The Case of Robert Charles: shot 27 racist whites in self-defense in New Orleans lynching, 1900

kp404

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@Gunshi :umadjack: and one starred this because the thread is doing numbers and talking positive about black power while all you do is to put it frankly, sit on dikks..atleast you can call up one of your trannys and pay them some of those crisp 5 dollar bills you flash so often (not too many though so you won't run out, then you can't post pics here), then they will let you receive the penis you love so much:smugralph:
 

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The end of World War II had seen a marked increase in Caribbean migrants to Britain. By the 1950s white working-class "Teddy Boys" were beginning to display hostility towards the black families in the area, a situation exploited and inflamed by groups such as Sir Oswald Mosley's Union Movement and other far-right groups such as the White Defence League, who urged disaffected white residents to "Keep Britain White".[1]

There was an increase in violent attacks on black people through summer. For instance, on 24 August 1958 a group of ten white youths committed a series of serious assaults on six West Indian men in four separate incidents. At 5.40am, their car was spotted by two police officers who pursued them into the White City estate, where the gang abandoned the car. Using the car as a lead, investigating detectives arrested nine of the gang the next day after working non-stop for 20 hours.[2]

Just prior to the Notting Hill riots, there was racial unrest in Nottingham, which began on Saturday, 23 August, and went on intermittently for two weeks
 

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The riot is theorized to have been set off by the assault of Majbritt Morrison, a Swedish former sex worker,[4] on 29 August 1958.[5] Morrison had been arguing with her Jamaican husband Raymond Morrison at the Latimer Road tube station. A group of various white people attempted to intervene in the argument and a small fight broke out between the intervening people and some of Raymond Morrison's friends.[6] The following day Morrison was verbally and physically assaulted by a gang of white youths that had recalled seeing her the night before.[7] According to one report, the youths threwmilk bottles at Morrison and called her racial slurs such as "Black man's trollop",[7] while a later report stated that she had also been struck in the back with an iron bar
 

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The riot is theorized to have been set off by the assault of Majbritt Morrison, a Swedish former sex worker,[4] on 29 August 1958.[5] Morrison had been arguing with her Jamaican husband Raymond Morrison at the Latimer Road tube station. A group of various white people attempted to intervene in the argument and a small fight broke out between the intervening people and some of Raymond Morrison's friends.[6] The following day Morrison was verbally and physically assaulted by a gang of white youths that had recalled seeing her the night before.[7] According to one report, the youths threwmilk bottles at Morrison and called her racial slurs such as "Black man's trollop",[7] while a later report stated that she had also been struck in the back with an iron bar.
 

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The 1981 Brixton riot (or Brixton uprising[2]) was a confrontation between the Metropolitan Police and protesters in Lambeth, South London, England, between 10 and 11 April 1981. The main riot on 11 April, dubbed "Bloody Saturday" by TIMEmagazine,[3] resulted in almost 280* injuries to police and 45* injuries to members of the public;[4]over a hundred vehicles were burned, including 56 police vehicles; and almost 150 buildings were damaged, with thirty burned. There were 82 arrests. Reports suggested that up to 5,000 people were involved
 

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Brixton in South London was an area with serious social and economic problems. The whole United Kingdom was affected by a recession by 1981, but the local African-Caribbean community was suffering particularly high unemployment, poor housing, and a higher than average crime rate.[6]

In the preceding months there had been growing unease between the police and the inhabitants of Lambeth.[2] In January 1981 a house fire, a suspected racially-motivated arson, had killed a number of black youths in New Cross; the police investigation was criticised as inadequate. Black activists, including Darcus Howe organised a march for the "Black People's Day of Action" on 2 March.[7]Accounts of turnout vary from between 5,000[8] to 20[9] to 25,000.[10] The marchers walked 17 miles from Deptford to Hyde Park, passing the Houses of Parliament and Fleet Street.[9][11] While the majority of the march finished in Hyde Park without incident, there was some confrontation with police atBlackfriars. Les Back wrote that "While the local press reported the march respectfully, the national papers unloaded the full weight of racial stereotyping."[2][11] The Evening Standard's front page headline was a photo of a policeman with a bloody face next to a quote from Darcus Howereferring to the march as "A good day". A few weeks later, some of the organizers of the march were arrested, charged with inciting to riot. They were later acquitted.[9] At the beginning of April, the Metropolitan Police began Operation Swamp 81, aplainclothes operation to reduce crime. Officers were dispatched into Brixton, and within five days around 1,000 people were stopped and searched, and 82 arrested, through the heavy use of the 'sus law' (stop and search powers).[12] The 'sus laws' were a type of law which allowed police to arrest members of the public when it was believed that they were acting suspiciously and not necessarily committing a crime. The African-Caribbean community stated that the police were arresting black people without a specific reason.
 

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Everybody can drop their anecdotes in here to show black collective resistance to racial capitalist hegemony...black power has always existed:blessed:
 

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Public disfavour came to a head on April 10. At around 17:15 a police constable spotted a black youth named Michael Bailey running away, apparently from three other black youths. Bailey was stopped and found to be badly bleeding, but broke away from the constable. Stopped again on Atlantic Road, Bailey was found to have a four inch stab wound.[13] A crowd gathered and, as the police did not appear to be providing or seeking the medical help Bailey needed quickly enough, the crowd tried to intervene. The police then tried to take the wounded boy to a waiting car on Railton Road. The crowd then struggled with the police, which resulted in more police being called into the area. Michael was then taken to a hospital. Rumours spread that the youth had been left to die by the police, or that the police looked on as the stabbed youth was lying on the street. Over 200 youths, black and white, reportedly turned on the police. In response the police decided to increase the number of police foot patrols in Railton Road, despite the tensions, and carry on with the "Operation Swamp 81" throughout the night of Friday the 10th and into the following day, Saturday the 11 April.
 
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