wscriven
wscriven
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432 posts
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wscriven · 3 months ago
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Can all the black men who love black women and vice versa reblog this so we can find each other?
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wscriven · 4 months ago
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Malcom X - The Contributions of The Black Woman!
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wscriven · 4 months ago
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wscriven · 4 months ago
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Stolen. Not from slavery. Not from sharecropping. From benefits paid for in blood
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wscriven · 4 months ago
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wscriven · 5 months ago
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wscriven · 6 months ago
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Dr. Amos Wilson
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wscriven · 6 months ago
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wscriven · 6 months ago
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To funny
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wscriven · 7 months ago
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wscriven · 7 months ago
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wscriven · 7 months ago
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These are hard times. As I try to stay positive I honestly don’t have good feelings about the future. I want to believe that things will be back to normal soon but I have a feeling things will not be back to normal anytime this year and this all could be way worse than we can imagine. I hope my feelings are wrong but I honestly feel like I am on #HellOnEarth
I am someone who seriously values my #FREEDOM in every way and right now it feels like we will never get that back. Something I was always thankful for but I never realized HOW MUCH I VALUED my FREEDOM!!!! I’m not trying to be negative but all I can is look back at my life and this world before things changed a couple of weeks ago. I feel like we’re in a real life horror movie. Right now I would do anything to go back to what it was before. If we thought we had problems and restrictions before…I feel like it’s about to get worse. What I would do right now to be able to travel to where I want in the world and be naked in the sun. It’s a sad thought to think those days are gone. WTF is going on???
There was never a time I’ve been so thankful not to have kids. I feel sorry for these kiddies. I feel they will never know what our “normal” was. They may never know what it is to party and be close to people. I had visions of this in my early 20s and I wanted to believe my mind was being dramatic but this doesn’t feel good. For the colored people I think we’re about to feel the pain of our ancestors. To all of the Black people who claimed they couldn’t be slaves because they would end their life before they were a slave…we bout to see….
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wscriven · 7 months ago
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for all my black follows, i think you'll need these for the next four years...
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especially black women. y'all are the true heroes of democracy. much love.
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wscriven · 7 months ago
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Did you know?
Professional Tai Chi Clothing on http://www.icnbuys.com/tai-chi-clothing-uniform
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wscriven · 8 months ago
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George Junius Stinney Jr. was, at age 14, the youngest person executed in the United States in the 20th century (1944) The boy was small for his age (5'1) so small, they had to stack books on the electric chair. 
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The photos at the end are George. (compare little George in this actual photo to the two white guys wearing hats) Because there was literally NO EVIDENCE AGAINST HIM (accused of murdering two white girls) …his conviction was posthumously vacated 70 years after his execution…
heart breaking!
#BlackHistoryAllYear
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wscriven · 8 months ago
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On the morning of September 4, 1957, fifteen-year-old Dorothy Counts set out on a harrowing path toward Harding High, where-as the first African American to attend the all-white school – she was greeted by a jeering swarm of boys who spat, threw trash, and yelled epithets at her as she entered the building.
Charlotte Observer photographer Don Sturkey captured the ugly incident on film, and in the days that followed, the searing image appeared not just in the local paper but in newspapers around the world.
People everywhere were transfixed by the girl in the photograph who stood tall, her five-foot-ten-inch frame towering nobly above the mob that trailed her. There, in black and white, was evidence of the brutality of racism, a sinister force that had led children to torment another child while adults stood by. While the images display a lot of evils: prejudice, ignorance, racism, sexism, inequality, it also captures true strength, determination, courage and inspiration.
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wscriven · 8 months ago
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