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This audio lecture from one of my favorite scholars, the brilliant ancestor Dr. Amos Wilson and this is on the Purpose and Funtion of Education
http://www.sendspace.com/file/lq9plm
Below is an excerpt from his extraordinary book titled "Awakening the Natural Genius of Black Children"
Education and the Future of Afrikan Peoples
I was reading a very interesting little book called Ethnic Enterprises In America, which compares the economic development of the Chinese, Japanese, and Blacks. And it deals with the issue of--Why haven't Blacks developed a large or a sizable business class? Why is it that with over 300 billion dollars (circa 1990) in consumer dollars Black people who, if you looked at their income, represent the 9th or 10th richest nation on earth--why is it that they haven't developed a business class? Why is it that they have Asians running their business communities? Why is it that they have other ethnic groups serving their needs? Why is it that they enrich other people and then beg for jobs? That's an issue we should concern ourselves with. That's an issue at the center of what Black economic education should be about. Not the issue of how do you move up in IBM; a wholly different thing. How do we gain control of those billions of dollars that are available to us and use them for our own interests and for our own advancement?
But, as long as we are in the school trying to learn how to move up in IBM, the Asians are going to move right in and suck every bit of our nickels and dimes out of our pockets and use them to advance their own interests. At the very point Blacks are getting the most degrees in business we're losing business territory--which tells us that there is something wrong with them. Obviously, these degrees are degrees for servants, which only prepare us to serve the interests of others and not our own. But that is true of any degree. It does not matter what it is. But it must be that way. Do you think the dominant Whites are going to prepare us to fully compete with them?
Part 1 - The Sociopolitical Context of Education -Introductory Lecture pages 8-9
This is the video "Fluoride Deception" and the link and description follows. Peace
http://www.sendspace.com/file/7uweru
In this video, Christopher Bryson, an award-winning journalist and former producer at the BBC, discusses the findings of his new book The ... all » Flouride Deception.
EARLY REVIEWS of The Fluoride Deception:
"Bryson marshals an impressive amount of research to demonstrate fluoride's harmfulness, the ties between leading fluoride researchers and the corporations who funded and benefited from their research, and what he says is the duplicity with which fluoridation was sold to the people. The result is a compelling challenge to the reigning dental orthodoxy, which should provoke renewed scientific scrutiny and public debate."
Can someone Reup this joint here???
I dubbed and digitized a VHS tape u may know called "No Vietnamese Ever Called Me ******". Its a documentary u may like. I actually cant find the video on the net for whatever reason. Its a good download. Good perspectives. Good watch for any youth planning to join the military. Good for the archives none the less.
"No Vietnamese Ever Called Me ******" - 2hrs
part 1- http://www.megaupload.com/?d=I5R47DZN
part 2- http://www.megaupload.com/?d=3T059LEA
Examines the relationship between racism here in the U.S. and abroad. Filmed at the Harlem Fall Mobilization March in 1967, this documentary lets people in the streets, as well as black Vietnam vets, speak out about social protest, life in New York's black ghetto, and the connection between racism and war.
Some other related info:
"I Ain't Got No Quarrel With The VietCong...
No VietCong Ever Called Me ******" — Muhammad Ali, 1966
On August 23, 1966, Muhammad Ali embarked on the biggest "fight" of his life when he applied with the Selective Service for conscientious objector status on religious grounds (as a minister with the Nation of Islam). In what became an extensive legal, political, professional, and personal battle, Ali was convicted of draft evasion, stripped of his boxing title, and became a lightning rod — and a voice — for opinions on the Vietnam War. Muhammad Ali's willingness to speak out against racism in the United States, and the affect it had on domestic and foreign policy, earned him many supporters and detractors. In 1971, nearly five years after it began, Ali's legal battle finally culminated with a unanimous decision (8-0 with Thurgood Marshall abstaining) by the United States Supreme Court overturning his draft conviction. The following resources document his struggle, his views, and his influence.
reup please. thanksNext up is a commentary by Gary Null on the abuse of the medical industry, specifically Psychiatry, against African Americans. I feel how the system of Racism and white supremacy works is whites have an agenda or end in mind and they use the means they have in their system (Health, Labor, Law, Politics, Religion, War, Medicince, Science, Sex, etc.) to justify myths, stereotypes, and lies so they can maintain their dominance over non white people. One example of this is how it may seem their "Science" is always coming up with ways to say blacks are genetically inferior, but anyway here is the audio, sorry about my own rant, I guess I got carried away, lol.
