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YouTube video: https://youtu.be/Kiw6Q9-lfXc. May is Asian/Pacific Heritage Month. I wanted to honor that with a reminder to Black Americans that white racial oppression and genocide against Black American slave descendants are diverse. The video is... moreYouTube video: https://youtu.be/Kiw6Q9-lfXc. May is Asian/Pacific Heritage Month. I wanted to honor that with a reminder to Black Americans that white racial oppression and genocide against Black American slave descendants are diverse. The video is surveillance footage of how Korean, Soon Ja Du, shot Latasha Harlins in the back of her head as sh was walking away from Soon Ja Du in 1991. The White Korean woman was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter, not first degree murder, but Judge Joyce Karlin rejected the jury's sentencing recommendations of 16 years in prison for Soon Ja Du by rewarding a white Korean with freedom, a $500 fine, five years of probation, and 400 hours of community service for killing an unarmed Black American child. Racist Judge Joyce Karlin applied judicial nullification to nullify laws guaranteeing Latasha Harlins constitutional right to life. Black Americans, your human rights are nullified everyday by the people you elect. Please vote your conscience by withholding your votes from the Democratic Party, write in god or your favorite civil rights leader instead, or put yourselves on the ballot as non-partisan candidates, and swing your votes to that non-partisan Black American. White supremacy over Black American slave descendants is diverse. Race is a social construct. It can change with the times and in relation to other groups. If a person can be Black with white and yellow skin and/or fine textured hair, then whites can be brown and black skinned with kinky hair. Wealthy Blacks are an example of honorary whites. They have bought their way out of blackness with money, a college degree, geographic separation from the Black community, and/or a white wife, etc. In relation to Black Americans, Asians, Hispanics, and Middle Easterners are racially white and many of them hold exactly the same racist views about Black Americans as Europeans, perceiving Black Americans to be an inferior, lazy, unintelligent slave caste, born to follow their orders without question or resistance. The category white can expand to include Asians, Hispanics, etc. Please advance the Black American cause by not referring to white ethnics as "minorities" or "people of color." These terms imply white ethnics or "dark whites" suffered the same oppression as Black American slave when they did not and do not today. This is an election year. Please vote your conscience on juries and at the ballot. Black American slaves win nothing in exchange for their votes when they help racist white and black Democrats win elections. You have been throwing away your votes for generations. Swing your vote to a non-partisan candidate and drive the Democrats out of every majority Black American district for your city, county, state legislature, and House of Representatives. #asianpacificheritagemonth, #asians, #racism, #oppression, #genocide, #murder, #manslaughter, #latashaharlins, #soonjadu, #joycekarlin, #slaves, #slavery, #injustice, #nullification, #voteyourconscience. less
00:26
Warning: this video shows graphic content.
This is security camera footage from Empire Liquor in South L.A. on March 16, 1991. Teenager Latasha Harlins and store owner Soon Ja Du got into an altercation. When Harlins tries to walk away, Du shoots her in ...
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Link to article: http://quasar.as.utexas.edu/BillInfo/FIJAPamphlet.html. "TRUE or FALSE? Factual Information about Jury Service" by the Fully Informed Jury Association. The conviction of Bill Cosby has got me thinking about how powerful, wealthy people... moreLink to article: http://quasar.as.utexas.edu/BillInfo/FIJAPamphlet.html. "TRUE or FALSE? Factual Information about Jury Service" by the Fully Informed Jury Association. The conviction of Bill Cosby has got me thinking about how powerful, wealthy people oppress, exploit, and victimize impoverished Black American slave descendants and evade convictions for their racially motivated civil rights, human rights, and criminal violations for years. It is because of judicial nullification and jury nullification allows them to evade responsibility and accountability for their violations against impoverished Black American slave descendants. Racist white, immigrant, and black jurors nullify the civil and human rights of Black Americans on a regular basis. They vote against facts, logic, and the law to ensure impoverished Black American slave descendants are sent to prison not for their crimes but for being born black and refusing to assimilate as the racist African-American bourgeoisie has done. They ensure Black American victims never receive justice by nullifying every law that says Black Americans are entitled to equality and freedom. Since none of the other races and etnicities are following the rule of law, facts, or logic in jury trails, there is no reason why impoverished Black American slaves