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Opening Doors To Being Free

during obama's lil speech at grant park in chi-town he made a reference to "our founding father" and the ideals that they had envisioned for amerikkka. how dare that nigga say "our founding father," when white folk founding fathers had our forefathers and foremothers in physical bondage, out in the field from can see in the morning to can't see at night. is that nigga sick or what? you will never catch the white jew saying anything nice about the legacy of nazism. it goes to show how sick the black man's mind is. it is a testament of the white man's control and absolute ownership of the mentality that the black man exerts. and that is the very reason why the black collective will continue to be controlled by the psycho structure of white supremacy.

you'd have to be completely out of your damn mind to reflect back on the founding fathers and then turn around and make them your founding fathers as afrikan people who have been basically beaten in all areas of our existence, short of our natural spiritual nature, which is first and foremost godly. and if that's not the underlying basis for such a jackass of a comment, then there is another-an agent of the enemy state, feigning to be the change that the black collective has been in dire straights for, the change that white folk have even fell victim to. but, i couldn't give a damn about what travails that the white collective all of a sudden is going through.

there must come a time when the black collective must be taught that there is a snakish element within our ranks that is just as much as the enemy as the white ruling class. and this scheisty entity is none other than the so-called black leaders. their failure to tell us what time it really is, on purpose for a purpose, is the sole reason why the black collective has been so manipulated and grossly deceived that it doesn't take much for the white ruling class to conjure up a fine black image, a white man in black face, and project it onto the black collective and with not one iota of resistance on our part.

obama is the latest political black pied piper that the black collective has been drugged with, in order to further control them, especially the black youth, because, given the right formula, which is revolutionary philosophy, it would be virtually unstopable in overthrowing a system that has threatened our existence in the worse ways that this planet has felt. never has there been a time where afrikan people have been attacked in the various forms of warfare-such as biological warfare, chemical warfare, cultural warfare and religious warfare-than before our defeat at the hands of modern white supremacy.

and after seeing all the black folk crying their tears of joy, over a long time coming, ever waiting so patiently, wishing, hoping and praying to God, that a black man, if not but for a lil moment or for just a flash, can finally become president of a regime that has been nothing but anti-afrikan since its inception, it has dawned on me that we're becoming more hopeless by the day, in the face of shriving for black sovereignty, recognizing ourselves as a continued displaced nation, as opposed to a still second class citizenship, and an illusory we-are-amerikkkans-too.

it is beyond saying that afrikans-n-amerikkka are so naive and gullible, that they haven't an inkling of an idea, as to how things really work in the sadistic world of politics. they have been so sold on the public image, the outer rim of inner politicing, that it seems that there is hardly any progress in the reshaping of the psycho-pompus minds of the black collective. again, we have no one to blame but the bunch of niggas, who were supposed to have been leading us in the field of politics (after they gained our heartfelt trust, because they were supposed to be black intellects), as it applies to what's best for the black collective. instead, what politicing they've projected onto us has only benefitted them, and created a one percent negro millionaire clique and black middle class circle, both of them having decided and concluded long ago, on the hinge of the post-civil rights movement, that it is perfectly alright to have faith in the government of the united snakes and promote amerikkkan fascist capitalism.

it is certainly mind blowing, overly amazing, to see the almost total collapse of the black collective mind, as it sinks deeper into the abyss of mental darkness, rooted in an abnormal social-psychology, that persuades the black collective to manifest a type of frame of mind, which pretends, in the highest form of denial, that the election of obama is going to be their break, or at least a lil loosening of the noose, from five hundred years of white terrorism.

in fact, there some brothas and sistars, as painful as it is to refer to them as such, who are aware of the same disgusting things, but have went along with the obama craze anyway, just because they can say finally, at last, in order to have a chance to be a part of history, a history that goes no further than feel good history, predicated on an emotional trip, just as the black collective has been sold on the trials and tribulations of jesus, who is said to have died for us. and the beat goes on...

uhuru!

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"during obama's lil speech at grant park in chi-town he made a reference to "our founding father" and the ideals that they had envisioned for amerikkka."

i caught that too... emailed folks about it... i caught that and a bunch of other stuff... offered his speech for critique and analysis and blind, poppy field dazed Black folks accused me of being analytical... go figure... yes i am nothing if not analytical... sigh... watching the poppy dazed zombies move about is heart breaking... sigh... of course i am being far more kind than my headache from the stress of our peoples lack of vision, insight, and inability to analyze and constructively critique would imply...

sigh
thanx for posting this nat...
i expect no less from u
qmk

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Nearly 100% of the African voters supported Obama. Do you really think that you are somehow smarter than nearly 100% of the people? What gives you the "insight", and "analytical"? What gives you the right to call the African people "zombies"? You may have a "headache" but he need a behind ache. Your parents should have taught you not to be so arrogant and blind.

