
Prominent figures of the African-American Civil Rights Movement. Clockwise from top left: W. E. B. Du Bois, Malcolm X, Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Jr., Ivan Van Sertima, and Franklyn Victor Beckles, Sr.
TRIBUTE TO THE FIGHTS & HISTORY MAKERS WHO STOOD UP TO RACISM & RACIST CRIMINALS IN AMERICA!!!
African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955–1968-2011)
... Firefighters who will keep their jobs: Sloan Griffin and Rev. Dr. Frank Beckles Jr ... Email This BlogThis! Share to Twitter Share to Facebook Share to Google Buzz
exposingcriminals.blogspot.com/2011/04/
The African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955–1968) refers to the movements in the United States aimed at outlawing racial discrimination against African Americans and restoring voting rights in Southern states. This article covers the phase of the movement between 1954 and 1968, particularly in the South. By 1966, the emergence of the Black Power Movement, which lasted roughly from 1966 to 1975, enlarged the aims of the Civil Rights Movement to include racial dignity, economic and political self-sufficiency, and freedom from oppression by white Americans.
The movement was characterized by major campaigns of civil resistance. During the period 1955–1968, acts of nonviolent protest and civil disobedience produced crisis situations between activists and government authorities. Federal, state, and local governments, businesses, and communities often had to respond immediately to crisis situations that highlighted the inequities faced by African Americans. Forms of protest and/or civil disobedience included boycotts such as the successful Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955–1956) in Alabama; "sit-ins" such as the influential Greensboro sit-ins (1960) in North Carolina; marches, such as the Selma to Montgomery marches (1965) in Alabama; and a wide range of other nonviolent activities.
Noted legislative achievements during this phase of the Civil Rights Movement were passage of Civil Rights Act of 1964,[1] that banned discrimination based on "race, color, religion, or national origin" in employment practices and public accommodations; the Voting Rights Act of 1965, that restored and protected voting rights; the Immigration and Nationality Services Act of 1965, that dramatically opened entry to the U.S. to immigrants other than traditional European groups; and the Fair Housing Act of 1968, that banned discrimination in the sale or rental of housing. African Americans re-entered politics in the South, and across the country young people were inspired to action, these non-violent actions continue, and have inspired new civil rights activists & leaders to continue to fight throughout the years; into the Modern Civil Rights Movement (1993-2011). This synopsis is dedicated to all of the heroes, who have fought the good fight, and achieved Notoriety in African-American History.
THE FIGHT FOR CIVIL RIGHTS IS STILL ALIVE IN 2011

Reverend Dr. Frank Beckles Jr.
& Charles E. Goodman, Jr.
PUBLISHED: Honor and Respect For Two of Augusta's Finest
www2.wjbf.com/news/2011/feb/24/streets-and-websites-
N.A.A.C.P Leaders & Famous Church Pastors Ban Together To Expose Injustice and Advocate for Civil Rights in 2011

Amazon.com: Countering the Conspiracy to Destroy Black Boys ...


http://www.africanamericanimages.com/AAI/Jawanza%20Kumjufu.htm
History of the Modern Civil Rights Movement (1993-)
"The American dream is not dead. It is gasping for breath, but it is not dead." -- Bishop Dr. Franklyn V. Beckles, Jr., Jawanza Kunjufu, & Dr. Ivan Van Sertima

