please read
I still canât buy this book yet bc just looking at the chapter titles SCALPED me

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please read
I still canât buy this book yet bc just looking at the chapter titles SCALPED me

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i do not want to have you to fill the empty parts of me i want to be full on my own i want to be so complete i could light a city and then i want to have you cause the two of us combined could set it on fire
Rupi Kaur, milk and honey (via mythaelogy)
I am a Negro: Black as the night is black, Black like the depths of my Africa.
Langston Hughes, âNegroâ (via childofzami)

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Is your name Luna? Are you the Moonâs daughter? Moon kissed child, I see the moonâs glow in your midnight blue/black skin.
Dean Steed, Is Your Name Luna? (via childofzami)
thereâs a whole galaxy between my hips waiting to be explored by youâŚwaiting for life, love, and energy. come get to work. weâll rest on the seventh day.
s.f somedays you feel like the closest thing to god (via writtenbysauce)
I killed a spider Not a murderous brown recluse Nor even a black widow And if the truth were told this Was only a small Sort of papery spider Who should have run When I picked up the book But she didnât And she scared me And I smashed her I donât think Iâm allowed To kill something Because I am Frightened
Nikki Giovanni, Allowables (via ofblackpoetry)
â2014 XXL Freestyleâ Chance The Rapper

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âThe Wayâ Chance The Rapper
5 Civil Rights Movement Myths You Learned In History Class
The human brain doesnât handle complexity very well. You can see this most dramatically in how we read and understand history.
#5. Myth: Slavery Ended In 1865
We mean, of course it did. The Civil War ended that year, while the Emancipation Proclamation went into effect and spin-kicked slavery right in the dick, and that was that. You learn that shit in kindergarten.
The thing is, simply winning a war and saying âSlavery is abolished, assholes!â doesnât make it stop any more than telling your cat not to use your shoe as a toilet stops her from doing it. The Southâs economy (and occasionally geography) was in ruins after the war, and they werenât exactly thrilled about giving away a significant chunk of their workforce. As such, they didnât so much do away with slavery after the end of the Civil War as they did something much more American: They justrebranded the operation, albeit on a smaller scale.
                                'forced independent contractors.â
The years after the war saw both black and white criminal activity increase, which was a problem, because most prisons had been destroyed during the war. The states took a look at the massive influx of prisoners in their hands, surreptitiously glanced at each other ⌠and started leasing them to wealthy planters and industry big shots as free, forced labor.This system, known as convict lease, quickly became one of the most lubed-up loopholes in history. Some of the criminals caught up in the machine were white, but an estimated 80 to 90 percent were black, because of fucking course they were. Many former slaves found that freedom was the worst thing that could have happened to them, as the police got hold of them and piled on enough arbitrary charges to put them into âtotally not slaveryâ forced labor for years, toiling under essentially the same assholes who had owned them during their slave days.Â
âIf you love someone, set them free. If you force them to come back shackled, kicking, and screaming, it was meant to be.â
The conditions were generally much worse, too. There was a lot less financial incentive to keep a prisoner alive than a slave, so living conditions of prisoners under convict lease tended to be abysmal. In some cases, the death rate was as high as 40 percent. But the public was okay with it, because hey, thatâs what they get for committing crimes! Weâre not exploiting a racial and economic class, weâre punishing the bad guys!Â
We can say that convict lease ended precisely fucking never. Establishments like the Louisiana State Penitentiary are still employing the model today, and are cool enough with what they do that they let a camera crew record their operation in 2015.
#4. Myth: Malcolm X Was A Violent Radical, While Martin Luther King, Jr. Was All About Pacifism
History sees Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr. as two sides of the same coin. Malcolm X was the violence-preaching militant radical, and Martin Luther King, Jr. was a Gandhi-like pacifist, though both were pushing for the same outcome. These days, we always tend to put activists into one of those two molds, and only offer public approval for the latter.
Reality, however, is always more complicated. For all of his militant talk, Malcolm X did not advocate attacking the government. He urged that black people should be ready to defend themselves violently if need be, but never once by initiating violence. Sure, he used scary-sounding rhetoric, but it was never âKill the whites to affect changeâ. Rather, it was, âWeâre not afraid to fight back,â or in his own words, âPut your hands on us thinking that weâre going to turn the other cheek â weâll put you to death just like that.âÂ
Meanwhile, Martin Luther King, Jr. wasnât quite as averse to guns as his popular legacy would have us believe. While he certainly did organize all of those nonviolent protests you know him for, he fully bought into the idea of âjust in caseâ firepower. Remember, King was a man of the South, fighting against acts of terrorism against his person and his people. In the early period of his leadership, his household could be accurately called an arsenal. It wasnât unheard of for a visitor to sit on a chair, only to be warned at the last second they were about to place their ass on a couple of guns. After his house was bombed in 1956, King even tried to get a concealed carry permit, though this went about as well as youâd expect. King also preached what he practiced, incidentally; his writings acknowledge the right to armed self-defense.
Once again, please donât take this as some kind of simplistic âSo King was the violent one, and X was the peace-seeker!â switcheroo.
#3. Myth: The Black Panthers Were A Bunch Of Armed Male Radicals
Since they are best known for showing up at the California Assembly carrying rifles or for getting into a shootout with the police four days after a police raid killed one of their leaders, many people assume the Black Panthers were hyper-radical armed terrorists who wanted nothing more than to fill the streets with rivers of white menâs blood.
