01/31/2019
Whether Philly, Harlem or your home town; Daylight could 'catch you up again' ...
The Rundown fact checks: Are federal workers more likely to be Democrats?
https://nbcnews.to/2UBNg3x
NW4C, is a Political Action Consortium established to empower voters by promoting political candidates & issues relevant to our societal needs.
01/31/2019
Whether Philly, Harlem or your home town; Daylight could 'catch you up again' ...
The Rundown fact checks: Are federal workers more likely to be Democrats?
https://nbcnews.to/2UBNg3x
1st) hire all your friends and unqualified folks
2nd) point fingers at every bidy messing up
3rd) fire every body that isn't qualified
4th) Tweet about everything except yourself
I'll Use It - 'Til It Runs Out !!! I'm Not Buying Anymore ...
07/28/2017
ON JULY 28, 1917, up to 10,000 African Americans marched silently through New York City in one of the first mass protests against anti-black violence in the US.
The 100th anniversary of the civil rights landmark is being commemorated by a Google Doodle, which is celebrating “those whose silence resonates a century later”.
Women wore white during the silent protest, creating a poignant spectacle
What was the background to the Silent Parade of 1917?
The Silent Parade reflected the heightened anger of black Americans following a recent outbreak of vicious race-related violence.
Between May and July 1917 brutal riots in East St. Louis, a city in Illinois, between 40 and 250 black people were killed by white mobs.
Authorities were blamed for failing to protect innocent lives, with a chilling contemporary report describing how police were “either indifferent or encouraged the barbarities”.
The bloody scenes in East St. Louis sparked fury among black people across a nation already simmering with racial tension as African Americans migrated from the south to predominantly white industrial centres.
Such violence was by no means uncommon – a lynching of a black farmer the previous year had attracted a gruesome crowd of 10,000 white Texans, according to the academic Chad Williams.
What happened during the Silent Parade?
On July 28, between 8,000 and 10,000 African American men, women and children marched silently down Fifth Avenue, New York City, in condemnation of the riots.
Women and children, all dressed in white, led the group, with the men following behind in dark suits, creating a poignant visual spectacle.
In contrast to the women, men involved in the Silent Parade wore dark suits
Placards held by the protesters expressed messages of peace and unity, as well as highlighting the contributions of African Americans to the nation and calling for justice over racial violence.
As well as a response to the shocking recent events in Illinois, the marchers demanded that President Woodrow Wilson delivered on campaign promises to protect black Americans.
His promised anti-lynching legislation never materialised – indeed, little was done to improve discrimination against African Americans during Wilson’s presidency.
However, as one of the first mass protests against anti-black violence in the US, the Silent Parade marks a significant landmark in the civil rights movement.
The anti-black violence protest included men, women and children
I Guess, NOW, We're Supposed To Like Him Because He Says The Right Things ...
It shouldn't surprise folks that the ignorant delight in their ignorance!!!
06/25/2017
Hmmm, 'Think Tanks' ...?
The 50 Most Influential Think Tanks in the United States | The Best Schools The institutions on this list make up the 50 most influential think tanks in the United States as gauged by their ability to market their ideas on the web!
Daily Declaration of the Obvious