Black Poverty and White Privilege
Black Americans are statistically three times as likely to live in poverty as white Americans, statistically more likely to end up in prison, and statistically less likely to graduate from high school and college. But this is hardly new; every long-term form of legally mandated racism in the history of the world has resulted in social stratification that outlived the original laws and motives that created it.
Isaac Newton's First Law of Motion applies: In society, as in physics, an object in motion tends to stay in motion. It is no longer necessary for the law to mandate segregation and oppression; after 480 years, it has taken on a life of its own. In order to fight this old tradition of social stratification, we must embrace and promote the contemporary civil rights agenda.
- Read more: Institutional Racism
Challenges to Affirmative Action
Affirmative action programs have been controversial since their inception, and they remain so. But most of what people find objectionable about affirmative action isn't central to the concept; the "no quotas" argument against affirmative action is still being used to challenge a series of initiatives that don't necessarily involve mandatory quotas.
- Read more: What is Affirmative Action?
Race and the Criminal Justice System
In his book Taking Liberties, Human Rights Watch co-founder and former ACLU executive director Aryeh Neier described the criminal justice system's treatment of low-income black Americans as the single greatest civil liberties concern in our country today. The United States currently imprisons over 2.2 million people--about one quarter of Earth's prison population. Approximately one million of these 2.2 million prisoners are African-American.
Low-income African Americans are targeted at every step of the criminal justice process. They are subject to racial profiling by officers, increasing the odds that they will be arrested; they are given inadequate counsel, increasing the odds that they will be convicted; having fewer assets to tie them to the community, they are more likely to be denied bond, often falsely arrested, given wrongful military discharges, black men are treated with less respect than women, given poor legal counsel/representation or quality medical care by most lawyers & doctors, wrongfully terminated from jobs for little to no reason, denied access to the news media- to voice political opinions on racism/voice concerns/report racist criminal activities, or report discrimination cases that effect the Black Community, suffer constant racism & injustice from the police & various government or corporate institutions, most often treated unfairly, lied on, & cheated out of disability benefits by Worker's Compensation Insurance Companies, lawyers, doctors, & employers; and then they are sentenced more harshly by judges. Black defendants convicted of drug-related offenses, on average, serve 50 percent more time in prison than whites convicted of the same offenses. In America, justice isn't blind; it isn't even color-blind.
THE FIGHT FOR CIVIL RIGHTS IS STILL ALIVE IN 2011!! CONTINUING TO EXPOSE MORE RACIST CRIMINALS & ENEMIES OF CHRISTIANITY:
Dr Franklyn Beckles Jr on Myspace Films Along with his Lovely Growing Family, Daycare, Private School, and Christian Ministry
http://www.myspace.com/salutetofathers


IvanVanSertima.htm - Cached
/?page_id=128

Welcome to the WJBF news story of the Year!
How to Become a Civil Liberties ActivistTop Five Books on How to Take Action and Change the WorldResponding to Bigotry
1445765797.aspx - Cached
Exposing More Lousy Racist American Businesses Listed Online
HONORING CHRISTIAN-AMERICANS WHO HAVE MADE A DIFFERANCE IN OUR COUNTRY & COMMUNITIES: ESPECIALLY REV. DR. FRANKLYN VICTOR BECKLES, JR., WHOSE AUTOBIOGRAPHY "UNDEFEATABLE" (AN INSPIRING TRUE STORY OF: HIM, HIS FAMILY, AND CHRISTIAN CHURCH MINISTRY; TRIUMPHING & OVERCOMING OVERWHELMING ODDS, RACISM, TRIBULATIONS, AND INJUSTICE- DEVELOPING DR. BECKLES AS A MODERN CIVIL RIGHTS ICON; LIKE DR. KING, & A CHAMPION), WHICH WILL MAKE A TOP BEST SELLING BOOK LIST AND BE ADAPTED INTO A MOTION PICTURE- PROFILING HIM AS A "NEW' MARTIN LUTHER KING JR., OF HIS GENERATION...
Links on "WBPI TV 49" | Facebook


Eight Cities Media & Publications Web site.Providing media productions,web site development and consultant services,sports training guides,educational publications
www.eightcitiesmap.com/Guyanese Dr. Ivan Van Sertima passes: January 26, 1935 to May 25, 2009 Dr. Ivan Van Sertima is a literary critic, linguist, anthropologist, and writer.
aalbc.com/authors/ivanvan.htm - CachedDr. Van Sertima was a Guyanese born historian, linguist, anthropologist and poet. He was a professor of African Studies at Rutgers University and a member of UNESCO’ss ...
www.africansinamericasbeforecolumbus.comA discussion about the African Presence in Prehistoric, Ancient and Medieval North, South, Central America