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uhuru,

"Do you really think that you are somehow smarter than nearly 100% of the people?"

yeah! i am, because i don't follow blindly. and nearly one hundred percent of afrikans-n-amerikkka most likely are unable to tell me what elements like the bilderberg is and how its policies affect presidential elections. and by the way, negro leaders like jesse jackass are smarter too, because they're smart enough to not let our people know the real deal, because they in on the deal.

"What gives you the "insight", and "analytical"? "

observation breeds participation. go figure!

"What gives you the right to call the African people "zombies"?"

what gives me the right is being able to think critically. and if you really knew anything, you'd know that afrikan people in amerikkka are the products of white terrorism. but, maybe you have the anal glaucoma.

uhuru!

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I also know that Africans are victims of "black nationalist" terrorism.

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here is sista Marimba Ani's response:
Breaking the Silence: Fulfilling The Promise
by Marimba Ani

Amura Onaa tells us that when our Ancestors were being torn apart from each other, we looked into each other’s eyes and made a solemn promise. We promised to reconnect with each other so that this tearing apart would never happen again. It is the Afrikan belief that we are our Ancestors reborn, and through this spiritual rebirth, we gain eternal life. The promise could only be fulfilled by future generations returning as Afrikans who had made this sacred promise to each other. What our Ancestors suffered over centuries, could only have been survived because they had hope. But what could possibly have given them cause for hope? If they had not survived and bore children who bore children who bore children, we would not be here. It is the Afrikan belief that we choose to be born when we are in the spirit world, and that we make a contract to fulfill a purpose in this life. All of this can only mean that we have chosen to be born Afrikan and that we are the hope of our Ancestors. Our purpose on this earth is to avenge our Ancestors and to achieve the victory: Afrikan sovereignty through a Pan-Afrikan world order based on the principles of MAAT. It is our choice to fulfill The Promise to our Ancestors by achieving the victory denied them.

It is now Tuesday, November 4, 2008. Is this the final act of assimilation, accommodation, and integration? Is this how we are fulfilling our promise to the Ancestors? Has America made restitution for what was done to them, still being done to us? Is the Maafa over or has it merely morphed into another, more insidious form of genocide? Are we now experiencing a life-threatening condition of cultural AIDS in which our immune system has turned on itself? Has the Yurugu virus mutated so that it looks like us? Are we participating in our own self-destruction?

We are witnessing a time of the most blatant acts of genocide such as “Katrina” (Maafa - 2005), in which thousands of our people were slaughtered, left to die, placed in disease-producing holding pens, forcibly relocated, separated from their families and support-systems, and their (our) children “lost”, all this for the purpose of corporate profit and for the illegal misappropriation of land.

In our time, Afrikan mothers are being incarcerated in increasing numbers, so that their presence in the u.s. prison system almost equals that of Afrikan men and fathers, who have, for more than a century, been sacrificed to the prison-industrial complex.
We are living in the time of Blackwater, mercenaries used by government and corporations. We are living in the time of American support of European Hegemony taken to the most extreme levels ever in history. We watch as America’s bank, the so-called “world bank,” sucks the life out of Afrika, Jamaica and other Black nations. We are living in the time of the IMF, the Federal Reserve, the Trilateral Commission, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Bilderbergers and more.

The Patriot Act is an updated McCarran Act of 1950. We are living in a time that can be understood as part of “the process of Fascism”. Fascism creates a demon, sells this demonization to the public, then uses it to control (intimidate, detain, torture, kill) anyone who challenges the state’s abuse of human rights. In the l950’s the demons were the “subversives,” and the “communists” ´throughout the “cold war,” in 1968, following the assassination of Dr. King, the demons were those suspected of being “guerrillas”, and by 2001 the term “terrorists” had been accepted as describing the new “demons.” Should we allow the original, the real terrorists to define “terrorism” ?

This brief statement is only meant to point to the reality of the times in which we live, the political legacy that we have inherited as “americans,” and what we need to be aware of at this “historic” moment. In the 1960’s, our people were regarded by the rest of the world as leaders in the struggle for human rights as we fought to expose and confront the genocidal policies perpetrated by the american government towards Afrikan people in the u.s.

