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The Black Myths Podcast

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Sep 22, 2021 • 1h 18min

Myth Revisited: Dem. Party Politics is Black Politics w/ Glen Ford

Glen Ford, the executive editor and co-founder of Black Agenda Report, recently passed on July 28th. His funeral was just held this past Saturday on September 18th. In this episode, we offer a special dedication and we replay our original interview with him concerning the myth: Democratic Party politics are Black politics. RIP Glen Ford.  Original Description This month we celebrate Black August in memory of George Jackson and Black resistance. In this episode, we spoke with the executive editor of the Black Agenda Report, Glen Ford. We held a robust conversation with Mr. Ford about Bill Clinton, Obama, Malcolm X, criticizing our leaders in the public, the Democratic party, Kamala Harris, political prisoners, his ideas about defunding, and abolishing the police, and if we should call for community control of the police. We did not enter this episode with a specific myth but we concluded with the myth that Dem. Politics is Black Politics.    
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Aug 25, 2021 • 1h 55min

Myth: Angela Davis was a Black Panther Pt. 2 (w/ Dr. Joy James)

In part 2 and in continuation of Black August, we speak with renowned scholar Dr. Joy James. Building on our foundational timeline from part one, Dr. James provides an expansive outlook on the events that shaped Angela Davis's image. We discuss the commodification of Black radicalism, the influence the Communist party has on Davis, Black Elite collaboration with empire, George Jackson, and the pitfalls of pragmatism. Steadfast and sobering, James provides an analysis that challenges us to reckon with the stakes of the times.  Dr. Joy James is Ebenezer Fitch Professor of Humanities at Williams College. She is the editor of several anthologies on politics and incarceration, including The New Abolitionists and Imprisoned Intellectuals. We highly recommend listening to part one first.  https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/myth-angela-davis-was-a-black-panther/id1504205689?i=1000532574659 Airbrushing Revolution for the Sake of Abolition https://www.aaihs.org/airbrushing-revolution-for-the-sake-of-abolition/   Twitter - @blackmythspod Instagram -blackmythspod Facebook- The Black Myths Podcast  
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Aug 20, 2021 • 2h 7min

Myth: Angela Davis was a Black Panther

In correspondence with Black August, we track the path of Dr. Angela Davis from childhood through or infamous trial against the US state. We discuss the extent of her involvement with the Black Panther Party, the origins of the Black Panther Party, and the events that led up to her trial involving George and Jonathan Jackson. More importantly, we debunk the idea that Black radical Aesthetics are synonymous with revolutionary action (Angela Davis should not be reduced to an Afro). Free Angela and All Political Prisoners https://thoughtmaybe.com/free-angela-and-all-political-prisoners/ Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/blackmyths Twitter - @blackmythspod Instagram -blackmythspod Facebook- The Black Myths Podcast Black Power Media - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7_X-VeroWRvx6b9iD0BOZrvAOieHbb8p RUCHELL CINQUE Magee https://www.thejerichomovement.com/profile/magee-ruchell-cinque  
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Aug 4, 2021 • 1h 31min

Did Racism in Cuba Ignite the Jul. 11th Protests?

Guest - Journalist Liz Olivia Fernandez of Belly of the Beast In this episode, we present our myth as a question regarding the recent protests in Cuba and the subsequent newfound interest in Afro-Cubans: Did racism in Cuba ignite the July 11th protests? We say ignite as in not just what started the protests but what was the main element driving them? The mainstream US press is increasingly giving the impression that there is a racial Revolution happening in Cuba. We discuss this veiled notion while attempting to understand what's happening in Cuba without romanticizing or demonizing its government. In tandem, we consider what impact US policy has on the ongoing condition in Cuba and how the US uses racism to escape its own accountability. To offer a much-needed perspective we are joined by Afro-Cuban Journalist Liz Olivia Fernandez of Belly of the Beast. Liz Oliva Fernández is a 27-year-old award-winning Cuban journalist and producer with Belly of the Beast. She has won a Gracie Award and was co-winner of a One World Media Award for her work presenting the documentary series The War on Cuba. Apart from her journalism and filmmaking, Liz is a dedicated anti-racist and feminist activist. War on Cuba Documentary  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivNOJfvlmOs&list=PLRrWfcMc1UyEb1ctxQCx6GvazKMPLbOFP Twitter - @blackmythspod Instagram -blackmythspod Facebook- The Black Myths Podcast Patreon - patreon.com/blackmyths   Black Power Media IG- @black.power.media Twitter @blackpowermedi1 YouTube- https://youtube.com/c/IMIXWHATILIKEBPMhttps://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7_X-VeroWRvx6b9iD0BOZrvAOieHbb8p  
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Jul 22, 2021 • 1h 25min

Debate: Community Control of the Police is Inconsistent with Police Abolition - Consider the Following

This month we are introducing a new series -- Consider the Following. A debate series administered to engage principled disagreements throughout the Black left and the sociopolitical Black world. Typically, our pod is predicated upon debunking quantifiable myths (propaganda) said about Black people. However, this series expands beyond fact and fiction to promote a discourse that works to clarify principled disagreements. This series will air every so often in combination with our normal episode format.  The resolution for this month is "Community Control of the Police is Inconsistent with Police Abolition." We were unable to create the debate format we originally had planned due to unforeseen circumstances but we still built a great discussion/debate for our first attempt. For this episode, we invited Max Rameau of Pan African Community Action and Kamau Franklin of Community Movement Builders to answer challenging questions about CCOP and Police Abolition.  Show notes https://docs.google.com/document/d/1p0yytrynaRQKyYXy6wd1iIkAjJqgXJaYaFK7k-O6qB4/edit
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Jul 1, 2021 • 1h 42min