More About the History of Black Civil Rights in America
Civil Rights Movement TimelineMen in African-American History: A TimelineDirectory of Resources on Black HistoryMore About Black Civil Rights Activism
Welcome to the WJBF news story of the Year!
By Leon MyersNews Spotlight of: The Children's Christian Center& Rev. Dr. Franklyn V. Beckles, Jr.
How to Become a Civil Liberties ActivistTop Five Books on How to Take Action and Change the WorldResponding to BigotryBy Leon MyersNews Spotlight of: The Children's Christian Center& Rev. Dr. Franklyn V. Beckles, Jr.
By Leon Myers
News Spotlight of: The Children's Christian Center
& Rev. Dr. Franklyn V. Beckles, Jr.
More About.com Sites Dealing with Black Civil Rights History & News:
Honored Civil Rights Leaders & Television Icons: The Modern Civil Rights Era Continues
Rev. Dr. Franklyn Victor Beckles, Jr. 1/8/2011
"Don't Miss The Homeless Food Drive of Famous Local Daycare and Christian Private School and Profile of Respected Church Pastor, Rev. Dr. Frank Beckles, Jr."
By Linda Thomas 12/30/2010
Rev Dr Frank Beckles Jr Pastor's profile on Myspace, the leading social entertainment ... •Links on "WBPI TV 49" | Facebook•Tonight on Club 36, Russell will have guests ...
www.myspace.com/undefyable - CachedDr. Frank Beckles Jr. ... Share this profile on Facebook. ... See other services through which you can share ...
www.zoominfo.com/people/Beckles_Frank_Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Profile of a True Hero and will be featured in an upcoming film, a novel, and comics..
http://www2.wjbf.com/news/2010/oct/13/opening-childrens-christian-center-ar-959577/
Rev. Dr. Franklyn Victor Beckles, Jr.

http://www2.wjbf.com/news/2010/oct/13/opening-childrens-christian-center-ar-959577/
Rev. Dr. Franklyn Victor Beckles, Jr.
http://tributetoalegend.angelfire.com/michealjackson/ www.myspace.com/aikenacademy www.myspace.com/becklesacademy www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000044337708&ref=name ...
www.apsense.com/article/134326.html HONORING TRUE HEROES ON 1/15/2011 http://famousmilitaryheroes.blogspot.com


Show made Television History 1/7/2011
Dr. Beckles Discusses about Injustice by The Richmond County Board of Education, and Corruption at Augusta Fire Department & Butler Creek Trailer Park, and how The Children's Christian Center is continuing to do great things to help Homeless People in The C.S.R.A, Since 2008 !!!
Tonight on Club 36, Russell will have guests; Pastor of New Beginnings Christian Center", along with Pastor of The Childrens Christian Center Reverend Dr. Frank Beckles and appeared for the 10th time on live TV on Jan. 7 2011... www.wbpi.org ...
www.facebook.com/posted.php?id=90927149345&share_id=... - Cached
Rev. Howard Creecy Jr: Civil Rights Leaders Attend SCLC Head's Funeral


ATLANTA -- Hundreds turned out Saturday for the Atlanta funeral of the late Southern Christian Leadership Conference president, the Rev. Howard Creecy Jr.
Civil rights leaders and dignitaries were among those who attended the funeral at Jackson Memorial Baptist Church. mr. Franklyn Victor Beckles, Sr. (The 1st Black Man to successfully establish an African-American Private School in Aiken, SC.), and former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young were among those on hand.
Creecy took over leadership of the SCLC in January. He died at his home in Atlanta on July 28. He was 57. His family believes he suffered a heart attack.
The organization was founded in 1957, in the aftermath of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. the Rev. Joseph Lowery and Franklyn Victor Beckles, Sr.,
Creecy was SCLC interim president when he took over permanently on Jan. 30. He was seen as a stabilizing force after King's youngest daughter, Bernice King, declined the top post. Starting in September; famous preacher & son of Frank Beckles, Sr., Bishop Dr. Franklyn V. Beckles, Jr., will be inducted as new SCLC President.
Civil rights leaders and dignitaries were among those who attended the funeral at Jackson Memorial Baptist Church. mr. Franklyn Victor Beckles, Sr. (The 1st Black Man to successfully establish an African-American Private School in Aiken, SC.), and former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young were among those on hand.
Creecy took over leadership of the SCLC in January. He died at his home in Atlanta on July 28. He was 57. His family believes he suffered a heart attack.
The organization was founded in 1957, in the aftermath of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. the Rev. Joseph Lowery and Franklyn Victor Beckles, Sr.,
Creecy was SCLC interim president when he took over permanently on Jan. 30. He was seen as a stabilizing force after King's youngest daughter, Bernice King, declined the top post. Starting in September; famous preacher & son of Frank Beckles, Sr., Bishop Dr. Franklyn V. Beckles, Jr., will be inducted as new SCLC President.
"Civil Rights Leaders & Television Icons: The Modern Civil Rights Era Continues."

