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Its February! Happy Black History Month !

Oprah was not the First Black woman to host a syndicated talk show...Della Reese was...Oprah saluted Della @ The Legends ball years ago and acknowledged the fact...

Della was also the FIRST Black woman to guest host Johnny Carson's "The Tonight Show"....


Oh, Ooops.

I don't know why its all over the internet then. I thought that I got that from a reputable website.

Its there a difference between syndication and national syndication ?
 
............
those BYU students should be ashamed, this is why [STRIKE]the world thinks that[/STRIKE] America is retarded...
I was asked to provide solutions for America's retarded condition:

1. Improve our educational system. Make teaching attractive enough to recruit more good people*
2. Repair the infrastructure. (good way to create jobs)
3. Continue to develop alternate energy sources.
4. Implement high-speed railroads.
5. Accept global climate change. Take corrective measures.
6. Repeal Citizens United. Corporations are not people. Worst SCOTUS decision since Dred Scott.
7. Reinstitute Glass Stegall. Financial institutions are not casinos.
8. Repeal Marbury v. Madison. The Supreme Court has way too much power.
9. Persuade the upper 2% to contribute their fair share to generate revenue.
10. Get the fuck out of Afghanistan. (costing us two billion dollars a week!)
11. Get over Barack Obama's reelection.
12. Our legislators need to quit *|*, stop behaving like petulant children and do the jobs that their constituents are expecting.

Currently, many nations regard the U.S. as a banana republic and for good reasons.

*I listed education deliberately.
 
...
6. Repeal Citizens United. Corporations are not people. Worst SCOTUS decision since Dred Scott.
...

One would think that the more recent Plessy v. Ferguson would fit that description, but that's not important. This thread is about Black History Month, not America's perceived social and legal problems and your theories on fixing said issues. If you want to discuss such topics then make a new thread and talk about it there instead of derailing this thread.
 
One would think that the more recent Plessy v. Ferguson would fit that description, but that's not important. This thread is about Black History Month, not America's perceived social and legal problems and your theories on fixing said issues. If you want to discuss such topics then make a new thread and talk about it there instead of derailing this thread.
Please re-read first line of post. I was asked how to make America less retarded by a fellow Jubber. See post #131. Your response merely reconfirms my original point. Meanwhile, offtopic:
 
Sure thing: here's some info on Amber Valley, Alberta:
It was settled by black homesteaders from Oklahoma just over a hundred years ago. The prejudice that would have given a strong reason for black families to stick together in a separate community weakened over time, and the settlement declined as farm life changed and people found better opportunities in other places in Alberta or the rest of the country. It's interesting that this Alberta story may be outside the US, but would not have happened without the US experience.

In fact when I think of "black history" in canada, i think of black people from the US as a cultural grouping, as opposed to, say, somalis or ghanaians or zimbabweans who have immigrated in the last 25 years or so…people who in some contexts might be considered part of the same demographic. But I think that's a different history month! Is there a "Black History Fact" that does not relate to the experience of people in the US?


https://maps.google.ca/maps?q=Amber...r=Amber+Valley,+Division+No.+13,+Alberta&z=15

Anyway, as you might guess from the map of Amber Valley as a farmer's field just north of a cloud, there is not a lot of black history on the canadian prairies, and not a lot of contemporary black presence with roots going back to the states either. I definitely noticed the demographic differences between my hometown and the US when I visited seattle…seattle has a huge black community compared to life in western Canadian cities, but Americans tell me Seattle is actually Whitey McWhiteville by comparison with other parts of the US.

Yep, Seattle is in fact that. Along with the other cities of Portland, Denver, and Salt Lake City...
 
Black History in Music:

In 1957 the First Gold Record was awarded to Movie/Music/Activist Mr. Harry Belafonte for selling 1-Million copies of his Album Calypso.
 
I agree entirely with Refugi... (early in the thread) - Black History Month was (I assume) put into place by a bunch of old white men who thought that they could really be doing great things for an entire huge group of people by selecting a certain part of the annual solar cycle (which is arbitrarily divided by humans into twelve segments of roughly equal length which don't relate to anything at all in the cosmos or in nature), and naming one of these segments for that group of humanity.

Yes, it's nothing more than a label slapped onto a span of time which doesn't really mean anything. In no way shape or form does it do anything that measurably benefits, or changes the standard-of-living in any way, for Black people.
 
Yes, it's nothing more than a label slapped onto a span of time which doesn't really mean anything. In no way shape or form does it do anything that measurably benefits, or changes the standard-of-living in any way, for Black people.

Frank I'm sure the following is what you MEANT to type...Gay Pride week/month that's Celebrated @ Different times in just about every State in this Country doesn't really mean anything. In no way shape or form does it do anything that measurably benefits, or changes the standard-of-living in any way, for Gay people...You've talked about how you travel to different Gay Events..Well did you tell the Gays at those events that their Gathering isnt worth a Damn?

Wow...It NEVER surprises me how some of you just SHIT on everything....
 
Well Black History Month is almost up. That was fast lol.

Im extremely saddened by the passing of Lou Myers aka Mr Gaines. A Different World is one of my favorite shows of all time.

During its time, it encouraged so many Black children to go to college.

