Author Archives: toddpanther
Black Oral History Gets Archived
Supreme Court Kills Broadcaster
Yeah, yeah, yeah. But it’s only a matter of time. Aereo will be viewed one day as an important pioneer.
re: ABC News: So Let Me Get This Straight…….. :
Report: Sekou Kambui, Political Prisoner, Granted Parole
Just got this from Freedom Archives, sent via the email list of International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal:
POLITICAL PRISONER SEKOU KAMBUI TO BE RELEASED FROM PRISON
After 40 years incarcerated in Alabama State prisons, political prisoner Sekou Kambui (sn. William Turk) was granted parole on June 18, 2014. He will be in the process of transitioning to a halfway house over the next two weeks.
As a youth in the 1950’s and 60’s, Sekou was involved in the civil rights movement, and was a member of the Black Panther Party. Throughout his years in prison, he continued to organize for justice and prisoner rights.
Sekou’s parole success is a happy and unexpected victory for Sekou, his friends and supporters, and for all political prisoners who can gain renewed hope from Sekou’s upcoming release.
–Eve Goldberg, longterm friend and supporter.
Freedom Archives 522 Valencia Street San Francisco, CA 94110 415 863.9977 http://www.freedomarchives.org
Diane Nash, The Legend
Diane Nash, center, and C.T. Vivian, right.
Diane Nash and my friend, Troy Smith, who has taught his “Malcolm and Martin” undergraduate class for 20 years at different colleges and universities across Massachusetts.
Here’s what he had to say about this:
I was so moved today after watching the “Freedom Summer” documentary on PBS. To see Fannie Lou Hamer speak is to be inspired. As we approach the 50th anniversary of the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that was enacted on July, 2 of that year, I am reflecting on the many unsung heroines and heroes who risked and sacrificed their lives for our freedom.
It was truly an honor for me to meet civil rights legends Ms. Diane Nash and Reverend C.T. Vivian at the Syracuse University College of Law back on March 20-23, 2014 during an emotional and empowering civil rights conference. They were invited by the SU Cold Case Justice Initiative, which investigates unsolved homicides from the Civil Rights era.
This summer as I teach three courses focused on the Civil Rights Movement at North Shore, Springfield, and Cambridge College, I am thankful for the opportunity to work with students of such diverse cultural backgrounds, ages and experiences. When students share the growth that they have experienced from their work in my course it means a lot. I feel that I am doing what I should be doing and that is a blessing. Tomorrow my North Shore Community College class will debate the proposition that, “Racism continues to grow in the United States even after the Civil Rights Movement era.”
I dedicate my summer classes to those pioneers who made today’s opportunities possible, and to the community oriented students of today who will make the social transformations of tomorrow a reality.
Miscellaneous Baraka Campaign Photos
Prepping for the audiobook, and waiting to go up to the inauguration, so I want to use the photos I’m not using.
Ras and longtime activist Lawrence Hamm.
re: Rangel: So I Guess My Only Question Is……….
…………did he win/lose because of, or despite, this song? LOL! 🙂
Below is what he looked like when he beat Adam Clayton Powell.
And now:
And here’s a timeline.
I Will (As) Happily (As I Can) Wait Two Years For “Sherlock’s” Season 4……..
…..as long as Stephen Moffat keeps the quasi-promise he makes here. 🙂