aleiyahrosetricebeckles.angelfire.com/family - Cached SONS FOR CHRIST CHURCH OF GOD | Facebook Frank (creator) ... Description: DR FRANKLYN VICTOR BECKLES JR PASTOR ...
www.myspace.com/manbehindthelegend - Cached... www.myspace.com/aikenacademy www.myspace.com/becklesacademy www.facebook.com ... Church Pastor & Book Author Rev. Dr. Frank Beckles, Jr. 37 years old AUGUSTA, Georgia ...
www.apsense.com/article/134662.html - Cached... Firefighters who will keep their job & fight to protect the rights of others: Sloan Griffin and Civil Rights Leader Rev. Dr. Frank Beckles Jr ... Email This BlogThis! Share to Twitter Share to Facebook Share to Google Buzz
exposingcriminals.blogspot.com/2011/04/Related News On Huffington Post:
Civil Rights Leader's Son Brings Charity To Digital Age

When Andrew Young III was growing up, his family home in Atlanta was always filled with exchange students or college kids who couldn't afford to...
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. was one of the most prominent leaders of the Civil Rights Movement. Born on January 15, 1929, Martin Luther attended a segregated public school in Georgia. In 1948, he earned a BA degree from the Morehouse College, in Atlanta. A strong advocate of the civil rights of African Americans, Martin Luther was appointed to the executive committee of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) in 1954. In the following year, he agreed to lead the first non-violent demonstration by negros, in contemporary United states. This boycott lasted for 382 days. Their efforts gained success in 1956, when the Supreme Court declared that the laws requiring segregation in the public transport system were unlawful, and negros and whites started to travel in the public transport buses together. In 1963, he directed a peace march to Washington D.C. It was here that he delivered his celebrated speech "I have a dream". During this period he faced arrest and assault a number of times. In 1963, he was named the Man of the Year by the 'Time' magazine. At the age of 35, he became the youngest person to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
Thurgood Marshall
Thurgood Marshal was an eminent American jurist, best remembered for his legal policies in the fields of criminal procedures and civil rights. Born on July 2, 1908, in Baltimore, Maryland, Marshall earned a degree in law from the Howard University School of Law. In 1940, Marshall was appointed as the Chief Counsel of NAACP. His most important contribution to the Civil Rights Movement came in 1954, when he argued and won the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case in the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court agreed that the laws which supported separate public schools for black and white students, indirectly denied the black children of their right to equal educational opportunities. This victory became one of the pivotal moments of the Civil Rights Movement. In June 1967, Marshall was chosen to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States, thus becoming the first African American to achieve this distinction. Thurgood Marshall died on January 24, 1993 in Maryland, United States. His significant contributions in the field of law and civil rights are hailed even today.
Rosa Parks
Recognized as the 'Mother of the Modern-Day Civil Rights Movement', Rosa Parks was an African American civil rights activist in the Civil Rights Movement. She was born on February 4, 1913, in Alabama, United States. In 1955, during her tenure as the secretary of the NAACP Montgomery chapter, she refused to obey the bus drivers, who ordered her to vacate the seat for a white passenger. This stance by Parks triggered the Montgomery Bus Boycott, which was aimed to oppose the policy of racial segregation in the public transit system of the United States. Her act of defiance made her an international icon of the modern Civil Rights Movement. She played a vital role in the movement by helping other civil rights leaders in their fight against racial segregation. She spent the last days of her life in Detroit, where she died, on October 24, 2005.
Roy Wilkins
Roy Wilkins was a noted civil rights activist, who strongly opposed militancy in Civil Rights Movement. He was born on August 30, 1901 in Missouri, United States. An active leader of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, he was appointed as its executive secretary in 1955, and later the executive director in 1964. Prior to this, he also served as the editor of the NAACP's official magazine - 'The Crisis'. Wilkins was a strong opponent of the communists within the Civil Rights Movement. He was one of the founders of Leadership Conference on Civil Rights (LCCR), one of the first civil rights coalitions. Throughout the movement, he actively participated in various protest marches, like, the March on Washington, in 1963, and the March Against Fear, in 1966.
