Should Dwight Yorke have won the 1999 Ballon d'Or? 🤔

We looked back at THAT season as part of #BHM2025 ⏮️

Marking #BHM2025 at United ❤️
Marking #BHM2025 at United ❤️

As of the time of writing this, Black History Month will be over in ~27 hours.

Maybe you've been celebrating it every day with a daily fact calendar and spending a little extra at that one Black owned business. Maybe you're sad to see the month come to a close, but happy it's inspired you to redouble your antiracist efforts.

Or maybe, absolutely nothing is going to change for you as of the 1st.

You may think I'm about to get on some moral high horse and lambast you for not paying out reparations to every Black person you know. But no, I'm not.

Of course, if you aren't Black (and ESPECIALLY if you're white) you should have. But I get it. Shit sucks right now. Money's probably tight for you. You or someone you know is probably in some mess and needs all the support they can get. And even if everything is just peachy in your life, it doesn't feel like it. You feel powerless, or useless, or overstimulated, or this looming dread over everything and every moment.

And that's okay.

The things you feel are valid. That disquiet in the air is manufactured. The degradation of everything at once is by design. These things aren't random chance; they are being done to us. There are people who are doing them to us purposely.

And they aren't going to stop because you're overwhelmed or your tired or you don't know how to respond. In fact, they're just going to keep pushing harder. Pity and appeals to morality will not stop them. Appearing respectable or obedient will not stop them. They understand no language other than power.

So I ask you to use what little bit of power you have.

Tomorrow there is a general strike planned. The target is the economy itself. If you have no other power, you at the very least have the tiniest little mote in the form of your money.

Do not buy ANYTHING. Do not eat out. Do not get gas. Any purchase you can hold off on for a day, do it.

This isn't going to change much in the short term. But it is a reminder from us as a collective that we have power. It will not be the last, especially not if the foundation is strong.

Besides that, there are other things you have to give. You have talents. You have time. You have a voice or a platform. Tomorrow is a beautiful day to offer these things to the Black people in your life. Or find some Black people to include in your life, and offer these things to.

If Black History Month is the only time you feel like being charitable to Black people, you missed the point. If you get all of your Black history during the month of February, you missed the point. If you feel hurt or called out by reading this, good. Let that energy drive you to be better.

And most of this stuff is applicable to the Black folks reading too. We can do a little more than put on hotep hats and talk about the new Kendrick. Our ancestors got through some shit, and we will too. But only if we learn from their examples, good and bad. Only if we do this together. All of us, from your uncle with a law degree to your cousin who dropped out.

We have to save us.

So if you want to do something that matters, tomorrow's about the easiest showing solidarity gets.

Do nothing. Buy nothing. Do not comply.

#bhm #bhm2025 #reparations

#RideOnBus and MCDOT celebrate Black History Month by recognizing significant African American figures in #transportation. Today we’re featuring the courage, bravery and sacrifices of Lieutenant #JackieRobinson. #BHM2025 #TransitEquity #BlackHistoryMonth (Post &🖼️courtesy of #RideOn) #montgomerycountymd #transitTooter #transit

Martin Dibobe – vom Häuptlingssohn zum Zugführer

Dibobe kommt 1896 nah Deutschland, tritt in Völkerschauen auf, heiratet eine Berlinerin, arbeitet bei der Berliner Hochbahn und fordert mehr Rechte für Afrikaner in Deutschland.

#BHM #BlachHistoryMonth #BHM2025 #BlackHistory #Geschichte #GermanHistory @blackvoices
https://zettundzett.wordpress.com/2024/07/15/martin-dibobe-vom-haeuptlingssohn-zum-zugfuehrer/

Martin Dibobe – vom Häuptlingssohn zum Zugführer

1896, im Schicksalsjahr von Martin Dibobes Leben, war seine Heimat Kamerun seit zwölf Jahren deutsche Kolonie. Reichskanzler Bismarck hatte im März 1884 das Gebiet im Knie von Afrika zum Protektora…

Zett-und-Zett

RedHawk concludes Black History Month spotlighting Barack Obama — the first African-American US President. Before presidency, Obama was a Chicago South Side community organizer, civil rights lawyer, Harvard Law Review President, Illinois Senator and US Senator. His policies included health care reform, economic stimulus, banking reform, consumer protections and ending “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” - allowing LGBTQ+ to serve openly in the military.

#BlackHistoryMonth #BHM2025 #Chicago #Obama #RedHawk

Barack Obama's 2008 Election – A Historic Milestone

Barack Obama's 2008 victory as the first Black U.S. president marked a pivotal point in history.

A step forward in the quest for equality. #BHM2025

"Brave Bessie" Coleman was the first African-American woman and first Native American to hold a pilot license, and was the first Black person to earn an international pilot's license, opening the door for many others.

#BlackHistoryMonth #BHM2025 #BHM #USHistory #Chicago #BessieColeman #RedHawk

Marsha P. Johnson – LGBTQ+ Rights Pioneer

Marsha P. Johnson's bravery during the Stonewall Uprising sparked a movement.

Her legacy as a Black trans activist continues to inspire. #BHM2025