invite you to give them something to take to their white people. oh, man. yeah. i think y all are doing it, honestly. i feel really heartened. the only other thing i can say is, keep embedding yourself in communities that people don t go to, except for the alt-right. on saturday, a group that we work with a lot called tan is having a rally outside a neo-nazi tattoo shop that s in my neighborhood and it needs to be shut down. you re going to check it out? yeah. you re gangster. at least your girl calls you gangster, you put that in your bio. i ll update my wikipedia page, wrap it up there. the redneck revolt provide their own brand of community defense in many ways like protecting counter protesters, taking a page from the black panthers, feeding those in need, teaching gun safety courses like
panthers wanted to hurt white people. at the beginning, you two were already working together. malcolm x went through that evolution, a period of being a black nationalist. and after traveling, not just around the world but in parts of america, he began to realize that this struggle was not just about black people. that this struggle was for the rights of all people. that was an enduring solidarity that i felt with members of the panther better and era. it s a sense of duty, a sense of honor. we re going to look out for each other. and the fact that black americans are such a small population, how can we talk about changing the system in america, revolution in america, when we re such a small part of the pie? in the late 60s, the panthers banded together with
KALW A mural on a West Oakland house celebrates the often overlooked stories of the women of the Black Panther party.
On Center Street and Dr. Huey P. Newton Way, in West Oakland, there’s a bright blue mural on the side of a chocolate brown house. The mural stretches across the entire length of the 2 story victorian. In block letters, at the top, it says, “Women Of The Black Panther Party.” The mural was created by Oakland resident Jil Vest to center the, often neglected, women of the Black Panther Party.
Over the sky blue background of the mural, are these 30 foot tall Black women, all with natural hair. One’s in a military stance holding a gun. Another is holding a protest sign with her fist raised in the air, and another one is cradling a small child. One woman is delivering a bag of groceries filled to the brim, over a backdrop of hundreds of names written in white paint.