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

footloose

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
yo wtf happened to Atlanta. :lol: What is this shit. now I understand check in culture.
The comments is crazzzzzy. Saying they responsible for the entrepreneurship I’m Atlanta. :lol:
 
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YoBitchChoseMe

Rising Star
Registered
Pause……. Again :fuckyousay: Stop quoting me.

Pause……. Again :fuckyousay: Stop quoting me.
iu

U lil fruit cake, get off Tariq Nutz
 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
Period.




Educate yourself.

How Malcolm X Became a Serious Threat to the U.S. After His Africa Visit

The influential activist was a strong proponent of Pan-Africanism.
By Ismail Akwei via Face2Face Africa on June 4, 2018



Pan-Africanism – the global movement encouraging the bond of solidarity between people of African descent – gave birth to the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) which inspired Malcolm X during his visit to Africa in 1964.

He has had prior visits to the continent with his first in 1959 when he touched down in the United Arab Republic (a short-lived political union between Egypt and Syria), Sudan, Nigeria, and Ghana to make arrangements for a tour by Elijah Muhammad.

He also visited Africa after his pilgrimage to Mecca in 1964 and conducted interviews and gave speeches in Egypt, Ethiopia, Tanganyika, Nigeria, Ghana, Guinea, Sudan, Senegal, Liberia, Algeria, and Morocco after meeting their leaders.

He earned the Yoruba name Omowale – which means the son who has come home – in Nigeria after he spoke at the University of Ibadan.

Malcolm was enlightened by Pan-African leaders such as Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, and Ahmed Ben Bella of Algeria who were stalwarts of African unity and wanted him to work with them.

The impressed Malcolm X returned to the United States in May and formed the Organization of Afro-American Unity (OAAU) to fight for the human rights of Black Americans and foster unity with Africans and all people of African descent.

He announced the establishment at a public meeting in New York’s Audubon Ballroom on June 28, 1964, after writing the group’s charter with other Pan-Africanists including John Henrik Clarke, Albert Cleage, Jesse Gray, and Gloria Richardson.

Two months later, he returned to Egypt for the second Organization of African Unity (OAU) meeting as a representative of the Organization of Afro-American Unity (OAAU).

Ahead of his trip to Africa, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover wrote in a memo dated July 2, 1964, that the OAAU was a threat to the national security of the United States.

The FBI had wanted to convict Malcolm under the Logan Act, which forbids “negotiat[ing] with foreign governments having a dispute with the United States.” The memo accused Malcolm of meeting Communist China in Africa.

Malcolm X returned to the United States and started laying a solid foundation for the OAAU under the four pillars of Restoration, Reorientation, Education and Economic Security of Black people.

He was killed on February 21, 1965, by three men suspected to be members of the Nation of Islam while preparing to address the OAAU in Manhattan’s Audubon Ballroom.


I said it in two words. The text said it in more than two words- provided the history you should have sought out yourself, and Malcolm said it in 6 minutes, pertaining to why though he would be pro-reparations he would in no form be about diaspora Black folk bashing like you, the no-name, no life, self-hating coons you quote from Instagram and you all's guru, Tariq that have become the uniform of FBA.

Malcolm X explicitly said:
"In hating Africa and hating the Africans we end up hating ourselves without even realizing it. You can't hate the roots of the tree and not hate the tree. You can't hate your origins and not end up hating yourself. You can't hate Africa and not hate yourself. And you show me one of these people over here who have been thoroughly brainwashed who had a negative attitude toward Africa and I'll show you one who had a negative attitude toward himself. You can't have a positive attitude toward yourself and a negative attitude toward Africa at the same time.
To the same degree that your attitude and understanding toward Africa becomes positive, you'll find that your understanding of and your attitude toward yourself will also become positive - and this is what the white man knows."
@Soul On Ice

Therefore, he would not be part of Tariq's divisive FBA movement, since it's founder regularly hates on, derides and insults native African and non-FBA Black folks every chance he gets as his followers follow suit, yet he features Malcolm X in his struggle museum while spitting on Pan-Africanism, the trigger to Malcolm's demise. THAT is cooning. Tariq is a forked tongued grifter perpetuating the divisive work of the slave master.

