Happy #BlackHistoryMonth !

I still haven't made it to Black history yet. I'm still on white US history.

Q: Why is it OK for Black folk to like the Black Panthers, but white folk can't like the klan? Black supremacy is just as bad as white supremacy! Why the double standard?

A: Black folk know white US history, so they know that the Black Panthers were not Black supremacists.

(At this point, half of the Black folk reading this just involuntarily said "COINTELPRO!" out loud).

1/N

#BlackMastodon

Most of what you know about the Black Panthers, is a lie. It is intentional disinformation, created and circulated by the FBI, with the assistance and complicity of newspapers and local police. This disinfo was spread as part of the FBI's counter intelligence program (COINTELPRO).

This is not some unfounded conspiracy, this is documented and now admitted by the FBI.

The Black Panthers were the good guys, and the FBI were the cartoonishly evil Bond villain bad guys. Seriously.

The Black Panthers wanted to reduce racism and increase collaboration between the races, and the FBI wanted to increase racism and reduce partnership between the races. 🙂🙃

If you've been reading along this Black history month, you might agree that these things are good:

* Reduce racism
* Systemically prevent another Tyre Nichols
* End false convictions
* Feed all school kids nutritious breakfast and lunch
* Affordable health care for all
* Access to better education for all
* Lower unemployment
* Get poor Black, white, Latinx, indigenous, and Asian workers to work together to assert their rights
* Safer infra and public transportation for all
* Stop wage theft

Regardless of your race or political philosophy, think about which of these above points you would disagree with. No, seriously. Read it again, and find one that doesn't make sense to you. It's okay if you don't agree with them all. 👍🏿

Now look at the Black Panthers' 10 point plan from 1966:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten-Point_Program_(Black_Panther_Party)

Seriously, see how many of these points you disagree with. And it's honestly OK if you don't agree with them all!

Notice the lack of Black supremacy or calls for pogroms.

Ten-Point Program (Black Panther Party) - Wikipedia

The Black Panthers provided free breakfast for poor school kids. ♥️👍🏿 Today, the US has a Federal free breakfast program. Black people that know white US history, know where that program started.

The FBI felt so threatened by the Black Panthers' school breakfast program, that they dedicated police resources to violently destroying it.

Imagine. Trained FBI agents, instructing grown men to urinate on Black children's food.

https://www.history.com/news/free-school-breakfast-black-panther-party

How the Black Panthers’ Breakfast Program Both Inspired and Threatened the Government

The Panthers’ popular breakfast programs put pressure on political leaders to feed children before school.

HISTORY

The Black Panthers also provided free clinics and vaccination for kids. ♥️👍🏿

“First you have free breakfasts, then you have free medical care, then you have free bus rides, and soon you have FREEDOM!” Fred Hampton.

https://time.com/5937647/black-panther-medical-clinics-history-school-covid-19/

How did the Black Panthers, with relatively zero funding, set up free health clinics for Black people, where the government of the richest nation on earth could not?

These are uncomfortable questions, most easily answered by destroying those clinics.

With Free Medical Clinics and Patient Advocacy, the Black Panthers Created a Legacy in Community Health That Still Exists Amid COVID-19

The Black Panthers' community health services grew out of a deep distrust in minority communities towards the traditional health care system.

Time

To this day, if you find a white trades person over the age of 50, and ask them what "It's not race, it's class" means, many can tell you. If you ask them "Who is Fred Hampton" many can tell you. If you ask them what a "rainbow coalition" was, many can tell you.

Why does an old, white, union steel worker in Detroit know who Fred Hampton is?

I've pointed out many times, in many threads, that the trope that "poor white people support Trump more" is not supported by data. It's more disinformation

83% of the US population lives in cities. Don't drive to some tiny town in Idaho and point to a poor racist white person. Most poor white people in this country live in places like Los Angeles, or Detroit or Houston, or Chicago or New York.

Jan 6 was the perfect example of the rich, white, racist phenomenon. Stop blaming Trump on poor white people.

https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/january-6-busts-key-myth-about-trump-supporters-rioters-ncna1287105

January 6 busts a key myth about Trump supporters (and rioters)

January 6 busts a key myth about Donald Trump supporters (and rioters) who attacked the Capitol in 2021 and tried to prevent Biden from becoming president

NBC News

Since the '60s, it has been true that rich white people are *more* racist than poor white people.

What happened in the 60s and 70s? What conversations intersected Black liberation with labor rights? What's the intersection between Detroit auto workers, Pittsburgh steelers workers, and Cali farm workers?

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=QqBr-A58YGo

The Black Panthers didn't start the labor movement, and they weren't the only anti-racists pushing for solidarity. But they left an indelible mark on working together.

Judas and the Black Messiah | "Common Interest" Exclusive Clip | HBO Max

YouTube

That scene is from a great movie titled "Judas and the Black Messiah." This Black history month, don't watch Black trauma movies designed for the white eye. They all have a beautiful redemption arc for the white racist at the end. They reduce racism to individual barbaric racists while downplaying systemic racism.

Don't Watch garbage like "Green Book." Watch this instead:
https://youtu.be/sSjtGqRXQ9Y

Why is the movie titled "Judas and the Black Messiah?" You need to know white US history to get it.