We stopped organizing. We stopped confronting “the system.” We became part of “the system.” We sent our sons to fight for u.s. monetary gain. We did not see value in self-determination, self-definition, and self-reliance for our people. Those who were politically conscious read and talked about ancient history. We no longer concerned ourselves with contemporary events, systems, or political realities. Instead of expanding our movement to become a world movement, a truly Pan-Afrikan movement, we were content to become “individuals” in the “greatest” (most materially powerful) country in the world.

So now we are “making history” by being swept up in someone else’s definition of what history is. We are “making history,” by capitulating to integration, accommodation, and assimilation. We have reached the mountain top, for we have been able to vote for a “first to.” The struggle is over. We have won. We can proudly say that one of our people represents the most repressive, destructive, inhumane, anti-Afrikan nation ever to have existed! We are proud to be part of a multinational corporate structure run by sociopathic adolescents who think nothing of stealing from their own people. (Imagine what they will do to us.)

We say that we vote because our Ancestors died to get the vote. Yes, if you decide to vote, that is your “right.” Do not, however, blame it on “the Ancestors.” That’s like saying Black people died to go to school with white people, so I will make sure that my children go to white schools. I have a personal experience of that Movement. Registering to vote in Mississippi was a means of confronting a system of oppression head on. Today we vote to avoid confrontation with a system that is Fascist. In Mississippi, attempting to register, meant putting your life on the line, if you were Black. This effort became part of a strategy to expose the system of oppression that existed in this country, which continues to exist even though we, Black people, can now “vote” (even in Mississippi). No, that is not what our Ancestors died for. They died to fulfill The Promise. And that is the question that we should raise. “What are we doing to fulfill The Promise?”

Is this occasion “historic” because it represents the abandonment of our sacred obligation to the Ancestors? Will we go down in “his” story as having finally capitulated and become satisfied with the evil that is represented in contemporary globalization, privatization and international capitalism? Have we aborted our movement for freedom, liberation and sovereignty? Or have we merely redefined that objective in “american” individualistic, “what’s in it for me” terms? Have we now “won”? Or have we simply taken the easier road, finding it more comfortable to be colonized than to fight for liberation? Are we excited about the possibility of being closer to power than we have ever been before?, even though that power rests on the exploitation, even murder, of Afrikans and other non-Europeans throughout the world? Have we even dared to ask ourselves “what kind of person would want to be president of the United States of America?”

What is the significance of this moment, Tuesday, November 4, 2008, in “our” story?

Let us make this a time for reassessment of our lives, each of us. Let us reconnect with each other in ways that will help our people to become self-sustaining. Let us read and study and become aware of what this country stands for in the world. Let us teach and learn about the monetary system.

Organize, Organize, Organize!
Food cooperatives,
Investment groups
Independent Afrikan schools
Alternative sustainable energy
Communal and collective social entities
Susus (saving together)
Vehicles for harnessing and sharing our resources
Ways of educating ourselves for optimal healthy living
Methods for alternative social organization
The study of ways in which our Ancestors organized communities, so that we can get ideas for the future (doing Sankofa)
Black political conventions
An independent Afrikan/Black vehicle for political action and race (Kanda) decision-making
A Back-to-Afrika process.

We must read the following:
Blueprint for Black Power (Amos Wilson) (especially chapter 31)
The Choice (Sam Yette)
There is A River (Vincent Harding)
The condition, Elevation, Emigration and Destiny of the Colored People of the United States of America (Martin Delany)
The Miseducation of the Negro (Carter G. Woodson)
The Destruction of Black Civilization (Chancellor Williams)
Two Thousand Seasons (Ayi Kwei Armah)
Wretched of the Earth (Franz Fanon)

By Europeans:
The Shock Doctrine (Naomi Klein)

And watch:
Goodbye Uncle Tom
Zeitgeist
Zeitgeist Addendum
End Games
Loose Change
The Corporation
(pass this on and add suggestions)