Peace
The Abuse of African Americans by Psychiatry
http://www.sendspace.com/file/s9xs06
GOOD STUFF THANK YOU 4 THIS !!!!!!!!!!!Powernomics Video 2hrs.
700MB
http://files.filefront.com/Powernomics+A+Vision+Beyomavi/;9011044;/fileinfo.html
Powernomics Video 2hrs.
700MB
http://files.filefront.com/Powernomics+A+Vision+Beyomavi/;9011044;/fileinfo.html
Now!
Thanks in advance!
This is the video "Fluoride Deception" and the link and description follows. Peace
http://www.sendspace.com/file/7uweru
In this video, Christopher Bryson, an award-winning journalist and former producer at the BBC, discusses the findings of his new book The ... all » Flouride Deception.
EARLY REVIEWS of The Fluoride Deception:
"Bryson marshals an impressive amount of research to demonstrate fluoride's harmfulness, the ties between leading fluoride researchers and the corporations who funded and benefited from their research, and what he says is the duplicity with which fluoridation was sold to the people. The result is a compelling challenge to the reigning dental orthodoxy, which should provoke renewed scientific scrutiny and public debate."
I want an independent video that I dont have to log onto the internet to watch. So googel Video is cool, But i still need the shit.
Downloading a Video on this from a torrent. Still waitin on the audio RE-UP.
I dubbed and digitized a VHS tape u may know called "No Vietnamese Ever Called Me ******". Its a documentary u may like. I actually cant find the video on the net for whatever reason. Its a good download. Good perspectives. Good watch for any youth planning to join the military. Good for the archives none the less.
"No Vietnamese Ever Called Me ******" - 2hrs
part 1- http://www.megaupload.com/?d=I5R47DZN
part 2- http://www.megaupload.com/?d=3T059LEA
Examines the relationship between racism here in the U.S. and abroad. Filmed at the Harlem Fall Mobilization March in 1967, this documentary lets people in the streets, as well as black Vietnam vets, speak out about social protest, life in New York's black ghetto, and the connection between racism and war.
Some other related info:
"I Ain't Got No Quarrel With The VietCong...
No VietCong Ever Called Me ******" — Muhammad Ali, 1966
On August 23, 1966, Muhammad Ali embarked on the biggest "fight" of his life when he applied with the Selective Service for conscientious objector status on religious grounds (as a minister with the Nation of Islam). In what became an extensive legal, political, professional, and personal battle, Ali was convicted of draft evasion, stripped of his boxing title, and became a lightning rod — and a voice — for opinions on the Vietnam War. Muhammad Ali's willingness to speak out against racism in the United States, and the affect it had on domestic and foreign policy, earned him many supporters and detractors. In 1971, nearly five years after it began, Ali's legal battle finally culminated with a unanimous decision (8-0 with Thurgood Marshall abstaining) by the United States Supreme Court overturning his draft conviction. The following resources document his struggle, his views, and his influence.
Part 2 is unavailable...Re-up please. Thanks in advance.
I want an independent video that I dont have to log onto the internet to watch. So googel Video is cool, But i still need the shit.
Downloading a Video on this from a torrent. Still waitin on the audio RE-UP.
I dubbed and digitized a VHS tape u may know called "No Vietnamese Ever Called Me ******". Its a documentary u may like. I actually cant find the video on the net for whatever reason. Its a good download. Good perspectives. Good watch for any youth planning to join the military. Good for the archives none the less.
