I told y’all the “socialism isn’t Black” psyop was coming 😅
Recommended reading: “Collective Courage: A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practices” by Jessica Gordon Nembhard
Release Day!
In the Worldwide Family of Militant Women - Arlene Eisen @Arlene519
A riveting memoir/social history of struggle over turbulent decades, with lessons for today’s liberation movements—from the mountains of Peru and the jungles of Vietnam to the revolutionary projects of Cuba, China, the USSR, and back to struggles inside the US.
Iskra Books invites you to join The Worldwide Family of Militant Women!
FREE PDF, and print edition available: iskrabooks.org/worldwide-fam…
This is Linda Davis, a special education teacher who was killed in a car crash involving ICE agents
The agents didn’t render aid.
She was minutes from her school and bled to death in her car.
They didn’t offer aid to Renee Good or Alex Pretti either.
Say her name too.
Che Guevara once said “The walls of the educational system must come down. Education should not be a privilege, so the children of those who have money can study.”
This is why we provide what we publish for free in pdf and otherwise as cheaply as possible.
“Migration: it went too far, it was destabilizing,” says the Secretary of State who backed the coup in Honduras which led to mass violence and a surge of more than 500k Hondurans to the U.S.
Constance Baker Motley, part of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund team, was often the first Black lawyer and the first woman to argue in Southern courts. In 1966, she become the first Black woman appointed as a federal judge. I was honored to serve as her law clerk in 1980-1981.
This #BlackHistoryMonth, we recognize Constance Baker Motley, a trailblazer in CT and the Civil Rights Movement. She was the first Black woman to argue before the Supreme Court and wrote the original complaint in Brown v. Board of Education, which is why I support legislation to honor her with a Congressional Gold Medal.