Think. Why would Feds want to snuff Malcolm for being a Pan-Africanist?

What point am I trying to make? The point was made. Can you read or listen?

You can lead a fool to knowledge but you can't make him think.

You also need to acknowledge that Malcolm X noted that he received resistance from some African leaders when it came to getting international support for Black America.

MALCOLM X SEEKS U.N. NEGRO DEBATE; He Asks African States to Cite U.S. Over Rights​


WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 —The State Department and the Justice Department have begun to take an interest in Malcolm X's campaign to convince African states to raise the question of persecution of American Negroes at the United Nations.

The Black Nationalist leader started his campaign July 17 in Cairo, where the 33 heads of independent African states held their second meeting since the Organization of African Unity was founded in Addis Ababa 14 months ago.

Before leaving for Cairo, Malcolm told friends in New York that it was his intention to add a new dimension to the civil rights struggle in the United States. This, he said, could be achieved by “internationalizing” the Negro question at the United Nations in the manner that South African apartheid was transferred into an international problem.

Malcolm's eight‐page memorandum to the heads of state at the Cairo conference requesting their support became available here only recently. After studying it, officials said that if Malcolm succeeded in convincing just one African Government to bring up the charge at the United Nations, the United States Government would be faced with a touchy problem.

The United States officials here believe, would find itself in the same category as South Africa, Hungary and other countries whose domestic politics have become debating issues at the United Nations. The issue, officials say, would be of service to critics of the United States, Communist and non‐Communist, and contribute to the undermining of the position the United States has asserted, for itself as the leader of West in the advocacy of human rights.

In a letter from Cairo to a [friend Malcolm wrote:

“I have gotten several promUses of support in bringing our| plight before the U. N. this year.”

According to one diplomatic report, Malcolm had not met with success, but the report was not documented and officials’ here today conceded the possibility that Malcolm might have succeeded.

Passages in Malcolm's memorandum indicated that he had encountered resistance to his idea.

“Some African leaders at this conference,” he said in his memorandum, “have implied that they have enough problems here on the mother continent without adding the Afro‐American problem.

“With all due respect to your esteemed positions, I must remind all of you that the good shepherd will leave 99 sheep at home to go to the aid of the one who is lost and has fallen into the hands of the imperialist wolf.

“We, in America, are your long lost brothers and sisters, and I am here to remind you that our problems are your problems.” The memorandum continued:

“The American Government is either unable or unwilling to protect the lives and property of your 22 million AfricanAmerican brothers and sisters. We stand defenseless, at the mercy of American racists who murder us at will for no reason other than we are black and of African descent.

“Our problems are your problems. We have lived for over 300 years in that American den of racist wolves in constant fear of losing life and limb.”
Malcolm also warned the heads of the African states that their countries would have no future unless the American Negro problem was solved. He said:

“Your problems will never be fully solved until and unless ours are solved. You will never be fully respected until and unless we are also respected. You will never be recognized as free human beings until and unless we are also recognized and treated as human beings.”

Asserting that the Negro problem is not one of civil rights but of human rights, Malcolm said:

“If United States Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg a few weeks ago, could find legal grounds to threaten to bring Russia before the United Nations and charge her with violating the human rights of less than three million Russian Jews—what makes our African brothers hesitate to bring the United States Government before the United Nations and charge her with violating the human rights of 22 million African‐Americans ?

“We pray that our African brothers have not freed themselves of European colonialism only to be overcome and held in check by American dollarism. Don't let American racism be ’legalized’ by American dollarism.”

Malcolm argued that “if South African racism is not a domestic issue, then American racism also is not a domestic issue.”

The Black Nationalist, who quit the Chicago‐based Black Muslim movement led by Elijah Muhammad to form his nonsectarian Organization of AfriAmerican Unity, said it was the intention of his group in coalition with other Negro groups ”to elevate our freedom struggle above the domestic level of civil rights.”

