Common Folk Collective » justice http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog Common Folk Doing Uncommon Things Tue, 15 Mar 2016 17:08:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.9 Recent Read: Revolutionary Suicide by Huey P. Newton http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/2013/01/recent-read-revolutionary-suicide-by-huey-p-newton/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=recent-read-revolutionary-suicide-by-huey-p-newton http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/2013/01/recent-read-revolutionary-suicide-by-huey-p-newton/#comments Tue, 15 Jan 2013 20:59:20 +0000 http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/?p=2686 revolutionary suicide

Cover photo from poster hanging in Black Panthers office with bullet hole from police

There’s reactionary suicide, when you can’t take the pressure from outside forces so you end it all. Then there’s revolutionary suicide, when you refuse to accept the pressure from outside forces and in order to end it’s injustice, you are willing to end it all.

Cultivating this as his ethos, Huey P. Newton gives us insight into the birth of the real Black Panthers, media conception be damned. He touches on working with White radicals (but oftentimes clashing with their inherent drug use and in/effectiveness, the Black Panthers had a zero tolerance drug policy), adamantly adhering to the letter of the law (and yes, this includes bearing arms, he would keep law books on his person), betrayal… (he doesn’t mince words about Eldridge Cleaver), and how the America of today, that stands so proudly behind its constitution (though effective at the time) is profoundly different from it’s inception and those differences now put many, especially ‘minorities,’ at an inherent disadvantage-

“What I wanted to show was that black people and other minorities in this country had been betrayed by the American constitution, the legal foundation of government. I stressed that the united states of America came into being at a time when the nation comprised a narrow strip of land on the eastern seaboard and whose population was small and homogeneous both racially and culturally. The economic system then was different, too—essentially agricultural. A small population and fertile land meant that people were able to advance according to their motivation and ability. In this way, democratic capitalism flourished in the new nation.”

He continues with how industrialization and the change from producing basic needs to ‘products’ completely altered the landscape of America and its foundation of opportunity.

A lot of Newton’s theory and action is based upon why should one hold life so precious if that life isn’t able to be lived in fairness, with equal opportunity? If you’re living in hellish conditions then you don’t even really have a ‘life’ to risk, so fighting for what is just only makes sense.

While not the most compelling book I’ve ever read, it’s stayed with me, in my thoughts. At times I vehemently disagreed, became angry and wished I could verbally dispute things he wrote. Other times he put things so simply, so eloquently that I can’t believe our society hasn’t evolved infinitely more than it has. He also reminds me how imperative it is to gather information from the source. Obviously the media has blown up their version/vision/bastardization of the Black Panthers and used its perceived violence to escalate popular intrigue/fear. Like so many injustices, Newton is all too acutely aware of this and makes in depth note of it.

And an added bonus to intrigue/inspire you to read this is the following bad review on amazon-

1.0 out of 5 stars Written with bigotry and fanaticism, December 26, 2012
Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
This review is from: Revolutionary Suicide: (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition) (Paperback)

The book is full of radical ideas and tries to brainwash with its single perspective. Death and violence is never an answer. They create more violence and death. Suicide as an act of death kills revolution and revolutionary thoughts. because it brings an end and it stops the search for ideals and utopia. Lack of support, wrong logic, intolerant, monolithic, logocentric, fascist. It need more voices and perspectives. It needs dialogue. Its author needs to read Mikhail Mikhailovich Bakhtin. Dangerous if readers do not apply critical thinking.

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R.I.P. Biggie http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/2012/12/r-i-p-biggie/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=r-i-p-biggie http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/2012/12/r-i-p-biggie/#comments Sat, 08 Dec 2012 02:48:34 +0000 http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/?p=2450 You cannot make a list of the greatest rappers of all time without mentioning The Notorious B.I.G. As we all know Biggie was murdered in L.A. and the case has not been closed. Today the autopsy was released. What is more frustrating is that officers close to the case have said that the case has long been solved but the perpetrators have not been brought to justice.

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Was just wondering where the Talib Kweli, Black Thought, Jadakiss, Immortal Technique, Brother Ali, & Black Milk track called “Hooded Up” is… http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/2012/03/was-just-wondering-where-the-talib-kweli-black-thought-jadakiss-immortal-technique-brother-ali-black-milk-track-called-hooded-up-is/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=was-just-wondering-where-the-talib-kweli-black-thought-jadakiss-immortal-technique-brother-ali-black-milk-track-called-hooded-up-is http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/2012/03/was-just-wondering-where-the-talib-kweli-black-thought-jadakiss-immortal-technique-brother-ali-black-milk-track-called-hooded-up-is/#comments Tue, 27 Mar 2012 20:23:35 +0000 https://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/?p=63 Well it only exists in my mind but the peeps over at the OC Weekly blog put together a post featuring five songs for Trayvon by Mistah F.A.B., Jasiri X, Tahir Jahi (from Kweli’s Blacksmith), Reef tha Lost Cauze, and Plies.

Songs for Trayvon Martin

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Common Folk Stands With Their Hoods Up in Solidarity http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/2012/03/common-folk-stands-with-their-hoods-up-in-solidarity/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=common-folk-stands-with-their-hoods-up-in-solidarity http://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/2012/03/common-folk-stands-with-their-hoods-up-in-solidarity/#comments Tue, 27 Mar 2012 04:14:15 +0000 https://commonfolkcollective.com/blog/?p=60

 

This is for Trayvon Martin. I didn’t know him. I don’t know the man that shot and killed him. I don’t know exactly what happened and no one ever will. Regardless, this teenager is dead. And it’s ashamedly not really anything new.

When people with guns make bad choices there’s no turning back. None.

I’ve gotten my ass beat down, badly. But guess what, I healed. And I would take a beat down again and again and again and never would I be justified in taking someone else’s life.

Recently in Slinger, WI a 20yr old, Bo Morrison, was also shot and killed when he ran from a underage drinking party to hide from the police on a neighbors enclosed back porch. The homeowner went out on the porch and shot him. Obviously situations like this are never cut and dry. I’m all for protecting your home and family but there’s smart ways to do so and shooting to kill is not justified unless you are in immediate, imminent, absolute danger.

To keep it real, bad choices were probably made by all parties involved but in no way should either of these young men had to pay with their lives.

(The hoody print is from OG New York street artist Dan Witz, check him out and buy from DanWitz.com)

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