Go to:
www.libradio.com
www.blackagendareport.com
www.houseofknowledge.com

Let this be a beginning again for us. Let us have the courage of Martin Delany and others, who organized the Black Convention Movement, and sought Afrikan sovereignty in the 1850’s. Let us recapture the spirit of the 60’s, with its “togetherness” of our people, only now with greater clarity about what we want. Let us revive the independent political party movement of the early 70’s (NBIP and CAP), when our people came together in activism in Gary, Indiana and elsewhere. Let us organize with our people, out of love for our people. Let us build a movement without hierarchy among the most economically depressed of our people; a movement that will be responsive to the immediate survival needs of our people, while raising the political consciousness and knowledge-base of us all. Let us study together and build together and fight together and teach each other. Let us build a revolutionary Pan-Afrikanist movement of all of our people, so that we can hold any and all elected officials accountable for their decisions and actions. Let us be in the vanguard of the movement for radical upheaval of the american reality. Let us organize a support system for the Katrina resistors. Let us not forget them. Let us organize sustainable struggle and self-sustaining institutions that can protect our people from the intentional “disasters” of monopoly capitalism, and save them in the natural disasters caused by the greed and selfishness of the rulers.
Let this be the moment in which we step back onto the stage of history, shouting ourstory to the world. “We are not capitulating.” “We are not allowing ourselves to be part of a Fascist nation.” We are not giving up our people, our movement, or our Ancestors for “one america.” Let us be unrelenting in our confrontation with the anti-Afrikan, anti-human mechanisms of oppression.
Never forget that our power is in our connectedness. If they did not succeed in disconnecting us through the middle passage, through enslavement and lynching and incarceration, let them not succeed now through the duplicity of false “democracy.”

Let us not believe the hype. This is not our victory. This “historic occasion” is a victory for america, it is a victory for the status quo, for all of the things that we should be fighting against. Be in Washington DC in January to make demands on the new administration. If you voted for it, make it work for you!

Let us make this a time for real change, a time for fulfilling The Promise. Tugane pamoja tutafune nia yetu. “Let us come together and define our cause.” Let the circle be unbroken.

Marimba Ani,
A Race Woman, A Cultural Warrior.


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hetep,

i've come to realize that i'm one the brothas who have almost ran the gamut when it comes to black consciousness, reading, going to lectures and what not. i made sure that when i began to understand this thing called amerikkka twenty years ago, i would learn about the origin of religious psychology, especially christ insanity. and since then, it's been an avalanche, as i've come to know many-a-things and have transformed into something else, a no holds barred black nationalist revolutionary, who understands the price of freedom fighting is death, one who understands that bloodshed is eminent, because that's how our enemy came to get us in the present situation that we are in today.

the obama thing reminds me of two other socico-psychological movements that have come along over the course of modern history-hitler in germany and jim jones in guyana. the power of the gift of speech and its well-rehearsed rhetoric is an absolutely amazing phenomenon. and as i watched all the brothas and sistars crying tears of joy, i couldn't help but feel more rage at the system of things, which includes niggas who have struck a deal with the devil.

in my neck of the woods, i'm drawing the line. on one side it's rbg and on the other it's whatever else. my rantings don't have room for let's hope, keep the dream alive, singing negro spirituals, optimism and faith in amerikkka. my rantings will, at times, discriminate against certain black people, because the streets is where my heart lies. if there ain't no work being put in on the streets, then we're waisting our time. i appreciate your knowledge, wisdom and understanding.

p.e.a.c.e. progress everytime afrikans cultivate enlightenment

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what is the last thing Marimba says in her audio clip that i shared?

"We are at war!" perod...

sigh...

keep fihting! unapolgetically, fearlessly, committedly, until We have won the War!

free the land,
qmk

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hetep,

one thing i make sure that i tell the brothas and sistars on the streets is that negroes like jesse jackson, al sharpton, john conyers, charley strangle aka charles rangel, cornel west, eric michael dyson, tavis smiley and michael baisden are not in the business of freeing afrikan people. they are in the business of preventing us from getting to know the minds of assata shakur, sundiata acoli, jalil muntaquin, kwasi balagoon and the rest of the bla. they are safe negroes, as opposed to unsafe afrikans, which is why whenever something racial always goes down, they are the ones who the white man turns to to articulate what he wants afrikan people to internalize, anything short of rebellion.

and because of that we have to deal with the fact that we haven't prepared ourselves mentally for what we are gonna have to do physically if we really wanna be free. so i tell the brothas and sistars whenever they get the chance to ask them no good niggas why they haven't encouraged us to think revolutionary to do so. they should ask them no good niggas what is the boule, skull & bones, illuminati. we have to put their asses on the spot so the rest of us can see the fraud in them. and i may get that chance when they bring their asses to the n o for that black whatever they call it. and i'm bringing some goons with me.

p.e.a.c.e.

