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hiphopmecca favorited a video
(1 month ago)
This time Max Keiser and co-host, Stacy Herbert, look at the latest scan...
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This time Max Keiser and co-host, Stacy Herbert, look at the latest scandals of invisible gorillas, virtual pay and China's hi-tech underclass. In the second half of the show, Max talks to Ellen Brown, author of Web of Debt, about 'deficit terrorism.'
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hiphopmecca liked a video
(1 month ago)
Millions of Americans are out of work, losing their homes, their savings...
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Millions of Americans are out of work, losing their homes, their savings, their pensions, their retirement security.
We are losing our Nation to Lies about the Necessity of Wars.
Bring our Troops home. End the war. Secure our economy.
Subscribe to http://www.youtub...
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hiphopmecca favorited a video
(1 month ago)

As we have seen through past history, is this the war against us all? Is...
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As we have seen through past history, is this the war against us all? Is history repeating itself?
Mumia Abu-Jamal (born Wesley Cook on April 24, 1954) is an American convicted and sentenced to death for the December 9, 1981 murder of Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner. He has been described as "perhaps the best known Death-Row prisoner in the world", and his sentence is one of the most debated today.
In his own writings, Abu-Jamal describes his adolescent experience of being "kicked ... into the Black Panther Party" after suffering a beating from "white racists" and a policeman for his efforts to disrupt a George Wallace for President rally in 1968. The following year, at the age of 15, he helped form the Philadelphia branch of the Black Panther Party, taking appointment, in his own words, as the chapter's "Lieutenant of Information", exercising a responsibility for authoring information and news communications. In one of the interviews he gave at the time he quoted Mao Zedong, saying that "political power grows out of the barrel of a gun". That same year, he dropped out of Benjamin Franklin High School and took up residence in the branch's headquarters.[18] He spent late 1969 in New York City and early 1970 in Oakland, living and working with BPP colleagues in those cities. He was a party member from May 1969 until October 1970 and was subject to Federal Bureau of Investigation COINTELPRO surveillance from then until about 1974.
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