JUDAS AND THE BLACK MESSIAH - Official Trailer

YouTube

The Black Panthers were not Black supremacists, although there were Black supremacists in the 60s. There are still Black supremacists today! No one cares much, because they have no power, and Black people don't listen to them. They mostly just spout nonsense at you while you're waiting for the bus. 🤷🏿‍♂️

The FBI did not care much about Black supremacists in the 60s either.

What they feared most, was the rise of any "Black Messiah," who could lead Black people.

https://shec.ashp.cuny.edu/items/show/814

The FBI Sets Goals for COINTELPRO · SHEC: Resources for Teachers

Primary resources, classroom activities, graphic organizers and lesson plans produced by the American Social History Project designed for use in K-12 classrooms.

To prevent this "Black Messiah" from rising, the FBI established a whole division to spread lies to tarnish the reputation *any* charismatic Black civil rights leader. This is why what most Americans know about the Black Panthers is so wildly different from the truth.

If the attempts to discredit the Black leader did not work, the FBI would create false arrests and false imprisonment. If that still did not work, assassination plans were drawn up.

Being a good leader could be a capital offense.

The reason so many Black people believe that the FBI assassinated MLK, is because they know white US history.

They know that COINTELPRO assassinated smaller Black Messiahs for doing things like providing free lunch and clinics, and getting white steel workers to take down confederate flags. And they know that the FBI considered MLK to be the biggest Black Messiah.

US high schools teach MLK's "I have a dream" speech, but not what the deputy director of the FBI said after seeing that speech...

"Personally, I believe in the light of King's powerful demagogic speech yesterday he stands head and shoulders over all other Negroid leaders put together when it comes to influencing great masses of Negroes. We must mark him now, if we have not done so before, as the most dangerous Negro of the future in this Nation from the standpoint of communism, the Negro, and national security."

FBI Deputy Director William Sullivan, after watching the "I have a Dream" speech.

The Black Panthers were revolutionary, but not because they had Black leather jackets and berets and shotguns. They were revolutionary because they were armed with breakfast, and vaccines, and the truth.

They weren't revolutionary because they wanted to "kill white people." They didn't want to kill white people, not even the racist ones. They wanted white people, even the racist ones, to see that racism is a tool used to oppress all people.

Be deeply suspicious of anyone that doesn't want you to know the truth about Black civil rights leaders.

Hiding the truth from you is an attempt to control not just Black people, but to control you as well.

If the Black Panthers were truly so terrible, we should be able to see the truth of their actions and their impacts, and judge for ourselves.

After reading this thread, you should understand why there seemed to be so few "Barack Obamas" in the 60s.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ueMNqdB1QIE&t=10m45s

Obama's 2004 DNC keynote speech

YouTube

🤔I realize I'm still being too subtle.

If Obama had given this same speech in 1964, about the same number of poor white people would have been inspired (or infuriated), as happened when he gave the speech in 2004, or if he gave it in 2024. That hasn't changed.

But the *system* of US policing in 1964, through the FBI and local police forces, would have set in motion a concerted and intentional plan to destroy his life. If that failed, they would have tried to falsely imprison him, or worse.

The *people* aren't significantly less racist than they were in the 60s. What's changed is that a few of the *systemic leverage points* have shifted in favor of justice and equity.

It's not all good news. Other important systemic leverage points have shifted away from justice and equity, and towards cruelty and fascism.

We can improve the US and the world more for all of us, by focusing on these leverage points and making sure that all the important ones land on the side of justice and equity.

@mekkaokereke thank you for these threads.
I'm just a clueless Irish guy who spent the first 20 years of his life on an island that was approximately 100% white.

But I've learned a little about the shameful history of racism of my country folk over the years, and I've grown out of believing I get a pass when people talk about racist white behaviour just because I'm Irish.

But it's not just books and movies, it's threads like this that I'm learning from, all the time.

@ConorMahood @mekkaokereke Great comment, Connor. I'm Irish-descent in California. We came here as poor immigrants and became the police force in San Francisco, that granted us "honorary whiteness." One of the first acts of the newly empowered Irish was to support the racist, Chinese Exclusion Act. It's a vile and shameful moment in the history of the Irish Diaspora. https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/chinese-exclusion-act
Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)

EnlargeDownload Link Citation: An act to execute certain treaty stipulations relating to the Chinese, May 6, 1882; Enrolled Acts and Resolutions of Congress, 1789-1996; General Records of the United States Government; Record Group 11; National Archives View All Pages in the National Archives Catalog View Transcript The Chinese Exclusion Act was approved on May 6, 1882. It was the first significant law restricting immigration into the United States. In the spring of 1882, the Chinese Exclusion Act was passed by Congress and signed by President Chester A. Arthur.

National Archives

@greenhombre @mekkaokereke Hey coincidence, funny enough I'm watching Warrior at the moment and it talks specifically about Irish in America supporting the Exclusion Act.

Irish people tend to believe we are somehow predisposed against racism but the truth hurts.

@ConorMahood That's an amazing show. This history is not taught to California children. I'm currently reading a brutal book about actual California history. Damn. https://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/nebraska/9780803224803/
Murder State

In the second half of the nineteenth century, the Euro-American citizenry of California carried out mass genocide against the Native population of their stat...

Nebraska Press
@greenhombre oh wow, that looks interesting and devastating