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WORLD WIDE AFRICA THE VOICE OF THE PAN AFRICAN MOVEMENT

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World Wide Africa

World Wide Africa

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Tonight a look at the inner mind of our brother George Jackson through his letters to his parents. We know that the system of so called Justice in America is geared towards keeping the prisoner a convict and we see it in the fact that a man convicted of petty theft who is Black is put in the same system with harden criminals who are White.  Thereby having the Black man fighting for his survival and becoming more of a criminal while in prison than he was before he entered.  We see this even today, and it is the same harden type of White criminals as it was yesterday, the serial killers, the children rapers, the rapists, the bank robbers.  White criminals being far more violent and sever offenders against society than the Black Man being treated better and getting lighter sentences for far more dangerous crimes.

George Jackson was convicted of stealing $70.00 from a gas station with a gun. As I see it, it was not the robbery that cost him his life but the fact that a Niggar had a gun was a danger to white society and only that.  For a Black Person to fight back against the poverty they inflict upon us by taking from them what we need to survive without a struggle is the real crime against them. The suffering of Black people is the objective of White America, and how server they can inflict that suffering upon each individual Black person. The reaction they cause is a study to them of our humanity as if we are an experiment in a laboratory.I will not only read his letters that show his contempt for this system of injustice but the tribulations he experienced with his inner spirit of love for his family and his belief that an omnipresent creator could not exist if the extent of his power could not save him or other Black people from a system of slavery in which we still exist. Oppression is oppression no matter the severity of it, to hold a people captive under codes in a system meant to take away their human dignity is still slavery.

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