..just a photographer from the DMV area. All images shown on this blog are my own so feel free to REBLOG. I'm always looking for people to work with. DM or email me: [email protected] w: WWW.JEVONMICHAELSFOTO.COM
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I'm too exhausted to explain my soul to someone again.
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Every Black skin ain't kin.
If you stand for Black power, you must draw the line.
There is no future in dragging dead weight.
We cannot build empires with those who worship our enemies, mock our struggle, or sell out our future.
Separate. Strategize. Mobilize.
Garvey said it plain: "Up, you mighty race — accomplish what you will!"
That means cutting off the cowardly, the comfortable, and the compromised.
We’re not here to convince—
We’re here to conquer.
Race First. Nation Always.
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new photos of roland garros’s 2025 champion coco gauff!
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The first genocide of the 20th century committed took place in Namibia (not Germany) where German military forces massacred between 50,000-80,000 Herero people and and 10,000 - 24,000 Nama people.
The Herero and Namaqua Genocide happened between 1904 and 1907 in German South West Africa (GSWA) which is currently known as Namibia.
Just imagine where we would be if the world and humanity would have nipped genocide in the bud. We could have prevented the Holocaust of the Jews, as well as all the subsequent genocides and holocausts since--including those happening now in the Congo, Palestine and Sudan.
Images and videos of survivor's descendant by @ajplus
Acknowledgment of Namibian Genocide by Florida State Representative @DotieJoseph
Last commemorative image by @parliamentnamibia
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In 1946, German-born physicist Albert Einstein taught a class at Lincoln University, an HBCU in Pennsylvania. At the time, he was living in Princeton, New Jersey, and had become a U.S. citizen in 1940 after fleeing Nazi Germany. While at Lincoln, the Nobel Prize-winning scientist spoke out against racial segregation, stating: “The separation of the races is not a disease of colored people. It is a disease of white people. I do not intend to be quiet about it.” Albert Einstein did not face serious consequences for speaking out against racism, but his activism did attract attention from the U.S. government. He was a known advocate for civil rights and had connections with the NAACP, including a friendship with W.E.B. Du Bois and Paul Robeson. Because of his outspoken views—particularly his criticism of American racism and his association with progressive and leftist causes—the FBI monitored him and kept a substantial file on him. However, Einstein was already an internationally respected figure by that time, and his reputation as a scientific genius largely shielded him from major repercussions. Unlike many activists of the era who were blacklisted or harassed, he remained free to continue his work and advocacy.
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