Underground Feed Back Stereo – Brothers Perspective Magazine – Personal Opinion Database – dont ever respect colonial oppressors Black People suffer in a place many are void of Self Awareness and Dignified Liberation. These europeons stole the land by killing the natives of lands but not to share with the original inhabitant or those they enslaved. These tyrants are negative to the core and cant do good. The fight is to know what an oppressor is and how a system operates from this oppression. The euro colonizers designs all the laws to neglect BLACK People from benefiting from the Land. The Black people are enslaved property on stolen land not able to benefit from the life they live! The payback for such atrocities can never be forgiven. Its the mind you must maintain against colonial genocide. This also happens with the endless rejection letters from art galleries etc. No respect to you! Sound Art? Tune in to these educated brothers as they deliver Personal Opinions for Brothers Perspective Audio Feedback #Reparations #diabetes
Underground Feed Back Stereo – Brothers Perspective Magazine – Personal Opinion Database – Blacks In Poverty Stolen Money to Ukraine
Black People suffer in a place many are void of Self Awareness and Dignified Liberation. These europeons stole the land by killing the natives of lands but not to share with the original inhabitant or those they enslaved. These tyrants are negative to the core and cant do good.
The fight is to know what an oppressor is and how a system operates from this oppression. The euro colonizers designs all the laws to neglect BLACK People from benefiting from the Land. The Black people are enslaved property on stolen land not able to benefit from the life they live! The payback for such atrocities can never be forgiven. Its the mind you must maintain against colonial genocide. This also happens with the endless rejection letters from art galleries etc. No respect to you! Sound Art? Tune in to these educated brothers as they deliver Personal Opinions for Brothers Perspective Audio Feedback
Underground Feed Back Stereo – Brothers Perspective Magazine – Personal Opinion Database – Not The Same Aint No Gain Imagine your entire your life is someone else’s gain and benefit. This some one else has literally stolen land and enslaved you and others for their benefit. These imperial colonial oppressors have convinced you and everyone else in the world that this is normal yet great. Think about how psychotic and sick these individuals would have have to be, how light they have to sleep to avoid backlash forever. The payback for such atrocities can never be forgiven. Its the mind you must maintain against colonial genocide. This also happens with the endless rejection letters from art galleries etc. No respect to you! Sound Art? Tune in to these educated brothers as they deliver Personal Opinions for Brothers Perspective Audio Feedback #Reparations #diabetes #75dab #art #life #WilliamFroggieJames #lyching #basketball #nyc #fakereligion #war #neverapologize #brooklyn #guncontrol #birthcontrol #gentrification #stopviolence #blackmusic #marshallact #europeanrecoveryprogram #chicago #southsidechicago #blackart #redlining #maumau #biko70 #chicago #soldout #PersonalOpinionDataBase #protest #blackart #africanart #gasprices #undergroundfeedbackstereo #blackpeople #race #brothersperspectivemagazine brothersperspective.com undergroundfeedbackstereo.com joelefthandrecords.com
AWARENESS OF THE FEARFUL DISGUISE CAPTURED POISON SCARED WITHIN LIES VISUALIZE FEAR PARANOIA ROBOTIC PEACE TREATY RAGE IN THE STREETS WE’VE SEEN THE MURDER SCARED MANY INTO SUBMISSION SEX, CHAOS, INFO MISLEAD TECHNICAL PARADE PARADOX PRICE OF POSSESION EYES TELL DIFFERENCES FROM SPIRIT SELLING SOUL
released March 2, 2022 Lyrics by: Fatboi Sharif Produced by: LoneSword Mixing and Mastering by: Wavy Bagels Artwork by: Shane Ingersoll Recorded by: LoneSword
Underground Feed Back Stereo – Brothers Perspective Magazine – Personal Opinion Database – What If Black People Stop Working for This SystemPart 1
Think about life in the sense of a boycott, a strike, giving up on the people who personally neglect you from peace of mind. Think of life from the viewpoint of the Civil Rights Movement during the Montgomery Bus Boycott in Alabama from December 5, 1955 to December 20th, 1956 think about the strain this placed on a racially biased economy where Black Folks are treated unequally but pay the same amount or more in taxes and red lined predatory loans. Think about how this affected the economy during a time when Black People were treated like they were subhuman, be mindful of the ongoing disrespect and out right disregard of Black Lives in the now while being reminded that Jim Crow laws were part of the actual laws. Imagine the 1,300 Black sanitation workers in Memphis, TN who led a strike commanding an improved working environment and increased payment this taking place February 12, 1968. Look at life from the perspective of the The Delano grape strike that is noted for its effectiveness in boycotts and the unheard of merger of the time of Filipino and Mexican farm workers joining together to unionize creating UFW labor union. The Brothers unionize to present the topic of Black People ending work all together across the globe, ending the opportunity for colonial oppressive systems gaining from the labor of Black People who are not treated or progressing after years of captivity and forced enslavement but are constantly innovating the world through the ongoing suffering. Do you have the heart to sit out, boycott or strike against a system who takes your hard earned tax money and support the world but can’t acknowledge Captive Slavery of those labeled Black or the colonial titles like African American, coloreds, negro or other derogatory words to describe people as thought to be 3/5ths of a man and chattel property. These same Black People were stolen from their homes globally, stripped of their names and cultural identities. They give a Marshall Act to others but will not Pay Reparations to Black people they have used for thousands of years, do they see Black People as People or just free laborers?