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Nat,

remember that before Barak there were 7 Black presidents and that's not counting the ones that were Muur, Washitaw, Indigenous, Chowktaw, Cherokee, Iroquois and other members of the Family of Nations... Will We ignore them the way amerikkkan his-story has? Will We pretend that Barak is something he's not?

97% of so called African Americans are Indigenous to this Country. Only 3% of Africans were brought to the US of A. The rest went to the Islands but mostly South America. That there was Slavery here in America is true but the Slaves came from right here in the USA.

Dr. Radine Amen-Ra has very good information on Indigenous peoples of the Americas. 500 nations and 40 million people were already here when Christopher Colon/Columbus so called discovered America calling the people here Indians. Indian use to mean Black, and Indie = still means Black which is the root of Indian.

qmk... done for now...

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A "Black" Man, A Moor, John Hanson
Was the First President of the United States! 1781-1782 A.D.

George Washington
was really the 8th President of the United States!


George Washington was not the first President of the United States. In fact, the first President of the United States was one John Hanson. Don't go checking the encyclopedia for this guy's name - he is one of those great men that are lost to history. If you're extremely lucky, you may actually find a brief mention of his name.

The new country was actually formed on March 1, 1781 with the adoption of The Articles of Confederation.
This document was actually proposed on June 11, 1776, but not agreed upon by Congress until November 15, 1777. Maryland refused to sign this document until Virginia and New York ceded their western lands (Maryland was afraid that these states would gain too much power in the new government from such large amounts of land).

Once the signing took place in 1781, a President was needed to run the country. John Hanson was chosen unanimously by Congress (which included George Washington). In fact, all the other potential candidates refused to run against him, as he was a major player in the revolution and an extremely influential member of Congress.

As the first President, Hanson had quite the shoes to fill. No one had ever been President and the role was poorly defined. His actions in office would set precedent for all future Presidents.

He took office just as the Revolutionary War ended. Almost immediately, the troops demanded to be paid. As would be expected after any long war, there were no funds to meet the salaries. As a result, the soldiers threatened to overthrow the new government and put Washington on the throne as a monarch.

All the members of Congress ran for their lives, leaving Hanson as the only guy left running the government. He somehow managed to calm the troops down and hold the country together. If he had failed, the government would have fallen almost immediately and everyone would have been bowing to King Washington. In fact, Hanson sent 800 pounds of sterling siliver by his brother Samuel Hanson to George Wasington to provide the troops with shoes.

Hanson, as President, ordered all foreign troops off American soil, as well as the removal of all foreign flags. This was quite the feat, considering the fact that so many European countries had a stake in the United States since the days following Columbus.

Hanson established the Great Seal of the United States, which all Presidents have since been required to use on all official documents.

President Hanson also established the first Treasury Department, the first Secretary of War, and the first Foreign Affairs Department.

Lastly, he declared that the fourth Thursday of every November was to be Thanksgiving Day, which is still true today.

The Articles of Confederation only allowed a President to serve a one year term during any three year period, so Hanson actually accomplished quite a bit in such little time.

Six other presidents were elected after him - Elias Boudinot (1783), Thomas Mifflin (1784), Richard Henry Lee (1785), Nathan Gorman (1786), Arthur St. Clair (1787), and Cyrus Griffin (1788) - all prior to Washington taking office.

So what happened?

Why don't we ever hear about the first seven Presidents of the United States?

It's quite simple - The Articles of Confederation didn't work well. The individual states had too much power and nothing could be agreed upon.

A new doctrine needed to be written - something we know as the Constitution.

And that leads us to the end of our story.

George Washington was definitely not the first President of the United States. He was the first President of the United States under the Constitution we follow today.

And the first seven Presidents are forgotten in history.

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"one thing i make sure that i tell the brothas and sistars on the streets is that negroes like jesse jackson, al sharpton, john conyers, charley strangle aka charles rangel, cornel west, eric michael dyson, tavis smiley and michael baisden are not in the business of freeing afrikan people."


Do not forget to mention Aunt Condoleezza Rice and Uncle Julius Nyerere.

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"one thing i make sure that i tell the brothas and sistars on the streets is that negroes like jesse jackson, al sharpton, john conyers, charley strangle aka charles rangel, cornel west, eric michael dyson, tavis smiley and michael baisden are not in the business of freeing afrikan people."


Do not forget to mention Aunt Condoleezza Rice and Uncle Julius Nyerere.

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