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Burn Baby, Burn ❤️🔥 Uncensored Version of Los Angeles Riots (1965) Attorney Donald Warden
This is an educational album and is not designed to incite violence. We Tell It Like It Is - The True Facts As Told
The recordings were originally part of a radio broadcast in the San Francisco Bay Area by the Afro-American Association.
These broadcasts discuss the 1965 Watts Riots thru the eyes of the Black American community.
Heard on these recordings are Chief Parker of the LAPD, some of the "Blood Brothers" L.A. Mayor Sam Yorty, Dick Gregory, "The Preachers" Singer Johnny Nash, and others.
Khalid Abdullah Tariq al-Mansour #bloods #blackmuslims #3dmodels #3danimation
* Black nationalist
* Helped Huey Newton and Bobby Seale to establish the Black Panther Party
* Outspoken hater of the United States, Israel, and white people generally
* Was a patron of Barack Obama who recommended the latter for admission to Harvard Law School in 1988
A native of Texas, Khalid Abdullah Tariq al-Mansour is a Muslim convert who holds a bachelor’s degree from Howard University and a JD from the UC Berkeley School of Law. After completing his formal education, he went on to become an attorney who sat on numerous corporate boards, including those of the Saudi African Bank and the Chicago-based LaGray Chemical Company.
Before converting to Islam, Mansour, whose original name was Don Warden, was heavily involved in San Francisco Bay Area racial politics as founder of the African American Association in the early 1960s. He also served as a personal mentor to Huey Newton and Bobby Seale, helping the pair establish the Black Panther Party; a subsequent falling-out, however, caused Mansour to end his association with them.
After learning Arabic and studying Islam, Mansour took his Muslim name in 1964. “I found,” he explains, “that Khalid Abdullah Tariq al-Mansour, if you put ’em together, it means that, if I’m eternally the slave of God, and I follow the right path, I will always be victorious. I liked that. So that became my name.”
In the mid-1970s, Mansour met and became a friend and adviser to Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Tatal, who at that time was studying business administration at Menlo College in California. Today Prince Alwaleed is best remembered for having offered a $10 million donation toward 9/11 relief efforts in 2001 – an offer that was rejected by New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani when the prince suggested that the terrorist attacks were an indication that America “should re-examine its policies in the Middle East and adopt a more balanced stand toward the Palestinian cause.”
Not long after having met the prince, Mansour in 1977 was introduced to the king of Saudi Arabia and became his attorney, representing the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in a lawsuit that had been filed against it.
After Prince Alwaleed earned his college degree in 1979, he returned to Saudi Arabia. Soon thereafter, he asked Mansour to help him invest money in Africa. “He said, let’s make our focus turning Africa around,” Mansour recalls. “He has never told me until today where this idea came from, but it became an obsession.”
A friend of the late professor Edward Said, Mansour — a black nationalist — is an outspoken hater of the United States, Israel, and white people generally. He has accused the U.S. of plotting a “genocide” designed “to remove 15 million black people, considered disposable, of no relevance, value or benefit to the American society.” He has told fellow blacks: “Whatever you do to [white people], they deserve it, God wants you to do it, and that’s whether you cut off the nose, cut off the ears, take flesh out of their body, don’t worry. God wants you to do that.”
Mansour has written numerous books, including such titles as The Destruction of Western Civilization as Seen Through Islam and Will the West Rule Forever?
Mansour made headlines in 2008 when the longtime black activist/attorney Percy Sutton — a former lawyer for Malcolm X and a former business partner of Mansour — revealed that Mansour had once been a patron of a young Barack Obama — by raising money for Obama’s education and recommending Obama for admission to Harvard Law School in 1988.
Though reluctant to speak publicly about his ties to Obama, Mansour said in 2008: “I wish him the best, and hope he can win the [presidential] election.”
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