Garvey Must Go" meetings were violently dispersed by Garvey's followers. A. Philip Randolph received the severed hand of a white man in the mail. It was accompanied by a note signed by the K.K.K., but Randolph believed the hand had been sent by the U.N.I.A.

On January 15, 1923, a group of eight prominent African Americans petitioned Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty asking the U.S. government to continue its prosecution of Garvey on charges of mail fraud, and to investigate acts of violence attributed to Garvey's followers -- among them, the assassination in early January 1923 in New Orleans of J. W. H. Eason, Garvey's former deputy, who had been expelled from the movement at the August 1922 Convention on charges of personal misconduct. The letter of petition ended by urging the Attorney General to "use his full influence completely to disband and extirpate this vicious movement," and imploring him to "vigorously and speedily push the government's case against Marcus Garvey for using the mails to defraud."

Garvey would eventually be convicted of mail fraud charges in 1923. He was jailed in the Atlanta federal penitentiary in February 1925, where he would serve almost three years of a five-year sentence. And in 1927, Garvey would be deported from the United States, never to return.
 

Soul On Ice

Democrat 1st!
Certified Pussy Poster
So she's researched this?
I denounced all of my former pro blackness in favor of becoming a D1 (democrat 1st).
I started listening to Roland religiously! I stopped working out. Began drinking soy milk. Went back to church. And listened to Urban View on my road trips.
I looked in the mirror, and was a fat sloppy slick talking sassy bro in less than a year.

She is absolutely correct.
But it's cool though, because if I go against his agenda, we'll become slaves again if we don't support what he's talking about.
 

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor


Activists charged with pushing Russian propaganda go on trial in Florida​

WLRN Public Media | By Patricia Mazzei | The New York Times
Published September 3, 2024 at 11:00 AM EDT
Omali Yeshitela is one of four Americans who have pleaded not guilty to conspiring on behalf of Russia. “We’re just a vehicle that’s being used to assault free speech,” he said in an interview.

Octavio Jones
/
NYT
Omali Yeshitela is one of four Americans who have pleaded not guilty to conspiring on behalf of Russia. “We’re just a vehicle that’s being used to assault free speech,” he said in an interview.
An unusual trial scheduled to begin on Tuesday in Tampa, Fla., involves obscure candidates for local office, activist groups far outside the political mainstream and relatively little money changing hands.

But experts say it offers a rare glimpse into how Russia has tried for decades to secretly influence American politics.

Prosecutors say that Russia, in relatively low-tech fashion, sought out a sympathetic group in the United States, invited its leader to visit Moscow and established a long-term relationship through calls, email and electronic messages. The group, which has long had a presence in St. Petersburg, Fla., then promoted Russian views on its website, social media accounts and radio station. One post argued that Russian athletes should be allowed to participate in the 2016 Summer Olympics.

Four Americans face charges that they conspired to have other U.S. citizens act as illegal agents of the Russian government, or that they acted as unregistered Russian agents themselves. The prosecutors say that Russians directed them — and in some cases, paid them — to push Russian propaganda, including after their country invaded Ukraine in 2022.
The defendants, who have pleaded not guilty, say that the U.S. government is criminalizing dissent protected under the First Amendment. All four of them are current or former members of the African People’s Socialist Party, an organization promoting Black power; three are also members of the Uhuru Movement, the party’s activist arm, which is based in St. Petersburg and St. Louis.

One of the defendants also founded a different group, Black Hammer, a radical Black separatist organization in Atlanta. The Uhuru Movement supports self-determination for Black people and has protested issues from racism and colonialism to local police conduct for decades.
“We are innocent of what they claim we’ve done,” Omali Yeshitela, the chairman of the Uhuru Movement and one of the defendants, said in an interview. “We’re just a vehicle that’s being used to assault free speech.”

Regardless of the outcome of the trial, which is expected to last about four weeks, experts say it offers a window into how the Russian government has long tried to influence U.S. elections and promote Russia’s geopolitical agenda.
“Infiltrating social movements has been core to Russian espionage since the 1950s,” said Bret Schafer, a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund, a Washington-based research group that promotes democracy. Some of the infiltration attempts involve unwitting Americans, he added.