We could use something like this today.
ADifferentWorld-1.jpg



Speaking of Black people making historic television: Diahann Carroll was the first Black woman to star in her own TV show. This was ground breaking because she was a white collar professional. This was one of my mother's favorite shows as a kid and I really don't think that people talk about Ms. Carroll enough. She is really amazing. I wish that Julia was in reruns. I would love to watch it with my mom.

julia.jpg


Here is a cute interview of her on Al Sharpton's Politics Nation

 
Happy Black History Month Anne and everyone else on JUB. (*8*)

I recently watched a film called The Long Walk Home, starring Whoopi Goldberg, which is about the 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott. Was very moving, I can't believe there was ever a time like that. I recommend it.

I really enjoyed that movie. I havent seen it in a while, but yes it is moving.

Happy Black History Month :)
 
Jackie Robinson's film will be out in two months. I think that I have posted this trailer here before but its worth posting again. He faced incredible hurdles and the racism was so bad for this man Im surprised that he didn't loose his mind. Very excited about this film.

My grandfather loved baseball and was so proud of this man.



jackie_robinson.jpg


Jackie Robinson became the first African-American to play major league baseball, becoming Rookie of the Year in 1947, National League MVP in 1949 and a World Series champ in 1955.



Quotes from Mr. Robinson:

Life is not a spectator sport. If you're going to spend your whole life in the grandstand just watching what goes on, in my opinion you're wasting your life.

I'm not concerned with your liking or disliking me... All I ask is that you respect me as a human being.
 
After making the Lil' Wayne/Emmett Till thread:http://www.justusboys.com/forum/threads/397787-Any-words-for-the-Emmett-Till-Lil-Wayne-Controversy

(It got moved to the Entertainment section, either I was mistaken about where I put it or perhaps the mods thought that Emmett Till was a rapper) Anyway....

I realized that many people may not know who Emmett Till was:

Emmett_Till.jpg


Warning if you google him, you may find some very disturbing photos.

Fourteen-year-old Emmett Till was visiting relatives in Money, Mississippi on August 24, 1955 when he reportedly flirted with a white cashier at a grocery store. Four days later, two white men kidnapped Till, beat him, and shot him in the head. The men were tried for murder, but an all-white, male jury acquitted them. Till's murder and open casket funeral galvanized the emerging civil rights movement.

The two men beat the teenager brutally, dragged him to the bank of the Tallahatchie River, shot him in the head, tied him with barbed wire to a large metal fan and shoved his mutilated body into the water.


Till's death provided an important catalyst for the American Civil Rights Movement. One hundred days after Emmett Till's murder, Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on an Alabama city bus, sparking the yearlong Montgomery bus boycott.

American Experience did a fabulous documentary on this entitled The Murder of Emmett Till


 
Jackie Robinson's film will be out in two months. I think that I have posted this trailer here before but its worth posting again. He faced incredible hurdles and the racism was so bad for this man Im surprised that he didn't loose his mind. Very excited about this film.

My grandfather loved baseball and was so proud of this man.



jackie_robinson.jpg






Quotes from Mr. Robinson:

Although I know there's no crying in baseball, last year when I noticed that one day every player in the Majors was wearing number 42, I got a little bleary-eyed. Jackie Robinson helped to make baseball what it is today. He must have gone through hell being the first African-American to break the color barrier, but there's something about being "first" in anything that is very compelling. Thanks, Jackie! ..|
 
255a4390-4044-4d92-b3ca-df24fbb49951-1.JPG


I know.

Shut


the


front


door.


The Maya Angelou. The one that would go on to become


maya-angelou.jpg


One of the most important voices in American and more generally, English poetry in the 20th century.
 
Trayvon Martin was gunned down one year ago today:

One year after the fatal Florida shooting of unarmed teen Trayvon Martin sparked national debate about gun laws and racial profiling, his parents prepared for a solemn vigil in Manhattan on Tuesday as they continue to crusade for stricter gun laws.

Meanwhile, George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch volunteer who shot Martin during an altercation, remained out of sight, preparing for the possibility of a high-profile murder trial scheduled for June in Florida.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/02/26/us-usa-florida-shooting-idUSBRE91P03D20130226
 
Very disturbing. I didn't know who he was, thanks for posting about this incident.

This quote from one of his killers, on the Wiki entry, made me rage:


Yeah, there are several documentaries about it. One of the things that has always stood out to me was when the reporters filmed the two White men with their wives moments after the trial they all had smiles on their faces.

The reporters asked the women: How do you feel ? and they responded I feel fine. No feeling of distress at all. How could you be married to such monsters ? The men obviously did it and sold their stories to a magazine later. Mrs. Till contacted Eisenhower to take the case to the Supreme Court but he did not help her.

The only good thing about this trial was the fact that the Bryant store in which Till told Mrs. Bryant "Bye, Baby" was boycotted by all of the Black people in the town and eventually went bankrupt.
 
till2_zps7c2fc67d.jpg


How brave was Moes Wright to stand up in front of all those people and point out the men that took his nephew. He could never return to his home. He would have been killed for sure.

till1_zps19c08f32.jpg


His poor mother. She was also very strong and brave.


till_zpsb2efccfb.jpg


This is hideous American History.

The Scottsboro Boys is also something to learn about. Yet another unjust case. That trial became a film, documentary and Broadway Musical.

scottsboro_boys.jpg


The Scottsboro Boys were nine black teenage boys accused of rape in Alabama in 1931. The landmark set of legal cases from this incident dealt with racism and the right to a fair trial.
 
Recy Taylor also never saw justice:

Recy Taylor is an African American woman from Abbeville in Henry County, Alabama. On September 3, 1944, she was kidnapped while leaving church and brutally gang raped by six white men]


recytaylor21.jpg


recyfam1.jpg


^ Propaganda
 
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