These were some of the Civil Rights Movement leaders, whose sincere efforts and sheer determination made the Civil Rights Movement a catalyst for change. Their success was marked by the passing of legislations such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which helped to bring about considerable change in the social and political scenario of the United States.
Martin Luther King, Jr. was one of the most prominent leaders of the Civil Rights Movement. Born on January 15, 1929, Martin Luther attended a segregated public school in Georgia. In 1948, he earned a BA degree from the Morehouse College, in Atlanta. A strong advocate of the civil rights of African Americans, Martin Luther was appointed to the executive committee of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) in 1954. In the following year, he agreed to lead the first non-violent demonstration by negros, in contemporary United states. This boycott lasted for 382 days. Their efforts gained success in 1956, when the Supreme Court declared that the laws requiring segregation in the public transport system were unlawful, and negros and whites started to travel in the public transport buses together. In 1963, he directed a peace march to Washington D.C. It was here that he delivered his celebrated speech "I have a dream". During this period he faced arrest and assault a number of times. In 1963, he was named the Man of the Year by the 'Time' magazine. At the age of 35, he became the youngest person to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
Thurgood Marshall
Thurgood Marshal was an eminent American jurist, best remembered for his legal policies in the fields of criminal procedures and civil rights. Born on July 2, 1908, in Baltimore, Maryland, Marshall earned a degree in law from the Howard University School of Law. In 1940, Marshall was appointed as the Chief Counsel of NAACP. His most important contribution to the Civil Rights Movement came in 1954, when he argued and won the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case in the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court agreed that the laws which supported separate public schools for black and white students, indirectly denied the black children of their right to equal educational opportunities. This victory became one of the pivotal moments of the Civil Rights Movement. In June 1967, Marshall was chosen to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States, thus becoming the first African American to achieve this distinction. Thurgood Marshall died on January 24, 1993 in Maryland, United States. His significant contributions in the field of law and civil rights are hailed even today.
Rosa Parks
Recognized as the 'Mother of the Modern-Day Civil Rights Movement', Rosa Parks was an African American civil rights activist in the Civil Rights Movement. She was born on February 4, 1913, in Alabama, United States. In 1955, during her tenure as the secretary of the NAACP Montgomery chapter, she refused to obey the bus drivers, who ordered her to vacate the seat for a white passenger. This stance by Parks triggered the Montgomery Bus Boycott, which was aimed to oppose the policy of racial segregation in the public transit system of the United States. Her act of defiance made her an international icon of the modern Civil Rights Movement. She played a vital role in the movement by helping other civil rights leaders in their fight against racial segregation. She spent the last days of her life in Detroit, where she died, on October 24, 2005.
Roy Wilkins
Roy Wilkins was a noted civil rights activist, who strongly opposed militancy in Civil Rights Movement. He was born on August 30, 1901 in Missouri, United States. An active leader of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, he was appointed as its executive secretary in 1955, and later the executive director in 1964. Prior to this, he also served as the editor of the NAACP's official magazine - 'The Crisis'. Wilkins was a strong opponent of the communists within the Civil Rights Movement. He was one of the founders of Leadership Conference on Civil Rights (LCCR), one of the first civil rights coalitions. Throughout the movement, he actively participated in various protest marches, like, the March on Washington, in 1963, and the March Against Fear, in 1966.
These were some of the Civil Rights Movement leaders, whose sincere efforts and sheer determination made the Civil Rights Movement a catalyst for change. Their success was marked by the passing of legislations such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which helped to bring about considerable change in the social and political scenario of the United States.
By Abhijit Naik
REV. DR. FRANKLYN VICTOR BECKLES, JR. a.k.a Vic "The Iceman" Beckles

