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The Official Black History Month Thread

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Cimarron

Member
In the spirit if black history month I want to start this thread so that people can post links and information about little known facts about about the history of those of African descent. Its all good that a lot folks may have there facts straight about popular Afro-American figures such as Malcom and Martin but if you want to share some info about men and women across who get little attention by the media and history books but they have contributed greatly to the struggle for blacks across the globe drop a little blurb or link to share your info with others!

I'll start this off by dropping a link about my peeps Cudjoe and the Maroons of Jamaica and thier struggle for freedom and independance in Jamaica.

http://www.jamaicans.com/info/maroons.htm

Folks spread the knowledge and the love! :)

Also non-blacks don't feel intimidated come on in and post any thoughts you may have. It's all about love and we are all family! :)
 
www.sevendust.com

sevendust.jpg


great rock/metal band with a black lead singer :D
 

belgurdo

Banned
Martin Luther King? Malcolm X? Bah. It's time to honor a new breed of black champions.

Such as porn goddess Dominique Simone.

dsimone1.jpg


She should get an award, this proud sista has been in so many films
 

MIMIC

Banned
conrice.jpg


Oh yeah....Condoleezza Rice was recently sworn in as the first African-American female Secretary of State of the United States. :D

(I hate that bitch...but I'll give her a chance)
 

Lonestar

I joined for Erin Brockovich discussion
I'll second the Sevendust mention, awesome band, awesome in Concert (well, the one I went to)
 

speedpop

Has problems recognising girls
I'll add my two cents since I am part Aboriginal (Australian native). There's quite a bit of hum drum about the entire fiasco that dates as recent as 40 years ago with families still being affected by it all. I have quite a few strong stances for and against the treatment of Aboriginals, their behaviour in public as well as certain other things.

Anyway if you're bored, here's two interesting links.

http://www.spinneypress.com.au/156_book_desc.html

http://www.aph.gov.au/library/intguide/SP/Stolen.htm

It can go deeper, like land rights for Aboriginals (whose tribal elders still believe that they should live and die on their respected area of land.. that it should be free from everyone else since all life returns to nature) or even the simple debate about alcohol. But we'll save those for a rainy day since most Australian history is boring :lol
 

Odoul

Member
belgurdo said:
Martin Luther King? Malcolm X? Bah. It's time to honor a new breed of black champions.

Such as porn goddess Dominique Simone.

dsimone1.jpg


She should get an award, this proud sista has been in so many films
Damn. Just damn. A nigga could survive without food for weeks off of those boys.
 

Days like these...

Have a Blessed Day
I've never heard sevendust but when i was a kid I used to listen to Bad Brains alot. They were an Africa American Hardcore/Punk band based out of DC. You guys into hardcore should check them out.
badbrains28tn.jpg
 

Cimarron

Member
Speed Pop very intresting link. I always thought that colonial Australians weren't quite nearly as fucked up as the colonies in the America's but I guess I was wrong. :( On a side note do the average aborigines consider themselves akin to black folk? I always did. I know they really aren't They are Australians not African but for being pretty much on the opposite side of the planet they look so much alike to so some "traditional" black folk its uncanny.
 

Days like these...

Have a Blessed Day
Damn, I was starting to think I was the only one who used to listen to them. Whatever you guys do avoid they're later stuff released in the 90's its pure garbage nothing like their early stuff. here is a link bad brains
Just a little edumacation on some brother who used to rock in the early 80's
 

pnjtony

Member
I went to George Washington Carver Elementary school Black History Month lasted untill about the beginning of April. Interesting stuff though. Who knew you could do all that with just peanuts?!
 

Blackace

if you see me in a fight with a bear, don't help me fool, help the bear!
21 more days... damn this month is short
 

Blackace

if you see me in a fight with a bear, don't help me fool, help the bear!
pnjtony said:
I went to George Washington Carver Elementary school Black History Month lasted untill about the beginning of April. Interesting stuff though. Who knew you could do all that with just peanuts?!

Well I just thought I would share a little fact I know... A black man created the traffic light... So for anyone not of color.... when you are waiting at a really long light you are now able to think "Damn N*****s" with cause.

And when can Jif give George his due? I mean for real, the brother created peanut butter... created it! before him there was no peanut butter, and after him there was!
 

Pimpwerx

Member
Better catch it while you can. It's almost over. :lol The shortest fucking month of the year. Should just call it, "I got your 40 acres right here bitch" Month and get it over with. :lol Sorry. I'm full of rum&cokes and pretty fucking bitter. PEACE.
 
