...Although considering the pathetic plight of our MASSES of poor...and the unbounded ignorance of our tiny middle & rich classes wrapped up in Babylon Lifestyles & Propaganda... you must be turning in your grave at our still being The Wretched of the Earth
But hope springs eternal
Saluting Marcus Garvey
Garvey's greatest achievements and accomplishments came at a time when racial prejudice and discrimination were at their zenith in America. He achieved without knowing what a smartphone was going to be, he had no laptop computer, he had no social media at his disposal, and he was able to generate a network that had millions of members all over Africa, her Diaspora and the wider world.
At the height of his power, black people began to prosper, and there was a town known as Tulsa in Oklahoma, USA which had the District of Greenwood that was called the Black Wall Street. Tulsa was mysteriously burnt to the ground ...Hmmm! Today we have black leaders with PhDs from Her Majesty's Commonwealth universities all over Africa and her Diaspora, who can't even grow their countries' economies by one per cent annually.
As an entrepreneur par excellence, Garvey generated income through his UNIA and provided jobs through the numerous enterprises that were owned. These included a chain of grocery shops and restaurants, a laundry, tailor shop, dressmaking shop, millinery shop selling clothes, fashionable hats, accessories etc. There was a doll factory that made dolls in the images of pretty little black babies. Garvey published his own newspaper and owned the publishing house. In New York City, Garvey owned several buildings and a fleet of trucks. He organised the Black Cross Nurses Unit and a Corps of Black Security Guards. His UNIA operated the Phyllis Wheatley Hotel at 3-13 West 136th Street in New York.
But hope springs eternal
Saluting Marcus Garvey
Garvey's greatest achievements and accomplishments came at a time when racial prejudice and discrimination were at their zenith in America. He achieved without knowing what a smartphone was going to be, he had no laptop computer, he had no social media at his disposal, and he was able to generate a network that had millions of members all over Africa, her Diaspora and the wider world.
At the height of his power, black people began to prosper, and there was a town known as Tulsa in Oklahoma, USA which had the District of Greenwood that was called the Black Wall Street. Tulsa was mysteriously burnt to the ground ...Hmmm! Today we have black leaders with PhDs from Her Majesty's Commonwealth universities all over Africa and her Diaspora, who can't even grow their countries' economies by one per cent annually.
As an entrepreneur par excellence, Garvey generated income through his UNIA and provided jobs through the numerous enterprises that were owned. These included a chain of grocery shops and restaurants, a laundry, tailor shop, dressmaking shop, millinery shop selling clothes, fashionable hats, accessories etc. There was a doll factory that made dolls in the images of pretty little black babies. Garvey published his own newspaper and owned the publishing house. In New York City, Garvey owned several buildings and a fleet of trucks. He organised the Black Cross Nurses Unit and a Corps of Black Security Guards. His UNIA operated the Phyllis Wheatley Hotel at 3-13 West 136th Street in New York.
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