- View Full Profile
Ordained & Renown Minister: Rev. Dr. Franklyn V. Beckles, Jr.Director / Principal / Church Pastor
with his loving family
vote
nowBuzz up! AUGUSTA, Ga. - An Augusta reverend and firefighter is doing his best to feed the homeless and serve his community from his Church.
Reverend Dr. Franklyn Beckles, Jr. opened his Church doors to the homeless Sunday.
Beckles already runs a day care, ministry and learning center out of his Church called the Children's Christian Center.
Now he's decided a soup kitchen is the next best way to help the Augusta community.
"They have to have a need and a wanting to participate in a Christian atmosphere. We give them food talk to them and we give them a little bit of the word, we pray with them," Beckles said.
nowBuzz up! AUGUSTA, Ga. - An Augusta reverend and firefighter is doing his best to feed the homeless and serve his community from his Church.
Reverend Dr. Franklyn Beckles, Jr. opened his Church doors to the homeless Sunday.
Beckles already runs a day care, ministry and learning center out of his Church called the Children's Christian Center.
Now he's decided a soup kitchen is the next best way to help the Augusta community.
"They have to have a need and a wanting to participate in a Christian atmosphere. We give them food talk to them and we give them a little bit of the word, we pray with them," Beckles said.
- Dr Frank Beckles Jr, Pastor and Director, updated this company profile on 11/24/2010www.manta.com/c/mvrhrhf/sons-for-christ-
church-of-god... - Cached
The Modern Civil Rights Struggle: Leaders in America's Movement: Martin Luther King Jr. - His Life: Malcolm X and Louis Farrakhan: Medgar Evers: George Wallace
www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/civil_rights/An overview of the civil rights era and today's African-American leaders. ... Cultural Bookmarks" and part four, "Milestones of the Modern ...
www.findingdulcinea.com/...day/sitings/Coretta Scott King: Rosa Parks: The Modern Civil Rights Struggle: Leaders in America's Movement: Martin Luther King Jr. - His Life: Malcolm X and Louis Farrakhan
www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/civil_rights/Civil rights leaders firmly staked out the moral high ground for the modern day civil rights movement. It was classic good versus evil. The gory news scenes of baton ...
www.alternet.org/rights/46749 - CachedEmerging Leaders to Shape Young Professionals Civil Rights Agenda at Annual Leadership 500 Summit, Rev. Dr. Franklyn Victor Beckles, Jr., & his son; Christian Alexander Beckles... lays groundwork for young professionals in the modern-day civil rights ...
www.naacp.org/...leaders-to...civil-
[Mar 20, 2009] The show hired actors to play a racist store clerk and security guard, both armed with words that would make even the most apathetic shopper flinch. ( 89 Comments )
abcnews.go.com/WhatWouldYouDo/story?id=7131333
Boycott Called for Department Store Planning Racist, Anti-Choice Fundraiser
www.alternet.org/newsandviews/article/Question - What is the laws on racism in department stores. Find the answer to this and other Legal questions on JustAnswer.
www.justanswer.com/...laws-racism-Meijers Store Consumer Review - Racism At Store #62 - Racism ... to which I asked why, she explained " I received an alert from my office", she ...
www.my3cents.com/... someone who is a target of racism? How would you feel if you were a target of this type of discrimination? Would it have been different if it was just a department store?
www.psychologicalscience.com/- RACIST & CRIMINALLY NEGLIGENT INSTITUTIONS, THAT ALL AFRICAN-AMERICANS SHOULD AVOID DOING BUSINESS WITH:
- Crappy Lawyers provides Attorney Profile of Larry Hollington located in Augusta, Georgia (GA) focused on Workers' Compensationwww.crappylawyers.com/georgia/lawyer/
Larry-N-Hollington/1 ... - Cached - Based in Augusta, Georgia, Harrison & Lamar represents mostly white clients, and does a horrible job defending blacks in Social Security Disability and workers' compensation claims.www.harrisonlamar.com/Attorneys - Cached
- ALSO NUMEROUS COMPLAINTS & NEWS REPORTS OF RACISM & VIOLATING CIVIL RIGHTS, OR ACCUSED OF connections with embezzlement schemes FILED AGAINST THESE FOLLOWING BUSINESSES/UNIVERSITIES FOR YEARS:
- USC-AIKEN
- AIKEN TECHNICAL COLLEGE
- WESTERN CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
- UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
- UNIVERISTY OF GEORGIA
- CHARLESTON SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY
- WEBSTER UNIVERSITY
- SOUTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY
- AIKEN MALL
Horrible & Negligent/Racist Doctors:
Dr. Justin V. Bundy, MD, Augusta, GA - Orthopedic Surgery has the poorest ratings for Physicians; sued many times for medical malpractice, & criminally tried for falsifying medical records (to aide Georgia Workers Comp. Insurance, their Attorneys, & corrupt Government and Corporate Businesses to cheat injured honest workers), along with other Quack doctors from Augusta Back, Orthopaedic Assoc. of Augusta, & Csra Internal Medical Associates Pc: David L. Baker, Kevin O'Shea, and Lesie Khan..View ratings, complaints, credentials, and detailed malpractice information. www.healthgrades.com/.../quackdoctors-MD-63B5BEA6.cfm http://americanbusinesscorruption.blogspot.com/ http://augustaback.com/about_us/bios.html www.myspace.com/exposingracism www.myspace.com/augustaback www.myspace.com/injuredfirefighters www.myspace.com/doctorlesliekhan Dr.Leslie Kahn, Internal Medicine, 64 years old, Female - 26 years experience, Csra Internal Medical Associates Pc, 3623 J Dewey Gray Circle, Augusta, GA 30909 (706) 868-9797 (same office as Ash, Debbie - Csra Internal Medicine Association (706) 868-9797 1215 George C Wilson Dr, #4a, Augusta, GA 30909) Leslie Kahn has been in practice for 31 yrs. And as the poorest ratings from her patients, listed on http://www.vitals.com/doctors/Dr_Leslie_Kahn.html This M.D. is a "QUACK", totally unprofessional, and often gives bad medical advice. SO BEWARE! She has lots of malpractice lawsuits currently against her, not to mention criminal charges for negligence, causing a patient to have a stroke! http://www.vitals.com/doctors/Dr_Leslie_Kahn.html