should follow the rules either. Those other races are nullifying your civil and human rights for freedom and equality, by "voting their conscience." Therefore laws that says we are free are not enforced. Laws that says it is illegal to terminate someone's employment for complaining about workplace race discrimination are never enforced and rarely make it to trial. Black American slave descendants need to put themselves on juries and "vote their conscience" to guarantee justice for victims of hate crimes and racial discrimination. I am not in any way telling Black American jurors to vote unfairly. I would never allow a Black American defendant to walk free form an alleged crime just because the person is Black American. However, I may consider that the Black American defendant had no other options but to commit a crime to attain justice denied by government agencies, politicians, and government employees, to survive poverty, to survive injustice, to survive racial oppression, to survive employment discrimination, to survive crimes committed by powerful, wealthy, racist people, to defend one's life and family's lives, or save another person's life and thus, deserves a "not guilty" verdict. Was that person under psychological duress or was intimidated or threatened by powerful, wealthy, racist people? That may cause me to let an alleged criminal walk free with a "not guilty" vote. Not because the person is Black American, but to ensure justice was served. Used ethically, jury nullification and "voting one's conscience" can guarantee justice and equality. But as we observe the justice system's treatment of Black American defendants and victims, we can see that the other races as well as racist blacks are using nullification and "voting one's conscience" to maintain de facto racial slavery for impoverished Black American slave descendants and genocidal public policies against Black American slave descendants. I am saying the other races are abusing judicial and jury nullification to maintain de fact racial slavery for Black Americans and continued genocide against Black Americans, so we are forced to fight back in the same way that they do in order to guarantee justice for both Black American victims and defendants. If you have reason to believe that the victim was intimidated by the more powerful and wealthy defendants from reporting crimes and pursuing civil trials, you must "vote your conscience" and help that Black American victim attain justice against his/her oppressors. If you have reason to believe that evidence was tampered with, intentionally destroyed, intentionally erased, or even stolen to keep the victim from going to trial, then you must "vote your conscience" to make sure that Black American victims of racially motivated criminal, civil, and human violations attains justice against his/her oppressors. Please use your social media connections to share this link to the article written by the Fully Informed Jury Association to all of your Black American friends and family members. All of your Black American friends and family should know that we can seek justice on juries through nullification and "voting our conscience." #blacks, #blackamerians, #juries, #judges, #nullification, #voteyourconscience, #fija, #fullyinformedjurors, #injustice, #justice, #socialjustice, #freedom, #equality, #slavery, #slaves, #defactoracialslavery. less
Fully Informed Jury Association Pamphlet
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YouTube video: https://youtu.be/T-MRO0FjsFA. The song is "Work Song Medley" by Voices Incorporated from the album, Roots: An Anthology of Negro Music in America. I found a second album on Freegal and YouTube with Black American slaves' folk music, but it... moreYouTube video: https://youtu.be/T-MRO0FjsFA. The song is "Work Song Medley" by Voices Incorporated from the album, Roots: An Anthology of Negro Music in America. I found a second album on Freegal and YouTube with Black American slaves' folk music, but it is like a condensed musical introduction to Black American history from the slave ship to popular Black American musical expressions. The album has narrations in between the music as though it was intended for a non-Black American audience. Listen to the album and decide whether the album was made for Black American slave descendants or non-Black Americans. I don't like the idea that an album about Black Americans was designed specifically for non-Black-Americans, but I appreciate their preservation of Black American folk music. For those of you, who are street artists, you, too, can preserve Black American slaves' folk culture for sale to libraries and museums, so the rest of us can research it, analyze it, write about it, and enjoy it. #blacks, #music, #history, #slaves, #slave, #culture, #blackamericanhistorymonth, #blackamerica, #blackamerican, #blackamericans. less
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Provided to YouTube by Sony Music Entertainment
Work Song Medley: Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child / Bayeza · Voices Incorporated
Roots: An Anthology of Negro Music in America
â„— Originally released 1965. All rights reserved by Columbia Records,...