And sure, the Panthers loved their guns. Their views on guns would make todayâs NRA membersknock themselves out with a thunderous agreement orgasm. But as was the case with Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, we tend to remember activists by their single most headline-grabbing traits. For example, when you picture a black panther, youâre probably imagining a guy in a beret and paramilitary garb:
So the fact that, by the end of the 1960s, women made up the majority of the Black Panther movement would blow most peopleâs minds. They even had a female leader in Elaine Brown, who took over in 1974. While it would be wildly inaccurate to claim that her gender was never an issue, sexism did little to dampen her success. Under Brownâs watch, the Panthers not only continued their famed resistance against police brutality, but also helped elect the first black mayor of Oakland, CA and built 300 houses for displaced people.
Oh yeah, that was the other thing. The papers love those photos of panthers standing around looking scary with guns, and there was certainly no shortage of âKill the copsâ rhetoric. But in black neighborhoods, they were known for their âsurvival programsâ â providing health clinics and handing out food, encouraging members of the community to volunteer and supply services that the government had no interest in supplying. Among the more famous of their many volunteer-based projects was the âbreakfast in schoolsâ program in the 1960s, which fed about 10,000 kids every day for a decade before the government got around to implementing the same thing nationwide.
#2. Myth: Segregation Was Solely A Southern Issue
The story goes that after slavery was abolished in the South, there was another century of segregation in those states until that practice also begrudgingly ended. But throughout, itâs seen as a problem that exists below the Mason-Dixon Line.
The reality? Well, there is an old Civil Rights Movement truism:Â
âIn the South, the white man doesnât care how close you get, as long as you donât get too high. In the North, he doesnât care how high you get, as long as you donât get too close.â
The North earned the saying by truly jumping on the systematic segregation train in the 1930s. The federal government built a phenomenal amount of public housing all across the North, to the point where the suburbs this created became the most popular housing in the country. But there was one tiny problem with the project. It didnât matter if it was Pittsburgh, New York, Baltimore, Chicago, or San Francisco, the rules were always the same: Black people were forbidden from buying. Instead, they found themselves shoved in increasingly large numbers into the overcrowded inner-city confines which white Americans were evacuating.
Places like Chicago used blockbusting, a process whereby real estate agents would use the threat of incoming African Americans as a tool to get white tenants to leave their city blocks as quickly and cheaply as possible. The local governments introduced redlining, a practice in which a literal red line is drawn around a predominantly black neighborhood, which then gets filed into the ânever offer financial services to these peopleâ folder. Ghettos are always man-made.
Predictably, the housing segregation created segregation in pretty much every aspect of life â schools, playgrounds, grocery stores, clinics, and more all tended to be of lower quality where they lived. Thus, migrants from the South quickly found that the North was little more than a slightly different flavor of terrible.
#1. Myth: The Civil Rights Movement Was A Resounding, Permanent Victory
Yes, the changes were huge and profound. Segregation is now illegal. We have a black dude in the White House. If a celebrity says something racist, their career is over (for a couple of years, anyway, depending on their performance at the box office). Sure, you get a questionable police shooting every once in a while, but if anything, that emphasizes the horrible shit they used to get away with.
But there is a very good argument to be made that while overt racism went out of fashion, the actual elements which made life harder for minorities are all still there â they just once again rebranded themselves to be less overt.
Black people are still much more likely to live in poverty, be the target of police brutality, and have higher mortality rates. African Americans are incarcerated at nearly six times the rate of whites for the same offenses. Itâs a system that has evolved to the point where every example can be hand-waved away as having nothing to do with race while continuing to ruin black lives with brutal efficiency.
For a breakdown of how it works, letâs look at the most damning metric of all: education. The good news is that graduation rates for black students have increased hugely since the groundbreaking Brown v. Board of Education case in 1954, which declared that separate schools for black and white students were unconstitutional. The bad news is that this decision, which was perhaps the biggest victory of the Civil Rights Movement, has been neutered and robbed of its power at every single turn.
Immediately after the ruling, private âsegregation academiesâ started popping up, carefully priced so that they were inexpensive enough for white kids while being juuuuuust a tad too expensive for African Americans (incidentally, many of these schools are still thriving today). Meanwhile, channeling black populations into poor neighborhoods meant channeling them into underfunded schools (only this time everyone can say, âBut no one is forcing them to live there!â).
How much of the school desegregation work has been undone? Well, in the wake of the Civil Rights Movement in the early â70s, only about a quarter of black kids in the South attended all-black schools (where minorities are at least 99% of the student body). Today itâs 53 percent. Nobody had to pass a law forcing it; they merely had to step aside and quietly let the market price them out.Â
So there remains a huge racial discrepancy between studentsâ graduation rates, minorities wind up with lower-paying jobs and thus end up in poorer neighborhoods, ensuring that their kids end up going to those same underfunded schools. And on and on it goes. But if you bring this up, invariably the first response will be, âUgh, are you guys still complaining about this?â
source
#BlackPower #MLK #MalcolmX #Segregation #Justice #CivilRights
#StayWokeÂ
Interesting!
The most disrespected person in America, is the black woman. The most unprotected person in America is the black woman. //Â Malcolm X
Childish Gambino in his âSweatpantsâ music video
Merdad and merbaby
Donât ask me how the book doesnât fall apart

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Had to share this @WeHeartIt http://weheartit.com/entry/227386089
Stages of Love
First meet
First Kiss
Inseparable
Playful
Intimacy
Together Forever
Real Love
Real Intimacy
Real Life. Together.
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