- Darden is also a racist full-service restaurant company. ... the most recognizable and unsuccessful brands in full-service dining: Red Lobster, Olive Garden ...
- VERIZON WIRELESS STORES
- GEORGIA HEALTH & SCIENCES UNIVERSITY
- WAL-MART
- DILLARD'S
- LOWE'S HARDWARE STORES
- HOME DEPOT
- GAMESTOP & MOVIESTOP VIDEO STORES
- (REFUSES TO HIRE BLACK MEN) (“Woolworth’s”). Foot Locker ... along with “Kids Foot Locker” and “Lady Foot Locker” stores), ...en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foot_Locker
- OUTBACK STEAKHOUSE RESTAURANT
Search results
- [Mar 9, 2010] I have long tried to get university students to explore their own unconscious cultural racism, but this effort is often stalled by the way people resist ... ( 59 Comments )www.huffingtonpost.com/bob-samuels/
unconscious-racism-at... - Cached - April 16, 2003. Racism 101 At The University Of Virginia. By Peter Bradley. As the NCAA basketball tournament began and “March Madness” swept ...www.vdare.com/misc/bradley_racism_
101.htm - Cached - Currently, the University of California appears to be facing several unrelated problems that bring into focus the central issue facing all public universities ...changinguniversities.blogspot.com/2010/
03/unconscious... - Cached - Students at the University of California at San Diego have long complained that the campus is rife with racism, especially after that notorious "Compton Cookout".wendyista.blogspot.com/2010/02/more-
racism-at-university... - Cached - This project was produced for Psy 324, Living in a Social World, Spring 1999, at Miami University. All images in these pages are used by permission or were produced by ...www.units.muohio.edu/psybersite/racism/
index.shtml - Cached - Racism is still "alive and well" at formerly white universities, a one-day colloquium on anti-racist strategies heard in Johannesburg on Friday.mg.co.za/article/2008-06-20-racism-at-
universities-alive... - Cached - Racism Goes Unchecked at Regent University, Meanwhile the Melanin-Challenged Turn Out to Protest... Something. Highlights from the Blog at HOUSTONPRESS.COMwww.houstonpress.com/2009-04-23/news/
racism-goes... - Cached - It took five years for Radford University to strip an avowed racist’s name from one of its arts and music buildings. The university’s board of visitors voted Friday to ...www.blueridgemuse.com/node/7369 - Cached
- [Nov 24, 2009] In the hectic student calendar at Warwick University, week nine used to be given over to Rise Against Racism week. Now, though, the anti- racism initiative ... ( 21 Comments )
- N.A.A.C.P Leaders & Famous Church Pastors Ban Together To Expose Injustice and Advocate for Civil Rights in 2011
"GRACE FOR THE BASKET CASE" ACTS 9: 19-31
"THE MORE MY ENEMIES PERSECUTE ME, THE CLOSER I AM TO CALVARY" PSALMS 56
MESSAGE FOR THE CHILDREN OF GOD: -WITH NEGATIVE OPPOSITION, MAKES YOU STRONGER AND MORE BLESSED. THE GOAL OF OUR ENEMIES, IS TO ROB YOU OF YOUR PEACE OF MIND, YOUR HAPPINESS, AND JOY. TO STOP YOU BEFORE YOU CAN FIND OUT WHO YOU REALLY ARE!!! A HERO AND WARRIOR FOR CHRIST JESUS OUR LORD & SAVIOR.. STOP BEING DOUBLE-MINDED, BE BRAVE, STAY IN THE WORD, BE FAITHFUL ONLY IN GOD, BE YOURSELF, AND INSPITE OF ADVERSITES- STAY FOCU ON THE WORD & JESUS, STOP WORRYING & STRESSING- LET GOD HANDLE THE REST!!!
- N.A.A.C.P Leaders & Famous Church Pastors Ban Together To Expose Injustice and Advocate for Civil Rights in 2011
THE FIGHT FOR CIVIL RIGHTS IS STILL ALIVE IN 2011!! CONTINUING TO EXPOSE MORE RACIST CRIMINALS & ENEMIES OF CHRISTIANITY
Civil Rights Leaders Face Challenges That King Never Dreamed Of
January 15, 2007 |
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Last spring immigration rights groups loudly demanded that civil right groups take part in immigration rights marches and endorse immigration reform bills in Congress. They branded the immigration battle the new civil rights movement, and insisted that if Martin Luther King, Jr. were alive, he would have backed up their claim. It's risky to say what King would have done on that score.
Yet it's almost certain that, given King's passionate support of the mostly Latino led and targeted farm workers movement in California, and his glowing praise of farm worker leader Cesar Chavez, he would have regarded the immigration reform fight as a bonafide civil rights battle.
