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My Angel came by today

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My Angel came by today
 Lakeshore Ave., Oakland CA


Marvin X on the balcony of  the Cliff House Restaurant, Ocean Beach, San Francisco, April 9, 2019, celebrating the 86th birthday of the Most Honorable Dr. Nathan Hare, Father of Black and Ethnic Studies in America
photo Adam Turner



Cover design Adam Turner
Photo Marvin X
Alicia Mayo

My Angel came by today
Academy of da Corner, Lakeshore Ave., Oakland
Long time no see Angel
she came today
Angels come to bless
She blessed me and all who came by
Academy of da Corner
Angel down fa knowledge
people came no money
Angel paid for books
especially women
Angels love women
Had man Angel at Academy of da Corner, 14th and Broadway, downtown Oakland
Man Angel
blessed all women with no money
Said he wasn't blessing men only women
Female Angel didn't say but did same
I don't know why Angels love women
Do women have Angel hearts souls minds spirits
Today my Angel in sorrow
Dr. Julia Hare transition
She blessed women with Julia's books
my books too
Somebody asked Angel my wife?
No Angel wife
Between Angel and wife
Give me Angel!
Angel pure blessings
love for love
no love hate love
Give me pure love Angel love
no stress zone love
Angel love
Angel's love for Goddess/God
Angel love unconditional sacred holy love
Can't abuse Angel love
wife love abuse not Angel love
Angel love too strong
Rasta man/woman vibration strong
God sent Angel love
Can't box with God
God don't like ugly
Respect Angels
They Special
Sacred holy.
--Marvin X
4/30/19
Academy of da Corner, Lakeshore, Oakland

FYI, Marvin X will be signing his latest book Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X, Black Bird Press, Oakland, 2019, 289 pages, Saturday, Sunday at the Bay Area Book Festival, Berkeley. He will be at the National Writers Union booth #146.

FYI, on May 29, 2019, in celebration of his 75th birthday,  the poet will release his magnum opus, Mythology of Pussy and Dick, Poetic Notes on the Human Condition in the #Metoo Era, Black Bird Press, Oakland, approx. 400 pages, limited edition, numbered and signed, donation $99.95. Order by Credit card, PayPal, et al., call 510-575-7148. Not available in bookstores or Amazon.com. This a Black Independence project. Credit cards acceptable.







Marvin X's magnum opus, Mythology of Pussy and Dick, Poetic Notes on the Human Condition in the #MeToo Era

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Commentary


I admit the title turned me off-no man would ever lay his hands on me with that kind of
language, but you have plenty to say and you say it like it is --even if it makes you feel
uncomfortable.
--C. Mixon

-
Don't send me anything vulgar like this. My mother didn't talk like this.

--D. Jackmon


-
Take me off your mailing list.
--Dr. Ernest Allen, UMass



I want my son to read this with a man, not with me.
--Rashidah


I wish I'ad this when I was 18. It would have saved me a lot of trouble with women.
I would have recognized who they are and who I am as a spiritual being.
--Reginald J.




Marvin, you and I should have read this when we were 17. Would have saved women a lot
of hell.
--Lumukanda


Do you have a brown bag? I can't take this back to work, might get fired.

--Anon


I put it in the trunk of my car--can't take it in the house, my wife will kill me.
--Conway J.



This book empowered me. I didn’t know I had that much power!—Young sister


It helped me step up my game!—Young Brother


Thank you, thank you, for writing this. I am going to make my son and daughter read it.
—A Mother


And youth who otherwise don't read, do read this book and even squabble over ownership,
as if it were black gold!—Paradise Jah Love




This book will be a great source by which young people can come to grips with their troubling sexuality.
It will help move the internal conflicts from below the solar plexus to above the neck. For many young
people, especially black men in their 20s and 30s, there is little more than hot amorphous vapor in that
region. So-called urban lit is their bible in coming to grips with the violent urgings of their penis. I used
to conceal my own risings with a jock strap. It took me sometime to train myself to sit still: running after
a woman, any attractive woman, was an addictive impact on the soul. Your teachings in this matter is a
kind of how-to book, much needed within our oppressed communities where inordinate violence is turned
within, on our women, on our children, and our reckless unfulfilled manhood.
--Rudolph Lewis, Editor, Chickenbones.com




Brother and comrade Marvin,
As an artist i.e. truth teller-trailblazer,  you have always been cutting edge both in what you lived,
experienced and the naked truth you bare in "emptying of Spirit out of itself" (as Hegel would put it) as
did Trane's Offering. Very rare, and whether we all recognize it now or not we are fortunate to witness
such openness and honesty, though it makes the smug uncomfortable in their fake comforts; show is the
unessential masquerading as essential and therefore art as truth ripping off masks is often seen as
dangerous expose


