(Source: throwyadiamonds, via fkx)
(Source: tallawa)
(Source: lowkeynerd, via strictlyhip-hop)
(via bizzarh)
(Source: not-too-bad, via fkx)
(via fkx)
(Source: yosimar, via costumepartypolitics)
the final frontier
this is this the american dream
bursting our countries seams
this is this the final day day dream
held low on self-esteem
this is this hunger held hostage
hostage held education exhausted.
a generation lost it
intervene? dont neverstop it.
is this is life dictator
the world is my hater
hate or love it, spirit above it
this is what i’ll tell the future
that this is this american dream
continues in our minds
never coming true it seems.
seems like dreams dreams
that is what it seems.
o’canada say can you see
what i mean?
to hold onto onto dreams
anthems it seems
sung to hypnotize
heart strings, the things
that sting these heart strings
are held tight on nation wide
thoughts that it brings.
hostage held hostage
our own thoughts
thoughts and plots
i thought i could
think outside
the box.
but my thoughts thoughts
held in this is this the american dream
never coming true it seems
seems like dreams dreams
this is what it seems.
bursting beams
in betweens.
so dream dream
continue on it seems
(via freethinker426)
BLACK WALL STREET is NOT a record label started by The Game.
Black Wall Street was the most prosperous black community in America during the 1920’s located in Tulsa, Oklahoma. It was known as “Little Africa” or “Black Beverly Hills”, a prime example of racial nationalism. To put into perspective of how money flowed in Black Wall Street, a dollar took 365 DAYS to leave the community, now a dollar leaves an African American Community every 15 MINUTES. The community had hundreds of businesses all negro owned and their motto was “To educate every child”.
June 1, 1921 white supremacists bombed BLACK WALL STREET and killed over 3000 people and destroyed over 600 businesses. 21 churches, 21 restaurants, 30 grocery stores, a hospital, bank, post office, and most schools were destroyed. The dead were buried in unmarked graves. It wasn’t till 1997 that Oklahoma decided to pass the “1921 Race Riot Reconciliation Act” which provided descendants of that area a free college education.
Educate yourselves, and never forget.
(Source: socialsociety, via queergiftedblack)
"I am flagless in a conquered world."
Zisa O. (via truths89)