Dr. Gerald Horne_Armed Struggle: Panthers and Communists, Black Nationalists and Liberals in southern California, Through the Sixties and Seventies

Dr. Gerald Horne is an author and historian who currently holds the John J. and Rebecca Moores Chair of History and African American Studies at the University of Houston. He joins us from Houston to discuss his latest book, “Armed Struggle: Panthers and Communists, Black Nationalists and Liberals in southern California, Through the Sixties and Seventies” which is published by International Publishers.

International Publishers Book Description:

Southern California has been a leader nationally in fomenting radicalism. The Communist Party had one of its strongest units there, buoyed by influence in Hollywood. Yet, this region also has been a stalwart of the Black Liberation Movement, as suggested by the importance of the Watts Uprising of 1965 in Los Angeles and the concomitant ascendancy of the Black Panther Party, whose leaders—e.g., Eldridge Cleaver and George Jackson—had roots in Pasadena. Angela Davis, accused in the early 1970s of murder, kidnapping, and conspiracy, was not only a bridge between the CP and BPP, but studied in San Diego before teaching at UCLA.

Black Nationalism flourished in the Southland: “Kwanzaa,,” a popular holiday, was born there. Given the prominence of Black celebrities in the region, the NAACP chapter in the area was a cash cow for the entire organization and shaped policy accordingly, including their disastrous capitulation to the Red Scare.

In this exhaustively researched book, Gerald Horne sketches the apparent paradox of some African Americans turning to armed struggle at a time when it appeared that Jim Crow was retreating. He draws critical distinctions between armed propaganda, armed self-defense—and armed struggle— all of which he places in a global context of anti-war activism, the Cold War, and African liberation.

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Elder and New Afrikan Political Prisoner Abdul Olugbala Shakur Teaches On Black August on GJU Radio and Prisons, gangs, witchhunts and white supremacy article

Elder and New Afrikan Political Prisoners Abdul Olugbala Shakur discuss Black August, Black August Memorial, Black August Resistance and how they relate to community Development, Community Organizing , Nation Building and transformation of the Criminal Mind to a Revolutionary Mind

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Learn more in RBG Communiversity’s eLibrary PG-RNA, NAIM, , BLA, FROLINAN, GJU, Rebuild Collective Folder

A RBG CLASSIC| Public Enemy, Featuring Paris_Rebirth of a Nation Album_mp3s and Good Read on the Project (Released March , 2006)

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Rebirth of a Nation is a collaborative studio album by hip hop group Public Enemy and rapper/producer Paris. Its title is a reference to the 1915 white supremacist film The Birth of a Nation as well as one of the group’s prior albums, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back. Despite the Public Enemy branding on the album, many tracks were written and produced by Paris; the album itself was deemed a “special project” by Chuck D in order to differentiate it from other Public Enemy works. It was released on March 7, 2006 through Guerrilla Funk Recordings with distribution via Caroline Distribution. The album was mixed and mastered at Data Stream Studio in San Francisco, California. The album features guest appearances from Dead Prez, MC Ren, Kam, Sister Souljah, The Conscious Daughters, Immortal Technique and Professor Griff. Rebirth of a Nation peaked at number 180 on the Billboard 200 albums chart in the United States and sold 5,592 units in its first week out. wiki/Rebirth_of_a_Nation

My FAV_RBG| PE-PARIS-, Hard Rhymin-f. Sista Souljah

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48 Tracks Playlist

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The Condition, Elevation, Emigration, And Destiny Of The Colored People of the United States (1852), by Martin Robison Delany and  History of African Philosophy (HAP) Podcast

“We are a nation within a nation, as the Poles in Russia, the Hungarians in Austria, the Welsh, Irish and Scotch in the British dominions.” (From the text below)

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Douglass was known as an assimilationist – a champion of blacks being freed from slavery and then being given full rights and opportunities in America.

Delany, for much of his life, championed emigration of blacks as a way of achieving equality, first to Central or South America, and later to Africa…”

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Learn more in RBG Communiversity Knowledge Media eLibrary| Martin R. Delany Folder