Malcolm X, born on this day (May 18th) in 1925, was a revolutionary civil rights leader who advocated for black liberation by “any means necessary”.

Biography

Born Malcolm Little, he spent his youth living in a series of foster homes and engaging in petty crime, eventually serving six years in prison for larceny and breaking and entering.

While in prison, Malcolm joined the Nation of Islam (NOI) and adopted the surname “X” to acknowledge his unknown African ancestral name. Malcolm quickly became a leader with the NOI and was paroled in 1952, beginning a period of radical advocacy for black liberation.

In the 1960s, Malcolm X broke with the Nation of Islam, growing disillusioned with its leader Elijah Muhammed. During his 1964 pilgrimage to Mecca, he witnessed Muslims of “all colors, from blue-eyed blonds to black-skinned Africans” treat each other as equals in worship. Because of this, Malcolm X became convinced that Islam could be used as a means to achieve racial equality.

On February 21st, 1965, Malcolm was assassinated in New York City. Three Nation members were charged with the murder and given indeterminate life sentences. Two of these men, Muhammed Abdul Aziz and Khalil Islam, were exonerated in 2021 after a 22-month investigation by the Manhattan District Attorney found that evidence of their innocence, including FBI documents, was withheld at trial.

The Shabazz family are among those who have accused Louis Farrakhan of involvement in Malcolm X’s assassination. In 1994, Betty Shabazz was asked if she thought Farrakhan had anything to do with her late husband’s death. She replied “Of course, yes. Nobody kept it a secret. It was a badge of honor. Everybody talked about it, yes.”

In the wake of his assassination, capitalist press vilified Malcolm X, while media in Africa, China, and Cuba lauded him as a hero and a martyr. The New York Times wrote that Malcolm X was “an extraordinary and twisted man” who “turn[ed] many true gifts to evil purpose”, while Time magazine condemned him “an unashamed demagogue” whose “creed was violence.”

In contrast, The Ghanaian Times identified Malcolm X as among “a host of Africans and Americans who were martyred in freedom’s cause.” In China, the People’s Daily described him as a martyr killed by “ruling circles and racists” whose death illustrated that “in dealing with imperialist oppressors, violence must be met with violence.”

In 2023, The Guardian reported that the Shabazz family announced their plans to sue the FBI, New York Police, and other agencies over Malcom X’s death. Ilyasah Shabazz, the third daughter of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz, announced that new information indicates federal and state agencies “conspired to and executed their plan to assassinate”. Ilyasah added “For years, our family has fought for the truth to come to light concerning his murder and we’d like our father to receive the justice that he deserves.”

“Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you’re a man, you take it.”

  • Malcolm X

I hope you nerds have a good month of April cuddle

Remember no crackers

anti-cracker-aktionqin-shi-huangdi-fireball

  • AlHouthi4President@lemmy.ml
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    4 days ago

    This article From SQUAD to South Lebanon: Inside the gaming generation behind the FPV revolution got me thinking about how these kids who grew up playing CS:GO are now revolutionaries who are flying FPV drones to defend their people and land against the child-killing israelis. (The article is written stylistically just like an LLM which is a bummer but the citations seem legit.)

    It reminded me of a documentary from Iran about the revolutionaries who were firing the missiles against the zionists during the 12 day war. This scene in particular.

    How interesting that a generation of gamers, when armed with revolutionary ideology and education, are now weaponizing these skills against imperialism.

    Really makes me think about how the criticism of “gamer culture” should really be identified within the context capitalist colonialist racial supremacy. The revolutionary in his base under the mountains in Iran, who prays 5 times a day and has dedicated his life to defending his homeland from the most evil people on earth, has nothing in common with the clowns who we think of when we discuss “gamers” in pejorative.

    It also reminded me that the head of Activision-Blizzard was in the Epstein Files talking about using games for mass cultural manipulation.

    This isnt a complete thought, just something Im thinking about.

  • Angel [any]@hexbear.net
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    6 days ago

    Got worried about an interview because I opened the Teams link like 1 minute late

    But the interviewer ended up being 15 minutes late

    Okay

  • 3rdWorldCommieCat [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    17 days ago

    Happy 100th anniversary of Malcolm X and may his legacy continue to inspire us until we achieve our goals!

    Unrelated news but currently learning about the Muslim conquest of Iberia in class and ofc the it was full of islamophobia. Next one will be about the Reconquista so won’t be better. 5 centuries of humiliation upon europe.

  • Frogmanfromlake [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    14 days ago

    Funny how NATO leftists and Hasan Piker are quick to call that Galindo candidate “insane” and terrible for her takes on Zionists while platforming Graham Platner and other problematic white men.

  • Frogmanfromlake [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    7 days ago

    Saw a lib mock a leftist invoking the “first they came for” poem by claiming they ignored all the poc and lgbt people being targeted.

    I hate when libs invoke that stuff, and the person saying that was blue MAGA and clearly ignored all the evil shit Kamala did to those same people while in office.

    The way libs talk about poc has always creeped me out. Like they have a weird fetish for us.