Blackace said:
Well I just thought I would share a little fact I know... A black man created the traffic light... So for anyone not of color.... when you are waiting at a really long light you are now able to think "Damn N*****s" with cause.

And when can Jif give George his due? I mean for real, the brother created peanut butter... created it! before him there was no peanut butter, and after him there was!

http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/trfclt/

http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/#peanutbutter
 

Blackace

if you see me in a fight with a bear, don't help me fool, help the bear!
Now it is time to bless this thread, even after I found out that a black man didn't invent the traffic light, with a joke that my father told me about 4 years ago and it remains one of my favorite jokes I have ever heard.

A young kid in the south was starting to learn about famous black people in school. After his lesson he came home ate dinner with his mother, father and grandma as always, then went to bed. Before going to sleep he wondered about what he learned in school that day; then he made a wish that he really learn what it is was like to be black. The next morning to his shock he looked in the mirror and saw that he had became black! He rushed downstairs to find his father. "Pa! I'm black see!! I'm a real black boy!" His father not wanting to hear any of this rubbish gave him a gool old fashion ass whooping. Wiping his tears he went to find his mother. "Ma, look! I turned into a black boy last night!" His mother also not wanting to hear that out of her son's mouth opened a can of whoop ass on him much like his father did. After getting the belt from his mother and father he started to head back to his room. Then he ran into his grandma. "Grandma, look at me! I became black last night!" He said again. And again he got his third ass whooping. After getting his ass whooping his grandma said "I hope that teaches you something about speaking nonsense in this boy! Did you learn a lesson?"

The Boy said "Yeah. I have been black for less than an hour and I already hate white people!"
 

Gek54

Junior Member
MIMIC said:
conrice.jpg


Oh yeah....Condoleezza Rice was recently sworn in as the first African-American female Secretary of State of the United States. :D

(I hate that bitch...but I'll give her a chance)

...and why do you hate her?
 

Flynn

Member
Following the music theme, this month is a good time to appreciate just a few of the important contributions African Americans have made to American culture:

The creation of Jazz, Blues and Hip-hop
 

belgurdo

Banned
Pimpwerx said:
Better catch it while you can. It's almost over. :lol The shortest fucking month of the year. Should just call it, "I got your 40 acres right here bitch" Month and get it over with. :lol Sorry. I'm full of rum&cokes and pretty fucking bitter. PEACE.

Nah, it's justified. They gave us the shortest month AND we have to fight for recognition space with like 2 billion holidays...
 

Shinobi

Member
Blackace said:
Now it is time to bless this thread, even after I found out that a black man didn't invent the traffic light, with a joke that my father told me about 4 years ago and it remains one of my favorite jokes I have ever heard.

A young kid in the south was starting to learn about famous black people in school. After his lesson he came home ate dinner with his mother, father and grandma as always, then went to bed. Before going to sleep he wondered about what he learned in school that day; then he made a wish that he really learn what it is was like to be black. The next morning to his shock he looked in the mirror and saw that he had became black! He rushed downstairs to find his father. "Pa! I'm black see!! I'm a real black boy!" His father not wanting to hear any of this rubbish gave him a gool old fashion ass whooping. Wiping his tears he went to find his mother. "Ma, look! I turned into a black boy last night!" His mother also not wanting to hear that out of her son's mouth opened a can of whoop ass on him much like his father did. After getting the belt from his mother and father he started to head back to his room. Then he ran into his grandma. "Grandma, look at me! I became black last night!" He said again. And again he got his third ass whooping. After getting his ass whooping his grandma said "I hope that teaches you something about speaking nonsense in this boy! Did you learn a lesson?"

The Boy said "Yeah. I have been black for less than an hour and I already hate white people!"

:lol :lol :lol
 

Triumph

Banned
Everyone should check http://downhillbattle.org/eyes/ to see if a screening of the documentary "Eyes on the Prize" is playing near you. I'll be seeing it tomorrow evening in the ATL, there are dozens of screenings planned, organized by downhillbattle.org, the same guys who organized the "Grey Tuesday" download of Dangermouse's "Grey Album" last year.

Here's a little info on the documentary:

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Eyes on the Prize is an award-winning documentary series that many consider a foundation of our collective memory of the Civil Rights Movement. It's the most vidid portrayal of the civil rights movement and for millions of people, it's the foundation for understanding what happened. Makers of Eyes on the Prize brought together extensive historical footage from the period and featured ordinary people who helped change the course of history for the better. No other book or movie has comprehensively brought together this much footage or has become a more common reference on the civil rights movement.

