“Michele’s Ingredients For Success: (1) Be open to change, and be ready to embrace it. Change can wreak havoc on your life, but it can also bring you life’s greatest gifts. (2) Be ready to listen to eureka moments. The most unexpected sources can show you the way to transform your life and create your […]
Read the rest of this entry »Archive for the 'Books' Category
Book Excerpt Of The Week: Part 2- “King Of The Cats: The Life and Times Of Adam Clayton Powell Jr.” By: Wil Haygood
Here are some more interesting snippets from, “King Of The Cats”: On Hazel Scott’s (Adam Clayton Powell’s 2nd wife) Run-In With Gangster Bugsy Siegel: “Scott was, however, one of the first Blacks to get work in Las Vegas, along with Sammy Davis Jr., and Nat King Cole. She took her pride to the desert. A […]
Read the rest of this entry »Book Excerpt Of The Week: Part 1- “King Of The Cats: The Life and Times Of Adam Clayton Powell Jr.” By: Wil Haygood
Here are some interesting facts that I gleaned about Adam Clayton Powell Jr. (the first Black congressman from NY), from the biography, “King Of The Cats: The Life and Times Of Adam Clayton Powell Jr.” By: Wil Haygood: On The Marcus Garvey/Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Connection: “As a little boy, Adam Powell Junior had climbed […]
Read the rest of this entry »Slavery After Emancipation: Debt Slavery & Forced Confessions In Kangaroo Courts
“The county convict leasing system, with its efficient mechanisms for forcing Black men to do the bidding of White business operators, soon leached into the process of collecting debts of any kind. White farmers who advanced money to Black tenants at the beginning of a crop season began to enforce their debts not by evicting […]
Read the rest of this entry »Definitions Better Than Webster’s: POWER
“Power is defined, in physics, as any form of energy or force available for work or applied to produce motion or pressure. Used in terms of social dynamics, the term power has essentially the same meaning, namely, the force required to bring about- or to prevent- social, political, or economic changes. It is relevant to […]
Read the rest of this entry »Slavery After Emancipation: The Beginning Of The Prison Industrial Complex- Part 4
“By the end of Reconstruction in 1877, every formerly Confederate state except Virginia had adopted the practice of leasing Black prisoners into commercial hands. There were variations among the states, but all shared the same basic formula. Nearly all the penal functions of government were turned over to the companies purchasing convicts. In return for […]
Read the rest of this entry »Slavery After Emancipation: The Beginning Of The Prison Industrial Complex- Part 3
“In 1871, Tennessee leased its nearly eight hundred prisoners, nearly all of them Black to Thomas O’Conner, a founding partner along with Arthur Colyar of Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Co. In the four decades after the war, as Coylar built his company into an industrial behemoth, its center of operations gradually shifted to Alabama, […]
Read the rest of this entry »Slavery After Emancipation: The Beginning Of The Prison Industrial Complex- Part 2
“Hardly a year after the end of the war, in 1866, Alabama governor Robert M. Patton, in return for the total sum of $5, leased for six years his state’s 374 state prisoners to a company calling itself ‘Smith and McMillen.’ The transaction was in fact a sham, as the partnership was actually controlled by […]
Read the rest of this entry »Slavery After Emancipation: The Beginning Of The Prison Industrial Complex- Part 1
“With the southern economy in ruins, state officials limited to the barest resources, and county governments with even fewer, the concept of reintroducing the forced labor of Blacks as a means of funding government services was viewed by Whites as an inherently practical method of eliminating the cost of building prisons and returning Blacks to […]
Read the rest of this entry »African American Voting: A Retrospective
“As of 1901, nearly every African American had been effectively stripped of all elective rights in Alabama and virtually every southern state. After passage of a new state constitution in 1901, Alabama allowed the registration only of voters who could read or write and were regularly employed, or who owned property valued at $300 or […]
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