 

respiration

/ˌrespəˈrāSH(ə)n/
BGOL Patreon Investor
You also need to acknowledge that Malcolm X noted that he received resistance from some African leaders when it came to getting international support for Black America.

MALCOLM X SEEKS U.N. NEGRO DEBATE; He Asks African States to Cite U.S. Over Rights​


WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 —The State Department and the Justice Department have begun to take an interest in Malcolm X's campaign to convince African states to raise the question of persecution of American Negroes at the United Nations.

The Black Nationalist leader started his campaign July 17 in Cairo, where the 33 heads of independent African states held their second meeting since the Organization of African Unity was founded in Addis Ababa 14 months ago.

Before leaving for Cairo, Malcolm told friends in New York that it was his intention to add a new dimension to the civil rights struggle in the United States. This, he said, could be achieved by “internationalizing” the Negro question at the United Nations in the manner that South African apartheid was transferred into an international problem.

Malcolm's eight‐page memorandum to the heads of state at the Cairo conference requesting their support became available here only recently. After studying it, officials said that if Malcolm succeeded in convincing just one African Government to bring up the charge at the United Nations, the United States Government would be faced with a touchy problem.

The United States officials here believe, would find itself in the same category as South Africa, Hungary and other countries whose domestic politics have become debating issues at the United Nations. The issue, officials say, would be of service to critics of the United States, Communist and non‐Communist, and contribute to the undermining of the position the United States has asserted, for itself as the leader of West in the advocacy of human rights.

In a letter from Cairo to a [friend Malcolm wrote:

“I have gotten several promUses of support in bringing our| plight before the U. N. this year.”

According to one diplomatic report, Malcolm had not met with success, but the report was not documented and officials’ here today conceded the possibility that Malcolm might have succeeded.

Passages in Malcolm's memorandum indicated that he had encountered resistance to his idea.

“Some African leaders at this conference,” he said in his memorandum, “have implied that they have enough problems here on the mother continent without adding the Afro‐American problem.

“With all due respect to your esteemed positions, I must remind all of you that the good shepherd will leave 99 sheep at home to go to the aid of the one who is lost and has fallen into the hands of the imperialist wolf.

“We, in America, are your long lost brothers and sisters, and I am here to remind you that our problems are your problems.” The memorandum continued:

“The American Government is either unable or unwilling to protect the lives and property of your 22 million AfricanAmerican brothers and sisters. We stand defenseless, at the mercy of American racists who murder us at will for no reason other than we are black and of African descent.

“Our problems are your problems. We have lived for over 300 years in that American den of racist wolves in constant fear of losing life and limb.”
Malcolm also warned the heads of the African states that their countries would have no future unless the American Negro problem was solved. He said:


“Your problems will never be fully solved until and unless ours are solved. You will never be fully respected until and unless we are also respected. You will never be recognized as free human beings until and unless we are also recognized and treated as human beings.”

Asserting that the Negro problem is not one of civil rights but of human rights, Malcolm said:

“If United States Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg a few weeks ago, could find legal grounds to threaten to bring Russia before the United Nations and charge her with violating the human rights of less than three million Russian Jews—what makes our African brothers hesitate to bring the United States Government before the United Nations and charge her with violating the human rights of 22 million African‐Americans ?

“We pray that our African brothers have not freed themselves of European colonialism only to be overcome and held in check by American dollarism. Don't let American racism be ’legalized’ by American dollarism.”

Malcolm argued that “if South African racism is not a domestic issue, then American racism also is not a domestic issue.”

The Black Nationalist, who quit the Chicago‐based Black Muslim movement led by Elijah Muhammad to form his nonsectarian Organization of AfriAmerican Unity, said it was the intention of his group in coalition with other Negro groups ”to elevate our freedom struggle above the domestic level of civil rights.”

Sure.
 

Duece

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
So he's gotten the Teig Hanley sponsor?

He's definitely headed back into the manosphere.
 
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