So why has Eyes on the Prize been unavailable for the past 10 years? Copyright restrictions. For example, the film includes footage of a group of people singing "Happy Birthday" to Martin Luther King. Incredibly, "Happy Birthday" is under copyright and some rights holders believe that they should be given licensing fees if the song appears in any film, even a documentary. (Yes that's correct, "Happy Birthday" is restricted under copyright--so if you've ever sung it in a restaurant or a park, you could literally be breaking the law.)

But "Happy Birthday" is just the beginning. Eyes on the Prize is made up of news footage, photographs, songs and lyrics from the Civil Rights Movement that are tangled up in a web of licensing restrictions. Many of these licenses had expired by 1995 and the film's production company, Blackside, could not afford the exorbitant costs of renewing them. "Eyes on the Prize" has been unavailable to the public ever since.

Copyright law has expanded out of control, and its public mission is no longer being served. Copyright was originally designed to encourage creativity and innovation--much like patent law. But for the past 50 years multi-national corporations like Disney and the major record labels have aggressively lobbied Congress to expand and expand and expand the reach of copyright law. Instead of lasting 20 years and requiring registration (like patents do) copyright has become automatic and now corporate copyrights last 90 years.

In addition to the excessive 90 year copyright, corporations have created a legal environment that effectively strips the free speech rights of documentary filmmakers and artists to excerpt copyrighted works for their productions. Nowadays even incidental copyrighted material appearing in a documentary (e.g. a television that's visible while people are talking) is being tossed on the cutting room floor because filmmakers are threatened with lawsuits. Copyright has become so twisted that it now severely restricts innovation, creativity and speech rather than encouraging it. In this case, our unworkable copyright law has kept "Eyes on the Prize" out of homes and classrooms, depriving us of a crucial historical record.

Last week Lawrence Guyot, a prominent civil rights leader with the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, told the Washington Post, "This is analogous to stopping the circulation of all the books about Martin Luther King, stopping the circulation of all the books about Malcolm X, stopping the circulation of books about the founding of America... I would call upon everyone who has access to 'Eyes on the Prize' to openly violate any and all laws regarding its showing."

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

It's incredible footage if you've never seen it before. If there's a showing near you, plese try and attend regardless of your heritage(I'm the whitest man alive, pigment wise, and I still think this is the most important documentary I've ever seen).
 

Uter

Member
Raoul Duke said:
So why has Eyes on the Prize been unavailable for the past 10 years? Copyright restrictions. For example, the film includes footage of a group of people singing "Happy Birthday" to Martin Luther King. Incredibly, "Happy Birthday" is under copyright and some rights holders believe that they should be given licensing fees if the song appears in any film, even a documentary. (Yes that's correct, "Happy Birthday" is restricted under copyright--so if you've ever sung it in a restaurant or a park, you could literally be breaking the law.)

Royalties are only due for commercial uses of the song, which include using the song in tv shows, movies, stage shows, playing or singing it for profit, and public performances. The law specifies this as "at a place open to the public, or at any place where a substantial number of persons outside of a normal circle of a family and its social acquaintances is gathered.". So I could sing it without infringment in a park or restaurant if the substantial number of persons gathered were friends and family.

Raoul Duke said:
Last week Lawrence Guyot, a prominent civil rights leader with the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, told the Washington Post, "This is analogous to stopping the circulation of all the books about Martin Luther King, stopping the circulation of all the books about Malcolm X, stopping the circulation of books about the founding of America... I would call upon everyone who has access to 'Eyes on the Prize' to openly violate any and all laws regarding its showing."

No, it is not analogous to stopping the circulation of books, this is a ludicrous statement. Since when are "all the books" about MLK, Malcom X, or the founding of America in a similiar violation of ANY laws? It is amusing to note the call to openly violate "any and all laws regarding its showing.", a call which is illegal in and of itself *. Why make that call for illegal acts to begin with, instead of *gasp* simply doing whatever is necessary to have funds DONATED to pay for the licenses in question? But that would be too hard wouldn't it, better to turn it into a neverending political point of contention. Allowing or encouraging donations isn't even an option considered by those involved in this project...

* Assuming that this call does meet the "clear and present danger" test, it would it illegal incitement of criminal conduct. "First, the speech must be directed to inciting lawless action. Second, the advocacy must be calling for imminent breaking of the law, rather than illegal conduct at some future time. Finally, the advocacy must be likely to produce such conduct.".
 