      • VILenin [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        15 days ago

        Also at one point they basically said “you’re too literate to be Chinese”

        Levels of racism that usually gets someone banned within the hour, but not surprising coming from a self-professed expat.

        逆天,难道英语流利就不是中国人了? 傻逼二百五

      • VILenin [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        15 days ago

        Yeah the whole “true Chinese only speak in mysterious bureaucratic terms” was wild(ly racist). Calipers moment.

        I was half-expecting to see the word “inscrutable” pop up at some point.

        At least action was taken quicker relative to the last problematic mod

          • VILenin [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            15 days ago

            Unfortunately response time is measured in years so having anything done within half a decade is surprising… And actually, it seems like they just banned from the community and not the site, so I have to take it back, the clock’s still ticking

    • Belly_Beanis [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      12 days ago

      LMAO This person went full mask-off, tone policing people over being called “gringo.” You can see it in the modlog and my post history. We need to shut down white people talking about race until we can figure out what’s going on. 😂

  • Poison_Ivy [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    9 days ago

    My friend who previously got the large coastal port city we live in, to officially pass a resolution recognizing itself as a transgender sanctuary city via pressure campaigns (if you google it, you’ll find our city) is running for city council and there is a high chance he’s going to win.

    He got the DSA endorsement and they sent in like 30+ people to canvas our district (in addition to the coalition of activists that he already had helping out) for his campaign. He’s a fairly popular activist in our city, and I’m hoping he wins, and I don’t wanna jinx it, but it really does feel like he’s going to win.

  • VILenin [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    14 days ago

    Love to see white “leftists” goo off about sissypee mass surveillance after that Fox News dipshit caught a fine for parking in the bike lane. Most of them are also self-professed “urbanists” constantly complaining about car-centric infrastructure but then whining about authoritarianism 1984 when China does something about it. And they didn’t even bother to fact-check Fox News’ obvious bullshit to find out that you actually get a text to move your car within 15 minutes before you actually get fined, but I guess running interference for sinophobic propagandists is more important. Most Chinese citizens actually support what they call “mass surveillance” but the average cracker is incapable of comprehending the existence of cultural differences.

    I’m always happy to explain the reasoning behind why most in China support CCTV but they always call me a sissypee shill before I get to that point. I guess it’s my bad though, not to have realized that John Oliver’s opinion on the Chinese government is far more important than what Chinese citizens think.

      • VILenin [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        13 days ago

        This is just one reason out of many but it is the most representative one. The 80s-90s-early 00s in China was absolutely chaotic. It was not safe to be outside. The most dangerous jobs in the country were taxi driver, long-haul bus driver, and truck driver.

        Taxi drivers got robbed and/or killed all the time, and there was even an informal “peak season” for taxi driver killings. I know a cab driver in Beijing, the older model cabs had a barrier that could be activated by foot. The idea was that you would flip the switch if someone was holding a knife to your throat and it would slam up and break their wrist. There was an interview with a medical examiner I saw a while back where she said she hated working in a semi-rural area because that’s where all the bodies of the taxi drivers would get dumped during the aforementioned “peak season”. Homicides in general around this time we’re through the roof relative to today.

        For any moderate-length road trip it was almost a coin-flip whether you would be robbed and/or extorted somewhere along the way, possibly multiple times over. There were entire tiny villages that had their economy essentially built on robbing people passing by.

        Things reached the worst point in the 90s. There were quite a few bus drivers who refused to work during peak travel season because encountering armed thugs was basically guaranteed. If the long haul bus you were on got boarded and robbed it wouldn’t even make the news. If your entire family got killed on a road trip that wasn’t newsworthy either. If an entire bus full of people got killed it would get mentioned in a summary segment at the end of the evening news. Oh, and calling the cops (or, more realistically, walking overnight to the nearest government office after you get carjacked to report it) was basically a meaningless token gesture.

        In the mid-90s the government implemented the “严打” scheme which can be loosely translated as “maximum enforcement”. You can look up pictures from this time; banners were placed all over cities and villages saying that robbers would be shot on sight. Sometimes an ambush would be arranged where they would drive around a fake cargo truck packed with soldiers. However strange it seems to today’s China they would sometimes get into gunfights with robbers.

        Around 2002 the government issued a statement that there would be not only be no criminal consequences for killing anyone who tries to intercept or rob a vehicle, but there would also be a financial reward. And unlike FBI rewards they actually paid out. This statement was plastered on every form of public transportation. The official advice was to keep going no matter who or what you hit.

        Ancillary to this, traffic in general was a total disaster and basically nobody followed traffic laws. Partially because it was an open secret that you could just bribe the cops to get your license. There was basically no enforcement, although sometimes fake traffic cops would extort money out of you for some made up violation.

        This is all within very recent memory (anybody born before 1995). Public safety made a complete 180 from ~2005 to ~2015. Chinese true crime shows went from being about murder all the time to being about guys stealing cones from the road. Nowadays getting robbed on the road is practically unheard of and would be front page news for months on end.

        Now, obviously the improvement of material conditions contributed in large part to this, but the proliferation of CCTV technology is credited with this also. Especially in terms of improving clearance rates for solving crimes and basically ending the concept of the police chase in China.