Myth: Algorithms are Colorblind Pt. 2 (W/ Michael Kwet & Tshi Malatji)

In part 2, expanding upon the impact of algorithms designed as racism --- we discuss the implications of Big Tech and Big Data on the global south with a focus on South Africa. We examine the notion of digital colonialism, how controlled opposition to it mutes our understanding of western tech hegemony and how a People's Tech (Digital Socialism) can help counter it. We are joined by guests: Michael Kwet, a Visiting Fellow of the Information Society Project at Yale Law School. He is the author of Digital colonialism: US empire and the new imperialism in the Global South, and hosts theTech Empire podcast. His work has been published at Motherboard, Wired, BBC World News Radio, and Counterpunch. He received his PhD in Sociology from Rhodes University, South Africa. Tshiamo Malatji, an organizer in Bloemfontein, South Africa, focusing on climate change, food sovereignty, and post-natural building as modes of responding to ecological crises. References https://docs.google.com/document/d/17fylaOq1hOXSxdThFhUK5ZDb3-L_upYaun8MhBU1-sY/edit Twitter - @blackmythspod Instagram -blackmythspod Facebook- The Black Myths Podcast  Black Power Media - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7_X-VeroWRvx6b9iD0BOZrvAOieHbb8p
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Jun 24, 2021 • 1h 22min

Myth: Algorithms are Colorblind

In this episode, we demystify the concept of algorithms and how they are technological representations of oppressive systems at large via Big Data/Big Tech. We explore the recently published Data 4 Black lives report, "Data Capitalism," to demonstrate how the process of data mining and producing algorithms to coerce labor has its roots in slavery. We examine current labor practices with Amazon and advertising mechanisms that all use algorithms to exploit Black people and other colonized people in the US. In our following episode, we will explore these practices and more outside of the borders of the US. Data Capitalism https://datacapitalism.d4bl.org/ Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7_X-VeroWRvx6b9iD0BOZrvAOieHbb8p Twitter - @blackmythspod Instagram -blackmythspod Facebook- The Black Myths Podcast Follow BPM: WEBSITE - https://www.blackpowermedia.org/​ TWITTER - https://twitter.com/BlackPowerMedi1​
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Jun 1, 2021 • 1h 6min

Myth: Black Wall Street Was Self-Sustaining (W/ Dr. Jared Ball) Pt. 2

In episode 2, we invite Dr. Jared Ball back to the show food to discuss the continuing myths of Black Wall Street in the modern-day. We "investigate" the Greenwood banking app, the myth Of Black dollar circulation, how public policy destroyed Black Wall Street a second time, and the pros and cons of self-sustainability.  SN: We moved our dates this past month to correspond with the hundred-year anniversary of the Tulsa Massacre. We will be returning back to our normal third and fourth-week release schedule. Twitter - @blackmythspod Instagram -blackmythspod Facebook- The Black Myths Podcast Patreon - patreon.com/blackmyths   Black Power Media IG- @black.power.media Twitter @blackpowermedi1 YouTube- https://youtube.com/c/IMIXWHATILIKEBPMhttps://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7_X-VeroWRvx6b9iD0BOZrvAOieHbb8p  
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May 26, 2021 • 1h 29min

Myth: Black Wall Street Was Self-Sustaining - The Black Myths Podcast

We're honoring the 100th-anniversary commemoration of the Tulsa Massacre sometimes poorly referred to as the Tulsa riot. We discuss how the pre-massacre Black Wall Street, a prominent Black business district located in the segregated Greenwood neighborhood of Tulsa, Oklahoma, was not the self-sustaining Black utopia/Wakanda that popular media has depicted it as. More importantly, we discuss the nature of the racial violence that occurred on May 31st - June 1st, 1921, and how it was an inevitable outcome of racial capitalism. In the end, we hope to honor the descendants of this horrible tragedy by reporting the truth of what they built and how they worked to defend it.
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May 13, 2021 • 1h 17min

Bonus episode - Myth: Flint is an Anomaly

In this bonus episode, we cover the Myth: Flint is an Anomaly by focusing on the city of Tallevast, Florida. In a Boston Review article "Poisoning Tallevast" Dr. James Manigualt-Bryant, Ruby Babywn, and JOSÉ Constantine cover the process of poisoning the water in the majority Black city. As the intro to the article states, "First, segregation blocked this Florida community from equal education and other public goods. Then the military-industrial complex sickened residents and destroyed their property." Environmental racism takes center stage in this special report.  Read here: http://bostonreview.net/science-nature-race/james-manigault-bryant-ruby-bagwyn-jose-constantine-poisoning-tallevast   Twitter - @blackmythspod Instagram -blackmythspod Facebook- The Black Myths Podcast Patreon - patreon.com/blackmyths   Black Power Media IG- @black.power.media Twitter @blackpowermedi1 YouTube- https://youtube.com/c/IMIXWHATILIKEBPMhttps://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7_X-VeroWRvx6b9iD0BOZrvAOieHbb8p  

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