II was reading Delores Nochi's Introduction to your new contribution, Mythology of Pussy and Dick:
Toward Healthy Psychosocial Sexuality, and thinking of what she observed: "Mythology of Pussy and
Dick is a compilation of everything Marvin X has written on sexuality in America and the world. There
are those who will miss this opportunity to receive wisdom from our brother because of the language he
uses to describe the male and female anatomy, and his perceived objectification of women and men, and
this is a tragedy because this information is crucial for men and women who are suffering from a
psycholinguistic crisis “inflicting actual violence upon lovers in their male/female and same gender
loving relationships. These dysfunctional interactions are witnessed by children who are the next
generation of couples....I agreed with her and at the same time recalled the fate of those who preceded
you in this undertaking - for instance the social scientist and psychologist Wilhelm Reich e.g.
The Function of the Orgasm, Sexual Revolution and Sex-Pol [he was thrown into an American federal
prison and his books burned in 1956, he died in an American prison in 1957
http://en.wikipedia/wiki/Book_burning#Wilhelm_Reich.27s_publications_.28by_U.S._Food_and_Drug_
Administration.29
Also I thought of Lenny Bruce: Bruce served in the navy during World War II (1942-45) and began
performing stand-up comedy in 1946. As he gained popularity in New York night clubs, his brand of
comedy shifted from impersonations to free-wheeling monologues satirizing religion and politics. He
released several comedy albums and appeared occasionally on TV, especially as a guest of Steve Allen
and Hugh Hefner. In 1961 he was arrested after a performance in San Francisco and charged with
obscenity. Bruce was acquitted, but for the next few years he was frequently in trouble with the law
for using raw language on stage -- a no-no back then. In 1964 he was convicted of obscenity in New
York and jailed for a few months (in 2003 Governor George Pataki posthumously pardoned him).
http://www.answers.com/topic/lenny-bruce .


Delores' take on the depth and honest language of your work also made me remember the radical 60s
and the writings of early contemporary feminists, such as the analysis of sexual biology by Anne Koedt
The Myth of Vaginal Orgasmhttp://www.uic.edu/orgs/cwluherstory/CWLUArchive/vaginalmyth.html
But more directly your artistic style and the Avante-Garde revolutionary love and rebellion poetry
and music of Archie Shepp - in particular his Blasehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TpE9SN81H6E
So! Your latest contribution here is evidence that the struggle continues! Thanks and stay strong!
--Lil Joe

"Marvin X says some wild, wild things!"
--Attorney John Burris
"He deals in hyperbole to the max!"
--Martin G. Reynolds, former Editor, Oakland Tribune
"I support his March for Men who need multiple wives and unlimited ho's (sex workers)."
--Empress Diamond
"I will march with him!"-- Paradise Jah Love
"I will hold the banner!"--Eugene Allen
"He has my support!"--Keith X Carlisle
"Son, you don't need a wife! You need a maid, secretary and mistress."
--Marian M. Jackmon, Mother of Marvin X
"Oh, Marvin, you never cease to amaze me!" Libby Schaaf, Mayor of Oakland
"Courageous and outrageous! He walked through the muck and mire of hell and came out clean as white fish and black as coal."--James W. Sweeney, Esq.
"In terms of being modernist and innovative, he's centuries ahead of anybody I know."
--Dennis Leroy Moore, Brecht Forum, New York City


Bro Muhajir
Another thing that can be said in your behalf is that you had good DNA to transmit to your children. And
you selected good mothers to nurture your seed and rear your children while you were out and about
struggling with your Nafs al-Ammara Bissu' (demons). Allah is the Best Knower. If you hadn't descended
into "Hell" you wouldn't be able to understand the depth of the despair and desperation that encompasses
so many of our Black Men, which also allows you to reach out to them and speak FOR them. Most often, it
is the one who has experienced the most intense of life's experiences who is best able to produce great art
that touches the heart. Can you imagine Aretha Franklin being able to sing " I Never Loved a Man" without
having her heart crushed? To quote one appropriate old gospel hymn: "Must Jesus bear the Cross alone and
all the World go Free? No, there's a cross for Everyone and there's a Cross for me."--Fahizah


People write this word on the wall as if it is something dirty and nasty. How can the organ through which
life is created be something nasty, not to be mentioned, as if it is vile?
And It ain't his--he don't have a pussy! When will men get this simple point?
We want to see people learn this information about themselves because there's other things to do in this
world, responsibilities, other people depending on them--men need to stop thinking about how many
pussies they can get with--how many women they have played when they have only played themselves--
start doing what real men do--start constructing their place in the world--be there for their children--
just as you are doing now, Muhajir (Marvin), helping your daughter with your grandson.
--Nisa Ra