Kave_Man

come in my shame circle
Blackace said:
Shortest month of the year

When I was younger I used to be so mad about that. I figured it was the white man's way of limiting our own special time. :lol
 

Loki

Count of Concision
Kave_Man said:
When I was younger I used to be so mad about that. I figured it was the white man's way of limiting our own special time. :lol

As a white man, I can tell you that that's exactly why we did it-- in fact, if you check the minutes of our last few meetings, you'll see that we discussed this very issue no fewer than three times. ;) :p
 

Uter

Member
Kave_Man said:
When I was younger I used to be so mad about that. I figured it was the white man's way of limiting our own special time. :lol

From your avatar I can see that you take your black pride seriously. :lol :lol
 

Beezy

Member
Who are the black members on GAF? From this thread I assumed that these members are black:

Beezy
Belgurdo
Bishoptl
Black Ace
Cimarron
Hobbitx
Kave_Man
Konex
lordmrw
Orin
Pimpwrex
Shinobi

I also belong on that list. Anyone know the rest?
 

Triumph

Banned
Beezy said:
Who are the black members on GAF? From this thread I assumed that these members are black:

Cimarron
Belgurdo
Black Ace
Kave_Man

I also belong on that list. Anyone know the rest?
Believe it or not, Konex and Orin are black. I know, I know.
 

speedpop

Has problems recognising girls
Cimarron said:
Speed Pop very intresting link. I always thought that colonial Australians weren't quite nearly as fucked up as the colonies in the America's but I guess I was wrong. :( On a side note do the average aborigines consider themselves akin to black folk? I always did. I know they really aren't They are Australians not African but for being pretty much on the opposite side of the planet they look so much alike to so some "traditional" black folk its uncanny.
I'm not too sure entirely, since their history on Australia dates back to roughly 15,000 years ago, it could be more. Essentially they believe that they were created on the land through their stories of the Dreamtime.

There is a theory that they did travel from Africa, through China and led down to Australia. But it's really too hard to tell whether or not it's true because apparently they found some human bones that predated quite a lot of the oldest bones found in and around Africa.

But to answer your question better, most traditional Aboriginals believe that they are only cousins to the Maori's (from New Zealand and various other Polynesian nations) and the Papua New Guinean's (who are directly north of Aust. and east of Indonesia). However most Aboriginals in the 10-30 age range will call anyone black a mutual brother. It's just natural.
 

hobbitx

Member
Beezy said:
Who are the black members on GAF? From this thread I assumed that these members are black:

Cimarron
Belgurdo
Black Ace
Kave_Man

I also belong on that list. Anyone know the rest?

Hey, Hobbitx is black! :D

Since were kinda on the subject, has anyone seen that new TV-One network channel? I had heard about this new channel coming out to compete with BET and now that I've seen it, it's pretty awesome. It's kinda lacking as far as original stuff, but I have to say getting this channel has made for one awesome BHM gift compared to the garbage BET airs. They have classic Apollo boo-fests, :lol

Oh, and can we get some Milestone Comics love in this thread?
 

belgurdo

Banned
hobbitx said:
Oh, and can we get some Milestone Comics love in this thread?

I miss the original racially-fueled Static series. ;_;

Hardware too, despite the fact that he was just an angry black Iron Man ;_; ;_;
 

hobbitx

Member
Right now I'm trying to get caught up with the original Static, Icon and Blood Syndicate were my main thing. I just recently got reacquainted with BS, man was that some good stuff. How is Hardware? Is it mostly hardcore sci-fi, or does it have a good mix of drama and action like the others?
 

belgurdo

Banned
hobbitx said:
Right now I'm trying to get caught up with the original Static, Icon and Blood Syndicate were my main thing. I just recently got reacquainted with BS, man was that some good stuff. How is Hardware? Is it mostly hardcore sci-fi, or does it have a good mix of drama and action like the others?

I had only read a handful of issues because most of what I had was second hand stock from my brother, and Milestone was long dead by the time he gave them to me, but I recall that the story was fairly serious. A lot of brooding on Hardware's part, although there was some character development and romance in there too, and the action was very tech oriented
 

bud

Member
MIMIC said:
conrice.jpg


Oh yeah....Condoleezza Rice was recently sworn in as the first African-American female Secretary of State of the United States. :D

(I hate that bitch...but I'll give her a chance)

One of the ugliest woman I have ever seen in my life.
 

lordmrw

Member
Beezy said:
Who are the black members on GAF? From this thread I assumed that these members are black:

Cimarron
Belgurdo
Black Ace
Kave_Man

I also belong on that list. Anyone know the rest?


Really funny question to ask, but I'm black too.
 
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