Black Power Leader Targeted in the FBI’s COINTELPRO Spent Over Thirty Years in Prison For Crimes He Did Not Commit

H. Rap Brown was charged for instigating a riot that never took place, and was sent to a Supermax prison after being convicted of a murder to which someone else confessed [This article is special for Black History Month. See previous CAM articles for B...

https://murica.website/2026/02/black-power-leader-targeted-in-the-fbis-cointelpro-spent-over-thirty-years-in-prison-for-crimes-he-did-not-commit/

Black Power Leader Targeted in the FBI’s COINTELPRO Spent Over Thirty Years in Prison For Crimes He Did Not Commit – The USA Potato

The Afterlife of Malcolm X: how the civil rights icon influenced America

In the year in which the groundbreaking activist would have turned 100, a new book looks at the enduring impact of his words and how they resonate today

The Guardian
Elaine Brown is still on mission she has created 79-units of affordable housing in West Oakland. At age 80.

Brown, the former chair of the Black Panther Party, is now leading an $80 million affordable housing project in West Oakland. She is the creator of the project, an activist, a writer, and also a singer.
https://www.becauseofthemwecan.com/blogs/news/former-black-panther-elaine-brown-leading-affordable-80m-housing-project-west-oakland
#BlackHistoryMatters #Blackpowermovement
#BlackMastodon
First Woman Chair of Black Panther Party, Is Now Leading $80M Affordable Housing Project in Oakland - Because of Them We Can

Elaine Brown is on a mission to create affordable housing in West Oakland! Brown, the former chair of the Black Panther Party, is now leading an $80 million affordable housing project in West Oakland. She is the creator of the project, an activist, a writer, and also a singer. In 1974, she became the only […]

Because of Them We Can
Cintamu Sepahit Topi Miring ( Slowed & Reverb ) Mengkane Full Bass🎧

YouTube

"#Panther offers the extraordinary little-told story of the first year the #VotingRightsAct was put to the test, in 1966, deep in the heart of the Jim Crow South. That election would reverberate across the nation, from Alabama to Oakland to the halls of Congress, changing the course of history through to the #VotingRights battles of today."

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/reckon-radio/id1420215603?i=1000619092556

#BlackPower #BlackPowerMovement #BlackPanthers #BlackLiberation #CivilRightsMovement #BlackHistory #USHistory

#ReckonRadio

‎Reckon Radio: Panther: Blueprint for Black Power on Apple Podcasts

‎Show Reckon Radio, Ep Panther: Blueprint for Black Power - Jul 2, 2023

Apple Podcasts

"We look at #LowndesCountyAndTheRoadToBlackPower, a remarkable new #documentary that shows how a small rural community in Alabama organized during the #CivilRightsMovement to challenge #WhiteSupremacy and systematic #disenfranchisement of Black residents, and would become, in some ways, the first iteration of the Black Panther Party."

#BlackHistory #BlackPower #BlackPowerMovement #VotingRights #cinema #AmericanCinema

#SamPollard #GeetaGandbhir

#DemocracyNow

https://www.democracynow.org/2022/12/12/lowndes_county_road_to_black_power

“Lowndes County and the Road to Black Power”: New Film on Radical Voting Activism in 1960s Alabama

We look at “Lowndes County and the Road to Black Power,” a remarkable new documentary that shows how a small rural community in Alabama organized during the civil rights movement to challenge white supremacy and systematic disenfranchisement of Black residents, and would become, in some ways, the first iteration of the Black Panther Party. Lowndes County went from having no registered Black voters in 1960 — despite being 80% Black — to being the birthplace in 1965 of the Lowndes County Freedom Organization, a radical political party that brought together grassroots activists and members of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Co-directors Sam Pollard and Geeta Gandbhir tell Democracy Now! the Lowndes County story has not gotten the attention it deserves compared to other chapters of the civil rights movement, in part because its lessons are “more threatening” to the political establishment. “It seems like it has been deliberately left out of the narrative of history,” says Gandbhir. We also speak with Reverend Wendell Paris, a former SNCC field secretary featured in the film, who says the organizing in Lowndes County reflected an understanding by residents that “they needed to band together to defend themselves.”

Democracy Now!