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YouTube video: https://youtu.be/gm3ZmgGxSbY. Listen to song, Voo Doo American, by Alex Foster and Michael LaRue. There is not any competition in the performance of Black American slaves' folk culture today. A man is singing something unclear before... moreYouTube video: https://youtu.be/gm3ZmgGxSbY. Listen to song, Voo Doo American, by Alex Foster and Michael LaRue. There is not any competition in the performance of Black American slaves' folk culture today. A man is singing something unclear before mentioning "troubled water." If any of you can recall, Simon and Garfunkel sang a song, "Bridge over Troubled Waters." I wonder if they took that expression from a slave song. Maybe? Maybe not? I don't presume to know. I am just asking. If any of you know for sure, inform me. I have suggested that Black Americans spark a cultural renaissance focusing on Black American slaves' folk culture and to sell those reproductions of art, music, dance, etc. to libraries and museums for profit and/or for religious worship. One person has already shot down the suggestion as if everything else African-American leaders have been doing on our behalves has been working to our benefit. American Negro Slave Songs is the only album I can find on Freegal about Black American slave music. Maybe there are others. I am just letting Black American slave descendants know that Black American slaves' folk culture is a market with little or no competition. There should be money to be made here. Yes, I believe if something is not broken, we should leave it alone. However, African-American leaders, who are chosen, financed, and elected by whites and immigrants, have decided things for the Black American poor and under their leadership, social conditions for Black Americans in poverty never get better. Things are only getting worse. Most of us have heard the expression, "It is insane to repeat the same things over and over again and expect a different result." Most Black Americans use the same old solutions for the same old problems and expect a different result. Most Black Americans are unwilling to try new solutions for old problems. One has called me a reverse racist against Africans, stupid, uneducated, and ignorant for suggesting new solutions to old problems, because Afrocentrism simply is not working economically, politically, or culturally to the benefit of Black American slave descendants. Let Obama's election as the first half-white, African immigrant president be a testament to how well Afrocentrism is working for Black American slave descendants. Obama won by Black Americans' votes and then, told them they don't deserve reparations for slavery. Perhaps, sparking a Black American renaissance based upon the best aspects of slave culture could change the course of Black Americans' future if we studied it, reproduced it, sold it, and practiced it. There is money to be made in folk arts and culture by selling to libraries and museums. For those of us, who are practicing artists, please consider preserving Black American slave culture in the ways Alex Foster and Michael LaRue has done. I found their music on Freegal through my library and then, I looked it up on YouTube. #blacks, #music, #history, #culture, #slave, #slaves, #slavery, #blackamericanhistorymonth, #blackamerica, #blackamerican, #blackamericans, #folk, #folkmusic, #folkculture, #folkways. less
05:04
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
Voo-Doo American · Alex Foster · Michel LaRue
American Negro Slave Songs (Digitally Remastered)
â„— 2009 Essential Media Group LLC
Released on: 2009-11-24
Screenplay Author: Traditional
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YouTube video: https://youtu.be/-O8QWs-Nc14. The song, "Follow the Drinking Gourd," by Alex Foster and Michael LaRue is marketed as American Negro Slave Songs. One line in the song says "Follow the drinking gourd for the old man is waiting for to carry... moreYouTube video: https://youtu.be/-O8QWs-Nc14. The song, "Follow the Drinking Gourd," by Alex Foster and Michael LaRue is marketed as American Negro Slave Songs. One line in the song says "Follow the drinking gourd for the old man is waiting for to carry you to freedom." It sounds as though it is an instruction to find an underground railroad conductor. I have no way of knowing for, but this is something for a Black American musician, musicologist, ethno-musicologist, or music historian to study and teach the rest of us. It came from a folk album. There is not a lot of competition for Black American folk music, dance, arts, crafts, and food ways. A group of Black American artists can combine their myriad skills and produce streaming media and sell it to libraries, so independent researchers and students can have access to it from library e-media contractors. Many of us don't want to think, remember, or study Black American slavery, but many of us love to complain when a white person does it for us. I don't know the race or ethnicity of Alex foster and Michael LaRue. I can't find any pictures. I don't think they have a Wikipedia page either. Regardless of what they may be, their voices sound inauthentic or culturally detached. However, I appreciate their preservation of those slave songs. Please share these Black American slave songs with others. #blacks, #music, #history, #slave, #slaves, #slavery, #blackamericanhistorymonth, #blackamerica, #blackamerican, #blackamericans. less
03:26
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
Follow the Drinking Gourd · Alex Foster · Michel Larue
American Negro Slave Songs
℗ 1973 Originally Released © Tradition Records. WARNING: All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of ap...
