America Banned This Japanese Scientist After He Revealed Too Much
Dr. Michio Kushi was a Japanese scientist whose ideas quietly challenged the limits of modern understanding. Decades later, his message still stands among the most eye-opening teachings ever recorded.
"I think there is a little bit of a misconception about when Apartheid started. It started in 1652 when the first Europeans came to Africa. They brought with them the paradigm in terms of superiority and inferiority. They always thought they were superior to the people who are indigenous to Africa. It was a paradigm of more than 300 years." - Roelf Meyer (History Channel)
"A los prisioneros palestinos les quité la mermelada, el chocolate, la carne, el ping pong, la TV, la radio... les quité todo. Salían de prisión demasiado gordos, tienen que salir mucho más delgados. Deberíamos haber bombardeado Gaza mucho antes".
El genocida Itamar Ben Gvir, ministro de Seguridad Nacional de "Israel", se vanagloria de usar el hambre como arma contra los palestinos secuestrados en sus prisiones.
Por algo no quiere que la Cruz Roja visite sus prisiones, para que la gente no vea un nuevo Auschwitz con prisioneros famélicos.
Now that everyone is aware Israel & America created ISIS and AL-QAEDA. It’s probably time to stop labeling Islam a terrorist religion. #dancingisraelis
In 1911 a mob dragged Laura Nelson and her 14 year old son from Jail. Raped her. Hanged them both from a bridge. Then sold photographs of their bodies as postcards. Her crime was protecting her son and being black
“What fools they are! How ignorant for them to think that you believe these stupid lies!” — From exile in Conakry, Guinea, Kwame Nkrumah fired back after Ghana’s 24 February 1966 military coup, accusing the junta of dismantling Ghana’s achievements and calling for African freedom and unity.
ghanaian londoners demonstrate against the murder of patrice lumumba.
1. sir edward asafu-adjaye, ghana's high commissioner to the uk, stands on the balcony of the ghana high commission answering questions put to him by the leader of the demonstration.
2. about two hundred africans demonstrated in london in connection with the murder of patrice lumumba in katanga.
3. asafu-adjaye had the distinction of being the first asante to qualify as a barrister in english law, in 1927.
belgrave square, london, uk, 15th February 1961.
🎥: douglas miller.
#FLOODS
Over the last four days, I have been in and out of Alajo in Accra and I am simply shocked by the absence of a sense of urgency in the struggle against floods.
Alajo has been a flood-prone area for decades. People have died and property has been destroyed as a direct result of flooding in Alajo caused primarily by the overflow of the huge gutters in the area.
As I move around Alajo, I cannot help but notice that mountains of refuse recently removed from the gutters have been piled on the banks.
Indeed, any moderate to high rainfall will push the refuse back into the gutters and cause more flooding.
What are we waiting for?
Can we be serious for a change?
“In the CIA, we don’t give a hoot about democracy, he doesn’t mean a thing to us. If an elected government does not collaborate with us, we will overthrow it”
-Former CIA Boss
HOW CONGO INSPIRED IRISH LIBERATION
In this powerful address, Richard Boyd Barrett, an Irish parliamentary representative for the People Before Profit-Solidarity coalition, highlights how the Congo inspired the Irish liberation struggle.
The speech was made at an anti-racist rally in response to a growing far-right presence in Ireland that has recently orchestrated racist riots.
Boyd Barrett dismantled the divisive myths of racism, exposing it as a cynical tool used by the ruling class to divide and rule the working class.
Drawing on the legacy of Irish revolutionary leader Roger Casement, he noted how Ireland’s fight for freedom is inextricably linked to the global struggle against imperialism.
Casement, once a diplomat for the British colonial service, saw the horrific dehumanisation of the Congolese people and realised that their fight against empire and slavery was identical to Ireland’s own resistance against British colonial subjugation and genocide.
As Casement famously declared, witnessing the suffering of the people of the Congo helped him "discover his inner patriot."
This message remains as urgent today as ever, especially after the death of Yves Sakila, a 35-year-old Congolese man in Dublin and the racist riots that happened in Belfast in the North of Ireland.
Boyd Barrett argues that if the Irish claim to respect a tradition of resistance to empire, they must recognise that the fight against racism is the central, integral heart of the collective struggle for the liberation of all.