Monday, January 16, 2012

Was The Civil Rights Movement A Trick To Get Black People To Demand Temporary 'Privileges' Instead of Their Natural Rights?

The Billionaire Oligarchy and the Civil Rights Movement

The major philanthropic foundations of America (primarily the Rockefeller Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Carnegie Corporation, and a host of others), represent the interests of the most highly concentrated sources of power in the world. The foundations are run by and for major elite interests, who simultaneously control the economic and political apparatus of entire nations and the world economy. 

The foundations were founded in the early 20th century as a means of these same elites to steer social progress, and ultimately undertake projects of social engineering. It was these very same foundations that were the principle financiers of the eugenics movement, which gave birth to scientific racism and ultimately led to the Holocaust
 
In short, these foundations had one principle aim: to socially engineer society according to the wishes of their owners. Through the banks and corporations these elites owned, they came to dominate the global economy. Through the think tanks they established, they steered politics and imperial foreign policy, and through the foundations, they engineered ‘culture’ and co-opted social movements into social engineering projects. Thus, every threat to the established social order would become an asset in its advancement and legitimization.   Andrew Gavin Marshall

9 comments:

D. Smith said...

So one could say that the granting of privileges via the civil rights movement was to basically increase membership in systems that the same elitists were using human resources for, and the more cash cows you can milk (read: tax) the better. For them anyway.

CNu said...

That's more like it!!!

The post-colonial counter-insurgency that neutered and reduced the Black Power movement to the black studies movement in higher education was a work of malevolent genius.

A memetic symphony that has played itself out over the past 40 years with the result of having shifted revolutionary Black values into the militarist, materialist, corporatocracy we see at work today.

Denmark Vesey said...

Deeeeee Smifffff!

What up my man?

The granting of "privileges" is simply consideration for the contract negros are suckered into with the US corporation.

The government provides certain ... privileges ... in exchange for those privileges, the Plantation Negro forfeits certain rights.

The Plantation negro effectively becomes the indentured property of the US corporation ... bound not by the Law of The Land .. but by corporate policy (Uniform Commercial Code).

In short, nearly a half million black people are in prison ... not because they violated The Law, but because they violated corporate policy.

They are being punished like bad employees.

The Plantation negro relationship with the government is like the employee to the corporation.

When his relationship to the government should be like the shareholder to the corporation.

The "Civil Rights" bullshit and the 14th Amendment established the status of black people in this country to that of essentially government employees.

makheru bradley said...

“The post-colonial counter-insurgency that neutered and reduced the Black Power movement to the black studies movement in higher education was a work of malevolent genius.”

The Black Power movement was not reduced to “the black studies movement.” That statement is as simplistic as it is inaccurate. The demand for Black Studies in the university was just one interpretation of Black Power.

With all due respect to Richard Wright…

“In 1954, novelist and intellectual Richard Wright published Black Power, a provocative book in which Wright offered his reflections on his travels to the Gold Coast as it was in the process of becoming the independent nation of Ghana. The term "Black Power" that Wright used to signify the possibilities of freedom and development for Africans, as well as Pan-African cultural connections, would become a familiar notion to people of African descent around the world, who identified with its potent message for liberation and cultural revitalization. In so doing, Wright opened a new chapter in the long history of political and intellectual dialogue across the African Diaspora-one that revealed both the convergences and ruptures between people of African descent on the continent and in Diaspora.”

…any analysis of Black Power begins with Kwame Ture, then known as Stokely Carmichael, and Mukasa Dada, then known as Willie Ricks. Early in my activist career I came under the tutelage of Baba Mukasa, and it was through him and Dr. Cleveland Sellers that I met Brother Kwame. For both of these brothers Pan-Afrikanism became the logical extension of Black Power.

http://blackactivism.wordpress.com/2010/03/04/134/

https://sankofa.com/videobookscafe/products/Stokely-Speaks%3A-From-Black-Power-to-Pan%252dAfricanism-.html

Dr. Maulana Karenga expressed Black Power through Cultural Nationalism. Huey Newton and Bobby Seale expressed it through Revolutionary Nationalism. For Amiri Baraka and the organizers of the Gary Convention it meant independent Black politics.

http://www.indianahistory.org/our-collections/collection-guides/national-black-political-convention-collection.pdf

Our Esteemed Ancestor Martin L. King had his interpretation.

http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=1139

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=podSc5KA6RA

The quest for Black Power was a vast movement that cannot be reduced to one tangent. And of course “for every action there’s an equal and opposite reaction.”

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3729458480013375211#

“A memetic symphony that has played itself out over the past 40 years with the result of having shifted revolutionary Black values into the militarist, materialist, corporatocracy we see at work today.”

LOL. There’s no better example of the “militarist, materialist, corporatocracy” than the administration of The Perfect Proxy you were duped into voting for. Your "buyers remorse" is quite comical.

Denmark Vesey said...

The Black Power movement was not reduced to “the black studies movement.” That statement is as simplistic as it is inaccurate. The demand for Black Studies in the university was just one interpretation of Black Power." MB

Either way.

It aint amount to shit.

All race based thinking falls apart.

CNu said...

There’s no better example of the “militarist, materialist, corporatocracy” than the administration of The Perfect Proxy you were duped into voting for. Your "buyers remorse" is quite comical.

Geriatric jiggaboos playing dress-up and giving themselves preposterous and unearned honorifics at their pathetic and underattended afro-trekkie conventions - with nothing useful to show for 40 years of incompetent effort - is vastly more comical.

Denmark Vesey said...

LOL.

50 year old Jigaboo Know-It-Alls with tits ... stuck in the basement ... smoking cheap weed should know.

makheru bradley said...

"All race based thinking falls apart."

Please advise, when did the Nation of Islam under the leadership of Minister Farrakhan fall apart?

The Garvey Movement was driven by race-based thinking. It did not fall apart. It was torn asunder by J. Edgar Hoover and his negro lackeys.

makheru bradley said...

with nothing useful to show for 40 years of incompetent effort -

So incompetent, in fact, that the US government declared war on that entire movement.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d2xIkvCkjac&feature=related

Dumb-ass government, always wasting the tax-payers money.