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YouTube video: https://youtu.be/8ZbT42mixwk. This is supposedly a traditional Black American slave song called, I'm Packing Up, by Alex Foster and Michael LaRue. Finding slave songs to share for Black American History Month was my original goal. When I... moreYouTube video: https://youtu.be/8ZbT42mixwk. This is supposedly a traditional Black American slave song called, I'm Packing Up, by Alex Foster and Michael LaRue. Finding slave songs to share for Black American History Month was my original goal. When I couldn't find it, I settled on sharing traditional R&B/Soul music. There is money to be made form Black American history and culture. We like to sing, dance, and watch movies. If there was a Black American renaissance, Black American artists can research traditional slave culture and reproduce it for libraries. I don't anticipate a majority of people buying it or personal use necessarily, but it needs to be reproduced for sale to libraries and museum exhibits for posterity. A separate Black American economy can be fueled by reviving traditional Black American slave culture and making up new cultural expressions. #blacks, #slaves, #slavery, #music, #history, #blackamericanhistorymonth, #blackamerica, #blackamerican, #blackamericans. less
01:59
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
I'm Packing Up · Alex Foster · Michel LaRue
American Negro Slave Songs (Digitally Remastered)
â„— 2009 Essential Media Group LLC
Released on: 2009-11-24
Screenplay Author: Traditional
Auto-generated by Yo...
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The U.S. is an illegitimate country dominated by immigrants. If you as a Black American slave exercise the freedoms of speech and protest that are promised to us by law, a shadow network of government officials and employees and private citizens with... moreThe U.S. is an illegitimate country dominated by immigrants. If you as a Black American slave exercise the freedoms of speech and protest that are promised to us by law, a shadow network of government officials and employees and private citizens with wealth like doctors, lawyers, professors, & landlords will take everything from you to starve you to death for not staying in your place beneath whites and immigrants. I have been homeless and unemployed for five years fighting the racial oppression and crimes committed by members of the so-called liberal political party and their allies in private industry. Please stop voting for the so-called liberal political party! Demand a sovereign Black American government on Native American land as part of the restitution that is owed to Black American slaves. We must be separate in order to be equal on our terms, not the immigrant majority's. I have nothing left and now they are taking away my free access to education through the public library. #blacklivesmatter, #slavery, #slaves, #black, #library, #DemocraticParty, #blacklisting, #racism, #genocide less
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However, when I used my local main library branch in the downtown area, where gentrification occurred, I was harassed by two police officers for appearing like I was sleeping. A Jew was searching for a book nearby where I sat and then, suddenly the... moreHowever, when I used my local main library branch in the downtown area, where gentrification occurred, I was harassed by two police officers for appearing like I was sleeping. A Jew was searching for a book nearby where I sat and then, suddenly the police showed up to harass for "sleeping" like I was a terrorist threat or something. That happened in approximately 2012 or 2014 and I never went back to that main library branch. After this survey was submitted for my reading challenge, I discovered today that my library account was suddenly changed from Good to Soft Restricted. I cannot order books. I cannot take online classes without Good standing. I cannot get inter-library loans. Story continued to next blog post. #blacklivesmatter, #slavery, #slaves, #black, #library, #DemocraticParty, #blacklisting, #racism, #genocide less
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I previously shared information about free online classes in hopes of helping Black Americans on welfare acquire job skills from their local public library's account with Gale or Universal Classes. I also shared information about joining your local... moreI previously shared information about free online classes in hopes of helping Black Americans on welfare acquire job skills from their local public library's account with Gale or Universal Classes. I also shared information about joining your local library's summer reading challenge. I recently completed my challenge for adults with my survey of the my library's services. I told them that my library is not a safe place for Black Americans or the homeless to visit if the the police is going to harass you for taking a short nap in a large library that is never full to capacity or has a shortage of seats. I am a college graduate. When I was a student, students took short naps in the libraries, because reading will fatigue anybody's eyes after awhile. At college, I was never harassed. Story continues on next blog post. #blacklivesmatter, #slavery, #slaves, #black, #library, #democraticparty, #blacklisting, #racism, #genocide less

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