PROGRAM OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF GERMANY - KPD (1918)
https://rotefahne.eu/1918/12/programm-der-kommunistischen-partei-deutschlands-kpd-1918/
The Original Antifa
PROGRAM OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF GERMANY - KPD (1918)
https://rotefahne.eu/1918/12/programm-der-kommunistischen-partei-deutschlands-kpd-1918/
The Original Antifa
Maybe some of them have heard it 100 times from someone just like you;
You tell them what they already know (mostly) but you propose no realistic plan to solve it.
What you promise you can't deliver .
Just like the Democrats and Republicans
They interpret as just another person that want them to do all the work and take the social risk so you feel better and can claim you were "part of the solution"
There have been whistle blowers for 60-70 years and you probably only know the names of 2-3.
Convince them this time will be different or they will presume you are just all talk like the rest.
Don;t delude yourselves you have the answers because clearly you don't. You don't even really understand the problem, and have a cartoon version of the opposition spout slogans rather than solutions.
The world is not waiting for you to save them becasue they know you can't.
Guys like Corsi wrote 30 books but nothing ever happened, except he made money telling the Truth.
Does he have any solutions and is he an activist or just the canary in the coal mine ( with the $bling$)
Imagine a prolonged power outage in NYC. LA & Chicago simultaneously.
New Orleans was a minor example.
Riots in the 1960s
Rochester 1964 race riot
24–26 July 1964[6]
Harlem riot of 1964
16–22 July 1964, New York City, New York, provoked by the NYPDs shooting of black teenager James Powell.
Philadelphia 1964 race riot
28–30 August 1964, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA, Allegations of police brutality sparked the Columbia Avenue race riots.[6]
Watts Riots
11 August 1965, Los Angeles, California, USA, The McCone Commission investigated the riots finding that causes included poverty, inequality, racial discrimination and the passage, in November 1964, of Proposition 14 on the California ballot overturning the Rumford Fair Housing Act, which established equality of opportunity for black home buyers.[7]
Hough Riots
18 July 1966, Cleveland, Ohio, USA, The underlying causes of the riots may found in the social conditions that exist in the ghettos of Cleveland.[8]
Racial tension in Omaha, Nebraska
5 July 1966, North Omaha, Nebraska, USA, More than 500 black youth gathered to protest the absence of recreation programs and jobs storm a local business district, throwing rocks and bricks at Jewish-owned businesses in the area. The National Guard is called in after three days of random violence and organized raids.[9]
1967 Newark riots
12 July 1967, Newark, New Jersey, USA, Factors that contributed to the Newark Riot: police brutality, political exclusion of blacks from city government, urban renewal, inadequate housing, unemployment, poverty, and rapid change in the racial composition of neighborhoods.[10]
1967 Plainfield riots
14 July 1967, Plainfield, New Jersey, USA
12th Street riot
23 July 1967, Detroit, Michigan, USA, The origins of urban unrest in Detroit were rooted in a multitude of political, economic, and social factors including police abuse, lack of affordable housing, urban renewal projects, economic inequality, black militancy, and rapid demographic change.[11]
Minneapolis-Saint Paul
USA, Fall 1967. Racial tensions boil over in North Minneapolis as whites continue to leave the decaying core of the inner city bound for the suburbs.
1968 Chicago, Illinois riots
4 April 1968 Violence erupted in Chicago's black ghetto on the west side, eventually consuming a 28-block stretch of West Madison Street. Looting and arson took place primarily in the corridor between Roosevelt Road on the south and Chicago Avenue on the north.
1968 Washington, D.C. riots
4 April 1968, Washington, D.C., USA, A report from National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders identified discrimination and poverty as the root causes of the riots that erupted in cities around the nation during the late 1960s and in Washington, DC in April 1968[12]
Baltimore riot of 1968
4 April 1968, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Glenville Shootout
23 July 1968, Cleveland, Ohio, USA, Shootout between black militant organization led by Ahmed Evans and Cleveland Police Department attracted large and hostile black crowds that caused a four-day riot
Stonewall riots
June 1969, New York City, New York, a turning point for the modern U.S. gay rights movement.
1969 North 24th Street Riots
24 June 1969, North Omaha, Nebraska USA, An Omaha police officer fatally shoots a teenager in the back of the head during a gathering of youth in local public housing projects. Many youth and adults from the local African American community gather in the local business district, routinely burning and otherwise destroying non-Black-owned businesses.[13]
Kent State University
Kent State shootings - May 15, 1970
Jackson State University - May 4, 1970
Jackson State killings