West Coast Connection Forum
Lifestyle => Train of Thought => Topic started by: boycriedwolf619 on May 07, 2007, 06:48:40 PM
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This site is a site full of good essays written by him check it out some real good stuff. ---> http://www.iacenter.org/polprisoners/majessay.htm
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I remember that shout out that 2pac did on White Man's World - something to the effect of:
Peace to my motherfuckin teachers: Mutulu Shakur, Geronimo Pratt, Mumia Abu Jamal, blah blah, and all the real OG's we out! What was the 4th name he says?
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Why ain't this man out yet??
It's funny becuz when I always think about injustice I never think about it still goin' on. Damn. :-\
Oh and course, good looks for the site!
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(http://www.thoseshirts.com/images/square-large-mumia.gif)
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Why ain't this man out yet??
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Because he murdered a police officer named Daniel Faulkner. You didn't know that?
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Yeah, I got chu loud and clear, nigga.
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Why ain't this man out yet??
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Because he murdered a police officer named Daniel Faulkner. You didn't know that?
Did you follow the case?
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I remember that shout out that 2pac did on White Man's World - something to the effect of:
Peace to my motherfuckin teachers: Mutulu Shakur, Geronimo Pratt, Mumia Abu Jamal, blah blah, and all the real OG's we out! What was the 4th name he says?
The fourth person is Sekou Odinga. I've heard of everybody befor except this guy.
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Why ain't this man out yet??
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Because he murdered a police officer named Daniel Faulkner. You didn't know that?
So? That's good. That's what all GODs are supposed to do. Fuck that honkey pig...I'd have shot his ass myself if he were in my way.
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I think that's the dude who is on Immortal Technique's Album "Revolutionary Vol.2".
He's got a track on it. He doesn't rap, but talk, beat is good.
To think about the origins of hip hop in this culture and also about homeland
security is to see that there are at the very least two worlds in America. One
of the well-to-do and the struggling. For if ever there was the absence of
homeland security it is seen in the gritty roots of hip hop. For the music
arises from a generation that feels with some justice that they have been
betrayed by those who came before them. That they are at best tolerated in
schools, feared on the streets, and almost inevitably destined for the hell
holes of prison. They grew up hungry, hated and unloved. And this is the
psychic fuel that seems to generate the anger that seems endemic in much of the
music and poetry. One senses very little hope above the personal goals of
wealth and the climb above the pit of poverty. In the broader society the
opposite is true, for here more than any place on earth wealth is more wide
spread and so bountiful. What passes for the middle class in America could pass
for the upper class in most of the rest of the world. They're very opulent and
relative wealth makes the insecure. And homeland security is a governmental
phrase that is as oxymoronic, as crazy as saying military intelligence, or the
U.S Department of Justice. They're just words that have very little
relationship to reality. And do you feel safer now? Do you think you will
anytime soon? Do you think duck tape and Kleenex and color codes will make you
safer? From Death row this is Mumia Abu Jamal
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Why ain't this man out yet??
It's funny becuz when I always think about injustice I never think about it still goin' on. Damn. :-\
Oh and course, good looks for the site!
because he was actually guilty
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Why ain't this man out yet??
It's funny becuz when I always think about injustice I never think about it still goin' on. Damn. :-\
Oh and course, good looks for the site!
because he was actually guilty
I usually dont trust things when theirs tampered evidence and a bunch of shady stuff going on which is what happened in his case
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Why ain't this man out yet??
It's funny becuz when I always think about injustice I never think about it still goin' on. Damn. :-\
Oh and course, good looks for the site!
because he was actually guilty
Yeah, how?
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Ahh ha, I see.
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I think that's the dude who is on Immortal Technique's Album "Revolutionary Vol.2".
He's got a track on it. He doesn't rap, but talk, beat is good.
To think about the origins of hip hop in this culture and also about homeland
security is to see that there are at the very least two worlds in America. One
of the well-to-do and the struggling. For if ever there was the absence of
homeland security it is seen in the gritty roots of hip hop. For the music
arises from a generation that feels with some justice that they have been
betrayed by those who came before them. That they are at best tolerated in
schools, feared on the streets, and almost inevitably destined for the hell
holes of prison. They grew up hungry, hated and unloved. And this is the
psychic fuel that seems to generate the anger that seems endemic in much of the
music and poetry. One senses very little hope above the personal goals of
wealth and the climb above the pit of poverty. In the broader society the
opposite is true, for here more than any place on earth wealth is more wide
spread and so bountiful. What passes for the middle class in America could pass
for the upper class in most of the rest of the world. They're very opulent and
relative wealth makes the insecure. And homeland security is a governmental
phrase that is as oxymoronic, as crazy as saying military intelligence, or the
U.S Department of Justice. They're just words that have very little
relationship to reality. And do you feel safer now? Do you think you will
anytime soon? Do you think duck tape and Kleenex and color codes will make you
safer? From Death row this is Mumia Abu Jamal
yea this albums great
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yeah Mumia Abu Jamal is big in the game, general, you see what I'm saying fam, he's a general on the roads, big him up, true stories, very deep brother that you know, I hope he beats his case, true stories, lets go
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you know what they say, dont do the crime if you're gonna play the race card
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you know what they say, dont do the crime if you're gonna play the race card
::) dont do the crime if you're going to play the race card ha ha so ignorant.
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I like listening to Mumia on youtube, I dont know whether he is guilty or not, regardless, he has very interesting stuff to say.