        If you go to bilibili and look at the comments of people reacting to the Fox “mass surveillance” segment it’s split between people mocking them for inflating the amount of the fine by 25% (and lying about getting one in the first place) and people talking about what life used to be like.

        There is a good bilibili documentary on this. If I have time I’ll sub it and upload it here.

        Of course this is not to say what they have in China is what we should aspire to, even in a hypothetical communist utopia. However if this is what Chinese people want for China then I’m not really in any position to say they’re wrong.

        Also a little addendum here. Basically every official and their mother was corrupt in the 90s. This is also when the vast majority of many infamous wrongful conviction cases occurred.

        The sheer level of corruption and nepotism in 90s-00s China would have turned it into post-soviet Russia 2 had the Xi camp not prevailed and started locking everyone up.

        All told there is a reason why most Chinese gangster flicks are set in the 90s. Probably most famously the show 征服 (“Conquer”). China in the 90s vs. today is almost completely unrecognizable.

        • Belly_Beanis [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          12 days ago

          Huh. Today I learned. Goes to show why the Chinese government is trusted over the US. Taxi drivers still have one of the most dangerous jobs here in the States for the same reason it was dangerous in China. The difference is night and day, however. The only reason taxi murders have declined is because of digital payment, so they aren’t carrying as much cash on them compared to the '80s and '90s.

          The government has done nothing to protect taxi drivers, especially in areas where they’re often immigrants and working class. Statistically, it’s more dangerous than being in the US military, yet they don’t get any recognition for it.

        • Fascinating. China really has changed more in the last 50 years than the US has.

          The part about the official advice being to keep driving even if you hit someone because it could be a setup for an ambush reminds me that I remember reading some garbage on Reddit years ago about “in Chiba they hit and run you because evil communists”

          • VILenin [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            12 days ago

            The part about the official advice being to keep driving even if you hit someone because it could be a setup for an ambush reminds me that I remember reading some garbage on Reddit years ago about “in Chiba they hit and run you because evil communists”

            Ahh… classic reddit-logo I’m not sure if it’s related to officials telling drivers to run highway-robbers over, but in China if you hit a regular pedestrian and then deliberately run them over again you are going from an insurance payout to the death penalty. I cannot recall a single instance of this actually happening that didn’t involve preexisting feuds between the people involved or extreme road rage. It’s definitely not to save money. So pretty much the same reasons drivers in other countries run people over on purpose. I’m sure they are deliberately misrepresenting government communiques from the highway-robbery era too. The government obviously never recommended that drivers run people over to save money, and they didn’t actually change anything in the law. Chinese highway-robbers had zero qualms about killing you even if you gave them everything they wanted. Most of the time they wouldn’t, but I doubt any driver was willing to take that bet. The 2002 statement didn’t change the law, it just emphasized that running armed thugs over was considered justified self defense. This was necessary because there was a lot of ambiguity about how far you could go before it was considered overboard.

    • CommunistCuddlefish [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      13 days ago

      I’m always happy to explain the reasoning behind why most in China support CCTV but they always call me a sissypee shill before I get to that point.

      I’d love to hear about that reasoning. It sounds very different from how I’d feel, but I’m in an ameriKKKan context where I hate that there’s recording all around which the genocidal government of the Fourth Reich can use

  • Angel [any]@hexbear.net
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    8 days ago

    I am technically already “hired” but as a worker for a recruiting agency. Legally, they count as my employer and they’re helping me to find work. I had an interview with one of their clients today, and it seems to be a good fit, but even if this one does not work out, they should be able to redirect me to something else. Lots of POC at this job, and my skills seem to be a good fit.

    The recruiting agency told me that jobs could hire me as early as the day of the interview, but this job told me I’d likely get an answer by next week. Hell, they told me that some jobs do not even require interviews. Something feels close! Fingers crossed!

    • Belly_Beanis [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      7 days ago

      Temp work is always a good fallback whenever it’s available. They get a lot of fuckups, so anyone who basically shows up on time and does what they’re told looks like a fire in a snowstorm. Places looking to fill a permanent position will often hire you on the spot so they don’t have to pay the agency and don’t have to go through the rest of the hiring process. The downside is agencies are often overloaded during bad economies because no one can find a job, so there ends up being a lot of competition for whatever is available.

      I once got a week’s work because the other temp didn’t show up (it was 10:30 AM when the shift started at 8 AM). I was there by 11 and they looked at me like I was some kind of prodigy. We were folding junk mail.

      • Angel [any]@hexbear.net
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        7 days ago

        Many of these positions are temp-to-hire or long-term from the getgo, thankfully. At least they seem to have a decent supply of work available, though. I likely won’t have more information until next week, but hopefully this all goes well!

  • Angel [any]@hexbear.net
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    7 days ago

    Interviewed with Planned Parenthood yesterday, too…

    Gee, if I actually got that position, it would make my Catholic grandparents more upset with me than they already are.

  • Angel [any]@hexbear.net
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    9 days ago

    I might (gonna put big emphasis on this word because I can never be too sure) be getting hired tomorrow