In the Florida case, which did not result in any pro-Russia candidate elected to public office, the payoff for Russia may seem exceedingly small. But on a broader level, Mr. Schafer said, Russia wants more “authentic” American groups to adopt Russia’s perspective.

“Even if they are not in a real position of power,” he said, “if you can infiltrate and influence enough of these groups and have them at some level adopting positions that are beneficial to you — and that doesn’t necessarily mean pro-Russian positions, but just to further radicalize them and create further divisions — we know that’s obviously a win for Russia.”

In the 2023 indictment of Mr. Yeshitela and his co-defendants, prosecutors said that a Russian man, Aleksandr Viktorovich Ionov, engaged with the four and with unnamed co-conspirators for years, urging them to make pro-Russian statements while he backed their unsuccessful campaigns for the St. Petersburg City Council in 2017 and 2019.

According to prosecutors, the events took place between 2014 and 2022, and Mr. Ionov worked with the F.S.B., a Russian intelligence agency. Mr. Ionov was indicted in the case in 2022; two other Russians, Aleksey Borisovich Sukhodolov and Yegor Sergeyevich Popov, both apparent F.S.B. officials, were indicted in 2023. None of the three are in the United States at this point and therefore will likely never face trial.
Mr. Yeshitela’s co-defendants are Penny Joanne Hess, an Uhuru Movement leader; Jesse Nevel, an Uhuru Movement member; and Augustus C. Romain Jr., a former African People’s Socialist Party member and founder of Black Hammer.

The relationship between Russia and the Uhuru Movement began after Mr. Ionov paid for Mr. Yeshitela to travel to Moscow twice in 2015, the indictment says. Mr. Ionov acted through his organization, the Anti-Globalization Movement of Russia, which prosecutors say was funded by the Russian government.

They say that Mr. Ionov paid the Uhuru Movement nearly $7,000 to conduct a four-city protest tour in 2016 drawing attention to a “Petition on Crime of Genocide Against African People in the United States,” which it had previously submitted to the United Nations.
Mr. Yeshitela, center, with fellow defendants Penny Joanne Hess, left, and Jesse Nevel. Each faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.

Octavio Jones
/
NYT
Mr. Yeshitela, center, with fellow defendants Penny Joanne Hess, left, and Jesse Nevel. Each faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.
In 2019, the indictment says, Mr. Ionov referred in communications with his F.S.B. handlers to a St. Petersburg City Council candidate “whom we supervise,” adding that he consulted on the campaign “every week.”
The only Uhuru Movement member to run for the City Council that year was Akilé Anai, whose name appeared on the ballot as Eritha “Akilé” Cainion. She received about 18 percent of the vote in the runoff election and lost. She has not been charged in the case and is unnamed in the indictment.

In 2022, the indictment says, Mr. Ionov provided designs for protest signs and paid nearly $3,000 for Mr. Romain and three other Black Hammer members to travel to San Francisco to protest at the headquarters of an unnamed social media company that restricted pro-Russian posts about the invasion of Ukraine. News articles at the time reported on a protest outside Meta, the company that owns Facebook.

Mr. Romain later protested United States policy on Russia in Atlanta in 2022, also at the direction of Mr. Ionov, the indictment says.

Mark O’Brien, a lawyer assisting Mr. Romain, said in written responses to questions that Mr. Romain “never knew he was dealing with the Russian government,” has no relationship with the other defendants and plans to testify at trial.

Mr. Yeshitela, who is 82, acknowledged traveling to Russia and other countries for conferences. But he and his lawyers denied that the defendants acted at the direction and control of Russia, saying their actions were protected speech consistent with their political views. Those views simply did not align with U.S. policy, the lawyers said.
And the group considered the payments sent by Mr. Ionov to be donations backing the Uhuru Movement’s actions, not payment for actions on behalf of Russia.

“We’ve been doing this work now for more than 50 years,” Mr. Yeshitela said.

The maximum penalty that Mr. Yeshitela, Ms. Hess and Mr. Nevel could face is 10 years in prison for failing to register as a foreign agent and five years for the charge of conspiring to have others act as Russian agents.

Mr. Romain, who was not charged with failing to register as a foreign agent, could face a maximum penalty of five years in prison. He is defending himself in court.
 
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