Archive for Marjorie Borgella (YesLioness)

Revolution by Diallo Kenyatta @DialloKenyatta #DialloKenyatta #revolution #freedom #power

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on July 18, 2023 by Brother Perspective Magazine

The government told the Black community, in the racial era of the 60s that if we continued to rebel against the government, kept disrupting the US economy and hurting its international standing by rioting, and seeking to link with international revolutionary and decolonization struggles in African, Asia, and South America; that we’d end up with mass incarceration, rising violence and homicides, and continue to be impoverished and unemployed. So we stopped with all the Black Panther/Black Liberation Army militancy and embraced interrogation, capitalism, and voting as a means to better our communities….
Here we are, half a century from the 60s, and we got everything that the government told us we would avoid if we stopped our Revolution and embraced social reforms. We got higher rates of incarceration, poverty, violence and homicides, drug addiction, and our overall health and life expectancy is also declining nationally.


Just as we were awakening from the scam the government and our established ‘Black Leaders’ pulled on us; they hit us with the Trojan Horse of Obama; which seems to have lull the vast majority of us into an even deeper sleep than we were in during the post-Civil Rights Era.


The fact is, we had more unity, stability, and direction when we were organizing against the institutions of power and oppression (the government and mega-corporations) than we do now that we are inside the institutions of power and oppression. Those who struggle from the outside (Dr. King, Atty. Thurgood Marshall, Malcolm X, Fred Hampton) were able to gain more political and economic justice for us than those who worked from the inside ( Ralph Bunch, Justice Thurgood Marshall, Obama).


Although things are bad, we, in this generation and those who will come after have the benefit of hindsight. We can look back and see that integration and reform were just delay tactics employed to halt our Revolution and reinforce the positions of our oppressors. We can see that they attacked our Revolution, not because it was unlawful, or harmful, but because it threaten to bring justice to America and the world, and justice is a cancer to oppression and those who profit from oppression.

Kwame Ture stated just before his passing that, “America is more ripe for revolution than ever.” I must agree with him. We are in a position look and see where our Revolutionary organizations went wrong in the past. We still have Revolutionaries from that era who are ready to teach and consult us, even organize with us, we have tools and skills that were not available to us in the 60s, and we have people all over the world waiting for us to revive our Struggle and join them in theirs.

Revolution is not illegal (yet), it is not about violence, it is not about leaving your life and running to live in the wilderness, it is not about wearing all black leather, combat boots, and dark sunglasses; Revolution is simply an adjustment in your thoughts, and social relationships. It is about cultivating and structuring relationships that feed what is life affirming, and rejecting that which is not; it is really that simple. Che Guevara put it best when he stated that Revolutionaries are by a “great feeling of love.”

Revolution in this stage is eating healthy, organic community gardens, it is using your disposable income to form cooperatives and cottage industries, local manufacturing, it is supporting local progressive businesses and rejecting corporate mass consumption, it is ignoring corporate media and supporting independent progressive media, it is leading your voice to the voiceless (prisoners, the homeless, bombing victims, etc.), it is refusing to live in fear, it is willingness to reserve some of your time to walk in, teach in, and work in your community for the specific purpose of empowering your community and expelling the parasitic elements from your community.

As we do this work, more opportunities, challenges, and risk will arise, but if we do the initial work properly; we’ll be better prepared as things intensify.


This post is getting long so I’ll stop here. I will be contacting those who have reached out, and responded to my invitations over the weekend, and I look forward to hearing from more of you.

Forward.
Bloom.

Website: http://diallokenyatta.com

Patreon: http://patreon.com/diallokenyatta

Venmo: @BroDiallo

CashApp: $BroDiallo

Merch: http://africanworldorder.com

#AntiCapitalism#GlobalCollapse#Socialism#Ecocide#WorldWar#BroDiallo#WorldPeace#Yurugu#BLKPWR#AWC#AfricanWorldCoalition

Underground Feed Back Stereo: Brothers Perspective Magazine – Personal Opinion Database – I Thought You Said Corn Part 2 #undergroundfeedbackstereo #africanart #brothersperspectivemagazine #art #reading #africanpodcast #nigeria #ghana #lagos #congo

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on April 12, 2022 by Brother Perspective Magazine

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.com undergroundfeedbackstereo.com joelefthandrecords.com  feat. art by instagram.com/nappy9folics

16 Sisters of Fine Art “You Shouldn’t Sleep On” [presented by ThinkBlk]

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on December 23, 2013 by Brother Perspective Magazine

16 Sisters of Fine Art “You Shouldn’t Sleep On” [presented by ThinkBlk]

A short list of some of the freshest expressions from soul sisters in the Fine Arts. Don’t sleep on the styles and please support their abilities by buying and spreading the word.  #culturedart

Madge Scott

Madge Scott
New York / Saint James, Jamaica | www.madgescottart.com

Brianna McCarthy

Brianna McCarthy

Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago | www.briannamccarthy.com
Salkis Re

Salkis Re

Macon, GA | www.salkisre.com

Makeba Kedem-DuBose

Makeba Kedem-DuBose

Chicago, IL | www.facebook.com/mkdubose

Ladessa Sullivan

Ladessa Sullivan (CandyAcidReign)
San Francisco, CA | www.facebook.com/candyacidreign

April Wilson Harrison

April Wilson Harrison

Greenville, SC / www.aprilsonggallery.com

Tobacco Brown2

Tobacco Brown

Memphis, TN | www.facebook.com/tobaccobrown

samidubsaks

SamiDUBz ART

Unknown | www.instagram.com/samidubsacks

Shanequa Gay

Shanequa Gay

Atlanta, GA | www.sgcreativewisdom.com

Tatyana Fazlalizadeh

Tatyana Fazlalizadeh

Oklahoma City, OK / Brooklyn, NY | www.tlynnfaz.com

DARLENE NEWMAN

Darlene Newman

Memphis, TN | www.darlene.fineaw.com

YESLIONESS

Marjorie Borgella (YesLioness)

Brooklyn, NY | www.yeslioness.com

Vinnie Bagwell

Vinnie Bagwell

Yonkers, NY | www.enslavedafricansraingarden.org

Tamara Natalie Madden

Tamara Natalie Madden

Kingston, Jamaica / Atlanta, GA | www.tamaranataliemadden.com

Amber Robles-Gordon

Amber Robles-Gordon
Washington D.C. | www.amberroblesgordon.com

avis hoggard

Avis Hoggard

Virginia Beach, VA | www.instagram.com/avishoggard_art

all art works are in no specific order please go to each artist website and buy their art and support .. please tell a friend | Brothers Perspective Carefully studies Art that we feel is relevant to our websites and blogs. #loveart #cultureart #repost #reblog

article by THINKBLK Copyright © 2013