The black Panthers was the most significant activist group during the 1960s who had a positive impact because they emphasized black pride, community control, and unification. Coming from different places, both Bobby Seale and Huey Newton were just two students at Merritt College who worked with eachother to develop the school’s black studies' curriculum and combine African-American History courses into their college curriculum, as they were also very involved in politics. After the assassination of Malcolm X, the mistreatment and extreme of police brutality against the African-Americans, both men were determined to do something for the black communities. On October 15, 1966 in Oakland California, was when the pair decided to form the Black …show more content…
The ten points included: 1.) We want freedom 2.) we want full employments for our people. 3.) We want an end to the robbery by the white man of the black community. 4.) We want housing; we want shelter, which is fit for human beings. 5.) We want an education which teaches us our true history and our role in the present day American society. 6.) We want all black men to be exempt from military service, stop the murder of black people. 7.) We want all black men immediately released from federal state, county, city jails, and penitentiaries. 8.) We want all black people when brought to trial to be tried in court by a jury of their peer group or people from their black communities, as defined by the constitution of the United States. 9.) We want land, bread, housing, education. 10.) we want clothing, justice and peace. They believed that in order to receive these demands, they would have to follow Martin Luther King Jr’s “Non-violence” campaign, in which they thought would take too long, or may not even work, but only way they could receive these demands quicker, was by violence as their public stance. In the event that the Black Panthers developed into a Marxist revolutionary group, many more people became involved in the party movement to end racial segregation, including women, exceeding up to 2,000 members operating in several major
Since the Emancipation Proclamation ended slavery in 1863 there was a perpetual battle for African American equality in the United States that was a key part of our history throughout the twentieth century. Anne Moody’s Coming of in Mississippi is a book that greatly outlines the hardships faced by a black individual during the fight for equality. One main theme covered in the book is whether violent or nonviolent action is more productive in the fight for equality. This argument is one that defined various African American leaders in the mid nineteenth century. Leaders such as Martin Luther King prided themselves on nonviolent protests while others such as Malcolm X argued that violence was needed to truly reach equality.
The Black panther party founded in October of 1966 by Bobby Seale and Huey Newton. The main purpose of this group was to fight white oppression after seeing many people suffer from police brutality. THey had chosen the name Black panthers because the black panther doesn’t strike first, “but if the aggressor strikes first, then he’ll attack.” the black panthers had a 10 point plan that had everything they wanted to change in society.
Initially, the group petitions for many things they feel owed by the federal government, but later contradictorily, speak of throwing off that same government. The rhetoric in this paper tussles between demanding the support of a capitalist democratic government and simultaneously denouncing that government and proposing the creation of their own separate communist system. The Black Panthers’ goal of Black liberation is ideologically crippled by two incompatible and mutually exclusive socio-economic systems, capitalism and
The Seattle branch of the Black Panther Party was one of the first chapters to be established outside of the original headquarters of California. Aaron Dixon, the founder of this branch, recounts his time as a panther in the book My People Are Rising. In this book, Dixon describes his experiences as having been a constant emotional roller coaster. One day everything would go according to plan, and the next the party would be under heavy attack. the Seattle Black Panther Party branch was one of the strongest, most well organized chapters within the party, and at one point in its existence, it was also one of the most dangerous chapters of the party, supporting Hoover’s statement of the Black Panthers being “the number one internal threat to the security of the United States.”
Was the Black Panther Party Significant? Well that's a very interesting question but in order to answer that you have to go all the way back to the beginning. In 1966 Bobby Seal and Huey Newton founded The Black Panther for self defense. Bobby Seale after his time in the Air Force decided to attend Merritt College, while he was there he joined their “Afro- American Association which was a group that promoted black voices and activist and it is their were he met Huey P Newton.
Numerous times throughout both chapters 4 and 5 have the concepts matched the experiences of the Black Panthers (I didn’t see any applicable examples in chapter 6). In chapter 5 there was multiple times throughout the reading where the text illustrates the struggle that the Black Panthers had to endure, but I focused on three main ones. the first example being that in page 72, it mentions that the FBI will use psychological and “social effects “to stop the movement of activists. The Black Panthers also felt these effects from the FBI as well when the FBI convinced the police that these people have guns and they are going to kill you.
The party was first formed to protect the black community from police violence. The Black Panther Party Platform, Program, and Rules was written to inform the
On May 2, 1967, Huey P. Newton, the minister of defense of the Black Panthers, said that “the time has come for black people to arm themselves against this terror before it is too late” (Document F). The group had changed to a violent point of view after they saw nothing was happening when they were
“How Enfranchisement Stops Lynchings” by Ida B. Wells is an Investigative Article that aims to encourage individuals to protect the constitutional rights of black people. The Black Panther Party's “10-Point Program” is a list of demands aimed to highlight the criminal injustices and disparities black Americans face from the government, and to call other minorities to defend their rights. While “How Enfranchisement Stops Lynchings” uses Logos to state facts to support her argument and urge for government action. The Black Panther Parties' “10-Point Program” uses the authorial choice of historical reference to highlight the hypocrisy of the American Government. Both texts aim to promote racial justice and equity to influence their audience to
In contrary to peaceful protest and marches led by Martin Luther King there were other leaders who had more radical approaches to protest. Amongst these radical leaders are Malcolm X, Robert Williams, and the Black Panthers. The Black Panthers, a group created by in 1966, by Huey P Newton and Bobby Seale protected black communities patrolling areas with loaded firearms, monitoring police activities involving blacks. Since they were known for carrying loaded firearms FBI Director J Edgar Hoover considered the Black Panthers “the greatest threat to the internal security of the United States” (To Determine the Destiny of Our Black Community). The Black Panthers created the Ten-Point Program.
In order to achieve true freedom one must discover that you can break unjust laws through peaceful protest. In “Letter from Birmingham Jail” by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr and “The Speech at The March Washington” by Josephine Baker each article passionately argues about the disadvantages of the black community, the equality and power of education. We must learn to act with patients and not guns we must protect are self’s with a pen and paper not violence. Dr. King once4 said “Nonviolence is a powerful and just weapon. It is unique in history which cuts without wounding and ennobles the man who wields it.
Introduction Many writers and speakers have been influenced by the speeches of Martin Luther King Jr. "I have a Dream" and Frederick Douglass "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July". These speeches have helped evolve the history so drastically that black American’s now have freedom and to never be segregated like they were in the past.
The Black Panther party, a very misunderstood but known civil rights party held a strong legacy. They achieved this through their actions such as their famous strategies, their demands from the ten point program, the numerous outreaches in media, their relationship towards authorities, and their effects towards the current generation. The Black Panther formed in 1966 by 6 men, very young at the time who were fed up with the white supremacy
The Black Panthers were a Black Power group that wanted equality for everyone. The Black Panther Party for Self Defense helped shape the Civil Rights movement immensely. Who they were, what their core beliefs were, and how they shaped the Civil Rights movement, and America today will be covered. The Black Panthers were originally started by Bobby Seale and Huey Newton.
The Panthers were fighting for equal housing, jobs, employment, education, and an end of police brutality across the nation on blacks and their support of civil rights movement and equality for all blacks. Newton and Seale devised a 10 point plan to empower blacks focusing on their rights as citizens with some of their views being unrealistic ie: having blacks released from prison and protesting the Vietnam War and the killing of