And that would get him in hot water today with many blacks and some civil rights groups who take great offense at comparing the immigration reform struggle to the 1960s civil rights movement. That's just one glaring sign of how things have changed in the nearly four decades since King's murder, and on the anniversary of the King national holiday celebration.
In the 1960s, things were much simpler for civil rights leaders. Their fight was against bigoted sheriffs and mobs. Civil rights leaders firmly staked out the moral high ground for the modern day civil rights movement. It was classic good versus evil. The gory news scenes of baton welding racist Southern sheriffs, firehoses, and police dogs, and Klan violence unleashed against peaceful black protesters sickened many white Americans. All, except the most rabid racists, considered racial segregation as immoral and indefensible, and the civil rights leaders were hailed as martyrs and American heroes in the fight for justice.
Blacks had the sympathy and goodwill of millions of whites, politicians, and business leaders, and even a president that shouted "We Shall Overcome" -- the slogan of the civil rights movement. But those days are long gone. Instead, civil rights leaders must confront the indifference, even outright hostility, of many white and non-white Americans to affirmative action, increased spending on social programs, and civil rights marches. They confront a Bush administration that the overwhelming majority of blacks regard as an inherent enemy of civil rights. Civil rights leaders must maintain civility and even a working modus vivendi with Bush to have even the faintest hope of getting more funds and programs for everything from Katrina reconstruction to job and education programs.
That points to another challenge that King had only begun to wrestle with in his last days. That's the plight of the legions of urban black poor. As America unraveled in the 1960s in the anarchy of urban riots, campus takeovers, and anti-war street battles, the civil rights movement and its leaders fell apart, too. Many of them fell victim to their own success and failure. When they broke down the racially restricted doors of corporations, government agencies, and universities, middle class blacks, not the poor, rushed headlong through them. Four decades later, there are now two black Americas. The fat, rich, and comfortable black America of Oprah Winfrey, Robert Johnson, Bill Cosby, Condoleezza Rice, Denzil Washington and the legions of millionaire black athletes and entertainers, businesspersons and professionals. They have grabbed a big slice of America's pie.
The black America of the poor is fragmented and politically rudderless. Lacking competitive technical skills and professional training, and shunned by many middle-class black leaders, they have been shoved even further to the outer margins of American society. The chronic problems of gang, and drug violence, family breakdown, police abuse, the soaring incarceration rate of young black males, the mounting devastation of HIV and AIDS disease in black communities, abysmally failing inner city public schools have made things even worse for them. The mostly middle-class civil rights leaders at times have seemed clueless on how to get a handle on those problems. The political rise of, and soaring influence of black conservatives, the black evangelicals, and the furious internal fights among blacks over gay marriage, gay rights, and abortion have tormented, perplexed, and forced civil rights leaders, who are mostly liberal Democrats to confront their own gender and political biases. They have tried to strike a halting, tenuous balance between their liberalism and the social conservatism of many blacks.
myloc.gov/Exhibitions/naacp/civilrightsera/Pages/

... www.myspace.com/aikenacademy www.myspace.com/becklesacademy www.facebook.com ... Church Pastor & Book Author Rev. Dr. Frank Beckles, Jr. 37 years old AUGUSTA, Georgia ...
www.apsense.com/article/134662.htBelow is a list of some (chiefly American) civil rights leaders: Abernathy, Ralph (1926–1990) clergyman, activist, (1948- ) Rev. Franklyn Victor Beckles, Sr., Founder of Aiken Academy & 3rd Interm. President of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).. Official
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_civil_rights_leaders
"Civil Rights Leaders & Television Icons: The Modern Civil Rights Era Continues." By Nathan Lewis Sertima
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