"No Vietnamese Ever Called Me ******" - 2hrs
part 1- http://www.megaupload.com/?d=I5R47DZN
part 2- http://www.megaupload.com/?d=3T059LEA
Examines the relationship between racism here in the U.S. and abroad. Filmed at the Harlem Fall Mobilization March in 1967, this documentary lets people in the streets, as well as black Vietnam vets, speak out about social protest, life in New York's black ghetto, and the connection between racism and war.
Some other related info:
"I Ain't Got No Quarrel With The VietCong...
No VietCong Ever Called Me ******" — Muhammad Ali, 1966
On August 23, 1966, Muhammad Ali embarked on the biggest "fight" of his life when he applied with the Selective Service for conscientious objector status on religious grounds (as a minister with the Nation of Islam). In what became an extensive legal, political, professional, and personal battle, Ali was convicted of draft evasion, stripped of his boxing title, and became a lightning rod — and a voice — for opinions on the Vietnam War. Muhammad Ali's willingness to speak out against racism in the United States, and the affect it had on domestic and foreign policy, earned him many supporters and detractors. In 1971, nearly five years after it began, Ali's legal battle finally culminated with a unanimous decision (8-0 with Thurgood Marshall abstaining) by the United States Supreme Court overturning his draft conviction. The following resources document his struggle, his views, and his influence.
JOHN HORSE !!!! must read !!!http://johnhorse.com/black-seminoles/black-seminole-slave-rebellion.htm
The slave rebellion the country tried to forget
* For quick facts, quotations, and documentation of the Black Seminole slave rebellion, see the information toolkit and bullet-point summary.
Imagine that the largest slave rebellion in U.S. history had gone unrecognized for more than a century and a half, even by the country's leading scholars. Imagine further that the rebellion was not some obscure event in a rural backwater, but a series of mass escapes that took place in conjunction with the largest Indian war in U.S. history and that resulted in a massive, well-documented destruction of personal property. How could scholars forget such an event? And what would such an oversight say about the country? A country that had robbed generations of the story of its most successful black freedom fighters. A country that had taught its children a lie, that over the first American century, only white men fought for freedom and won.
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This is a lecture from Dr. Walter Williams, the author of the two very powerful books, "The Historical Origins of Christianity" and "The Historical Origins of Islam". He is at the Afrikan Village which is Dr. Ray Hagins community and anyone of us who have heard Dr. Hagins we know he is on point with his talks on religion and spirituality. You should enjoy this lecture because Dr. Williams comes with information a lot of Christians and Muslims do not like but it's documented and they can not dispute it. Like when he talks about the "bible events" are literary and not historical aka the bible is not a history book it's myth.
But I'm not going to run down his lecture I'll let his words speak for themselves.
http://www.sendspace.com/file/96gtxe
Peace
$1 per DVD!!!!!!!!!!!!! You find a lot of good DVDs and other conspiratorial information at this site.
http://www.v911t.org/21_DVDs_Truth.php
Nice!!! Good look bruh. And if u could reup that joint above ^^^^ would be great.
thank you for these posts nu_guy.
i was wondering why the author of this synopsis would say the "ancient arabic" term when there was no ancient arabic documents from the land of arabia to talk about ancient egypt.
'kmt' is not an ancient arabic word, nor was it referred to as 'kmt' by ancient foreigners of the land mass called arabia today.
this would cause people to believe that somehow arabs had history in ancient egypt before the onset of islam, which would be inaccurate.
'khemet' is also a modern day convention done by egyptologists as well. so thats a bit more misleading.
what does everyone else think?
Kmt is the hieroglyphics translation of what the ancients called themselves. It's meaning went way beyond just the name of territory though. And, since hieroglyphics have never really been de-coded (there are over 400 images and only 26 are used to represent western letters) we really don't know what the ancients called themselves. They saw themselves as part of the universe around them, not apart from it as europeans do.
I'll tell you one thing: it's hard to find anything from the middle kingdom in Kmt. And forget the old kingdom, damn near impossible. It's all arabized over there. I'm going back next year, and I'll be trying to find some truths.
Ashe
I plan to make my next voyage to the motherland to KMT or Egypt next year myself also.