Black Leaders Discussion feat. Angela Davis, Kwame Ture & Fannie Lou Hamer (1973)
1,429,306
Published 2019-07-21
All Comments (21)
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This is like the black Justice League
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WHO ELSE OUT HERE CONSUMING AS MUCH BLACK POWER INFORMATION YOU CAN FIND???
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Back when black activists, thinkers and politicians met to discuss these issues. They’ve been strategically replaced with entertainers today. Moving backwards.
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"The wealthy receive welfare... they call it subsidies...." I felt that.
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Never in my life seen a group of black ppl hold a conversation without a white man interrupting them this is powerful
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This is the level conversation we had before actors, actresses and hip hop artists became our spokespersons and supposedly "leaders". Being rich or a celebrity did not qualify you for leadership
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Angela Davis, Stuckley Carmichael, and Willian Lucy is right on point. This was the Podcast of the day back then. You can't get no more grassroots than Fanny Lou Hammer. Power to the People. ✊🏾✊🏾✊🏾
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The quality and seriousness of this discussion is something I feel we haven’t seen in ages. Just trusting an audience to watch this without non stop bells and whistles and drama to keep us engaged.
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And we still have the same conversations almost 50 years later
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"I'M SICK AND TIRED OF BEING SICK AND TIRED !" -Fannie Lou Hamer
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Such a powerful discourse. The respect for one another, the sheer focus on understanding one another and finding solutions is something that is lost in today’s society.
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Intelligent, Strong, Driven, and Passionate Black Men and Women having an intelligent conversation/discussion about Black Liberation. This is true Black Excellence.
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They don’t even interrupt each other while someone speaks...
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NEVER IN MY LIFE HAVE I SEEN A GROUP OF EDUCATED BLACK PEOPLE LIKE THIS. CLEARLY THEY NEVER WANT US AT THIS HEIGHT OF AWARENESS EVER AGAIN. WE MUST REVIVE IT.
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Both Brother Kwame Ture, Sister Fannie Lou Hamer and Sister Angela Davis are our African political warriors that have fought their blood and sweat for us. Brother Kwame Ture and Sister Fannie Lou Hamer have gone but their memories will always be with us.
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Forty eight years later. Many of these panelists are now ancestors, and unfortunately we still have the same unresolved issues.Much respect to the late, inimitable Tony Brown.
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I'm loving all of us black people getting knowledge wherever and however.
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Awe it was so precious to hear Fannin Fannie Lou Hamer say she never heard a President talk so much and say nothing. It's a good thing she never met Trump. Oh, good times.
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In tears as I accept the gap and lack of representation 50 years later. Thanks Mr. Brown for your incredible journalism and your power packed panel.
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We need shows like this back on the air.