Underground Feed Back Stereo – Brothers Perspective Magazine – Personal Opinion Database – I Thought You Said Corn Part 2
I thought you said Corn is a satirical play on words and the balance between detachment and lust. Living in a society where honest neglect is coded in poor communication, underdeveloped adults and the voids in emotional let downs are discussed in this episode. The brothers discuss desires and passions inside of world of only fans, corn hubs and S videos if you over stand the meanings. Suggestive scenes implied or otherwise for unknown MPAA film ratings were given to films as far back as the 1950’s for french films, to 1968 in the USA when subjects where questionable in films for images not suitable for minors. The stories get interesting as the graphic nature of these motion pictures from Cinema Movies, 16MM Home Video, VHS, to present day Downloads, where adult topics can create jaded lovers, disinterest and no passion towards your significant other where love matters. Either hardcore or softcore be careful what type of visuals you train your thoughts to accept. #unknownratings #hiphop #blackart #rated #wcp #blackstories #westcoastproductions #16mm #VHS #DOWNLOADS #PersonalOpinionDataBase #protest #beats #samples #funk #undergroundfeedbackstereo #brothersperspectivemagazine brothersperspective.comundergroundfeedbackstereo.comjoelefthandrecords.com feat. art by instagram.com/nappy9folics
Underground Feed Back Stereo: Brothers Perspective Magazine – Personal Opinion Database – Does White Society Determine What Black People Think? Part 1
Underground Feed Back Stereo / Brothers Perspective Magazine and Personal Opinion Database swap narrative as it relates to a colonized society of poor diets and unjust laws. Does White Society Determine What Black People Think and from this sarcastic statement, are these thoughts that black people receive from white society worth having and keeping? Shouldn’t Black People reject the pathology of oppression. I’d rather sit with you broken than have peace if I don’t like you. Humans should not be convinced the way that they are educated is correct, it’s always room to learn. Life is an effort and land should not be stolen! Black people worked through racial discrimination, redlining, segregation to be integrated into a society to be discriminated against daily. #75dab #PersonalOpinionDataBase #raygun81 #biko70
Black History IDLEWILD, MICHIGAN (1912- ) African American Resort POSTED ON JANUARY 5, 2011 BY CONTRIBUTED BY: RONALD J. STEPHENS “Come to Idlewood” brochure, ca. 1955 Courtesy Ronald Stephens Collection
Idlewild, Michigan, was one of the leading African American resorts in the era of Jim Crow segregation. White land developers marketed Idlewild as an all-Negro resort town in Lake County, Michigan, about 300 miles northwest of Chicago, Illinois and 250 miles north of Detroit, through the Idlewild Resort Company. Although founded in 1912, resort property sales lagged until Dr. Daniel Hale Williams, the leading black surgeon at the time, became the first famous property owner in 1915. Williams retired at Idlewild and died there in 1931. His presence attracted colleagues and associates from Chicago, and eventually prominent black doctors from other Midwestern cities began purchasing property there.
Island Park (an island surrounded by Idlewild Lake), was the center of activity from 1920 to 1945. It featured the Idlewild Clubhouse, the Oakmere Hotel, and the Purple Palace Supper Club. Prominent African Americans, including Dr. W.E.B. DuBois, author Charles Waddell Chesnutt, millionaire businesswoman Madam C.J. Walker, and Chicago attorney Violette Nealey Anderson purchased Idlewild property. Anderson donated her property upon her death to her sorority, Zeta Phi Beta. Yet the resort also attracted leading entertainers who made it the “Summer Apollo of Michigan” since the entertainers in turn drew audiences from Chicago, Detroit, and other Midwest cities who came solely for the popular shows.
By the 1950s and early 1960s, Idlewild reached the height of its popularity. During those years nearly 25,000 vacationers made their way to the community, temporarily overwhelmingly the permanent year-round population. During this era, Idlewild boasted more than 300 black-owned businesses.
The Flamingo and Paradise nightclubs served as economic engines driving tourism during this period. The efforts of Phil Giles and Arthur Braggs made Idlewild the nation’s foremost black resort. Detroit hotel owner Giles managed the Hotel Giles and the Flamingo Club to showcase Idlewild as being “The Resort Capital of America.” Braggs, a Saginaw businessman, lured thousands to his Paradise Club by hosting entertainers such as Della Reese, The Four Tops, Jackie Wilson, Brook Benton, Dinah Washington, Etta James, Aretha Franklin, and George Kirby. Idlewild signified black economic empowerment and entertainment glamour. And while the Flamingo Club did not attract famous entertainers who frequented the Paradise Club, it did showcase local and regional musicians, comedians, chorus girls, and singers such as Larry Wrice and the Flamingo All-Star Band, Luther Thompson and the Flamingo Dancers, Black Velvet (an exotic dancer), Lavern Baker, and Detroit’s Queen of the Blues, Alberta Adams. The décor–including pink flamingo motifs on the walls and mirrors–assumed iconic status and symbolized affirmation of urban black identity.
While the clubs attracted black patrons, there were often examples of interracial mingling. As one Idlewild resident recalled, the clubs filled to capacity every night, and on some nights, “there were more white people in there than blacks. It wasn’t about race, it was about fun.”
Idlewild, like other all-black resorts, would not survive the civil rights movement. As formerly whites-only clubs and resorts across the nation integrated in the late 1960s, Idlewild went into decline. Its clubs and hotels closed as blacks began to frequent other resorts. Today, Idlewild is a struggling retirement community with fewer than half a dozen businesses. Despite this decline, Idlewild symbolized the heyday of the combination of race, leisure, and geography to create a briefly prosperous community through niche tourism.
Subjects: African American History, Places
Terms: 20th Century (1900-1999), United States – Michigan, Sororities-Zeta Phi Beta, Government-Local-Resort