“Our Black People are Rising Up. And we are happy to Rise into the knowledge of self and others. The Rise Of The Dead will be like the blast of a trumpet pretty soon!
The Black People will come into the knowledge of themselves so fast that it will look like The Rise Of The Dead has taken place at once!
I just love to look at my Black People now. All of them are Rising. And listening to them talk you see how much different they are!”-The Honorable Elijah Muhammad
Don't stop talking about Sudan
Don't stop talking about Sudan
Don't stop talking about Sudan
Don't stop talking about Sudan
Don't stop talking about Sudan
Such a sad new 💔
Broken broughbride Kiara who went viral for $500 wedding passed on after giving birth to her first child ,what supposed to be a happy moment turn sorrow ..
I hope that child grow in love and not being a reminded that her coming in to the world k*lled her mom 💔
May her soul rest in peace 🪦
“White people own everything in South Africa, focus on them and stop slaughtering our brothers and sisters.” - East African activist calls out South Africans.
With deep sorrow, we say farewell to one of the final sentinels of the Tuskegee Airmen. George E. Hardy, who once danced across the skies of Europe in his Mustang has taken his final flight at the age of 100. Leaving behind a legacy forged in courage, resilience, and unwavering dignity.
It began in a quiet room in Philadelphia. A 16-year-old boy hunched over his homework as the radio crackled with the news of Pearl Harbor. In that instant, the world fractured, and George’s childhood evaporated. He didn't wait for history to call; he went to meet it.
Denied entry because of the color of his skin, he didn't retreat. He leaned into the wind. He joined the U.S. Army Air Forces, arriving at Tuskegee not just to learn the mechanics of flight, but to dismantle the mechanics of prejudice.
By 19, George was a "Red Tail," a guardian of the clouds. While the world below was segregated, the flak in the European theater was indifferent. He flew 21 combat missions over Nazi-occupied territory, a teenager in a cockpit proving that valor has no pedigree.
Most men would have seen enough of war. George was not most men.
- World War II: 21 combat missions in the P-51 Mustang.
- Korea: 45 combat missions, braving the dawn of the jet age.
- Vietnam: 70 combat missions, a veteran hand guiding a new generation.
For nearly thirty years, he wore the uniform of a country that didn't always love him back, yet he protected it with a devotion that shames the very idea of hate.
When he finally climbed out of the cockpit, he didn't stop serving. As a Lieutenant Colonel, he helped architect the military’s first global communication systems. He spent his sunset years ensuring that those who followed him would never be out of reach, never be truly alone in the dark.
"He rose above the clouds so we could finally see the light."
Today, we don't just salute a pilot. We salute a man who endured the sting of Jim Crow to earn the silver wings of a hero. He was the quiet defiance in the face of "no," the steady hand in the cockpit, and the humble heart in the room.
The "Red Tails" are thinning now, their formation heading into the eternal sunset. But as George E. Hardy crosses the ultimate horizon, he leaves behind a legacy etched not in ink, but in the very air we breathe.
Rest well, Colonel. The watch is ours. The sky is yours.
عاد شاب يُعرف باسم بيبي جيت جونيور من الإمارات العربية المتحدة 🇦🇪 ليكتشف أن زميله السابق في الدراسة يعاني من إعاقة ذهنية. فأخذه إلى منزله وبدأ بإطعامه وكسوته وإيوائه يوميًا. والآن، أصبح صديقه مستقرًا نفسيًا بعد أن اصطحبه إلى مستشفى للأمراض النفسية لتلقي العلاج. يا له من حب حقيقي! ♥️
Did you know that @dixonmcmakin, who is pushing bills to eliminate the seat of @calvin4clerk, is the announcer for @lsu sports?
Dixon is from Baton Rouge, but he’s working to take away the clerk’s office in New Orleans and, in turn, nullify the votes of thousands of Black people.
During debate, Dixon invoked language that echoed George Wallace, the segregationist former governor of Alabama. That history matters, especially while legislation is being used to overturn the will of voters in New Orleans.
I’m curious how the Black Student Union and former Black athletes feel about Dixon being the voice of the Tigers. President Rousse, you have thousands of Black alumni in New Orleans being impacted by your sports announcer’s actions in his day job.
I’m just wondering if y’all have connected the dots on Rep. McMakin yet.
Share if you care 🦾