Dear Marvin x,
It is not often that I write commentaries but you asked for some feedback.
You will not remember me because so many people must have come by your table. However, the title of
your book destabilized me so much so that I returned on Sunday - drove all the way from Delaware to
purchase the $5 mythology series. I strive not to use graphic language in my speech so it is jarring to see it
in text. I strive to avoid most graphic communicative language as much as possible, so I was surprised to find
myself intrigued and captivated by the boldness of the title. It was awkward experience to visit your table.
Perhaps because I am researching female circumcision in Africa which was a rite of passage ritual for me at
age 9.
We are a people coming to the truth too late. We have taught each other that one can only stand guard
over their own soul and that we are unable to be our communities keeper . I speak to my daughter and two
sons about the choices available to them today. I tell my children that they have absolute freedom of choice
to do whatever action they desire. But I also tell them that what they do not have is the freedom to choose
the consequences of those choices whether deliberate or unintentional. The laws of the universe; the laws of
nature; and also the laws of society determine the consequences of our choices. I tell them the truth not so
much that they will change the world but that they can protect, guard and armor themselves. Ultimately, we are all individually responsible for whatever choices we make.
Slavery and its aftermath did not happen in a vacuum. In Africa, Africans sold Africans into slavery;
colonialism was only able to flourish because African chiefdom's worked against themselves and each other
(then and now); its African women who accept and engage in polygamy (then and now); its African women
who circumcise the girl child (then and now); it’s a black women beauty industry that mutilate ’s African hair
(then and now); and the list could go on…... It’s not that I am without hope but it’s a lonely place to be
when one can see past the rhetoric. Traumatized and broken we are a people coming to the truth too late.
In many, many areas of our lives the “horse has already left the barn.”
Perhaps there should be a Mythology Eight that attempts to address what could be done after the horse has
left the barn…..?
Kenya
Kenyalyn Makone-Anunda


Beloved Ones,
Forty years ago, I had a very backward, chauvinistic view of women, and battered and abused some good
sisters. Like all such gender criminals, I projected my insecurities on my victims. Since then, I turned my
hypocritical life around, but found that the obscene damage that I had done left deep scars. Many times we
cry out in our contemporary pain,
after waking up and realizing our transgressions. But we must understand that there are laws in this grand
Universe which operate whether we realize it or not. Eastern philosophy defines these laws as Karma. Yes,
it is wonderful that we come to our senses, over many decades, and discover true maturity. However, that
which was done in the Past might still affect our lives in the Present. I hope that we brothers all realize our
past heinous acts were no better than the oppressors we continue to struggle against today. Many of us
have been forgiven by our former mates. But can we forgive ourselves by walking a different Walk in this 21
Century New World? The youths and kids need us healed, and healing as fathers, brothers, uncles, elders and loving friends.
Truly we are the leaders that we have been hoping and praying for!
In Love and Struggle


Askia Toure

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On the mental health status of North American Africans, et al.

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As a lay mental health street worker, I was inundated today at my Academy of da Corner, Berkeley flea market. I was scheduled to attend the Bay Area Book Fair in Berkeley, but the Holy Spirit told me to go to the Ashby Flea Market. The Spirit told me to forget the money I possibly would have made at the Book Fair and set up shop at the Flea Market. After all, the last two days at my Academy of da Corner Lakeshore, my Angel had blessed all those who stopped by and wanted to purchase my latest book but didn't have money. Due to gentrification, the Berkeley Flea Market is bleak these days so when I arrived there were many vacant stalls. No matter, I set up shop, more so because I was very upset with white people for their banning of my friend from Facebook, Minister Farrakhan, as many North American Africans are as I write. My day began with a young man who had been given my books by a 93 year old Professor emeritus, Dr. Stillman, in Sacramento. The young man was honored and humbled to be in my presence. He had come to the Flea market on another mission but was overwhelmed to meet me. As we talked, a black conscious white boy arrived that I call John Brown. I believe he was once a white supremacist but had somehow been converted to a essentially a "black supremacist" in a positive way. He has studied Black culture and philosophy and was sincerely trying to recover from racist white supremacist notions of history and reality. He shared his knowledge with the younger and less informed black brother. He even purchased one of Drs. Nathan and Julia Hare's books for the young man. His acts of kindness deflated my anger at White people. No matter how angry I was, he showed me there is hope for white people. He departed when a sister arrived with mental health issues herself and a severely mentally ill son suffering from situational disorders as Fanon, Hare and others have noted. The mother bemoaned that her son was not the son she knew and she felt helpless. A short time later another sister arrived and when I asked about her mother's health, proceeded to tell me about the mental state of her sister and niece suffering manic-depression. She noted their situation was complicated by homelessness partly the result of gentrification. Enough. I departed the Flea Market but not before purchasing three pies from the Nation of Islam brothers, and I don't eat very many sweets, but I wanted to support the NOI.
--Marvin X
5/4/19

San Francisco's Sun Reporter Newspaper celebrates 75 years by Marvin X, photos Adam Turner 5/9/19

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When Sun Reporter Publisher, Amelia Ashley-Ward, invited Dr. Nathan Hare and myself to the 75th anniversary of San Francisco's preeminent North American African newspaper, it didn't dawn on me until tonight that the date coincided with my 75th birthday, May 29, 1944. Coincidentally, when I was born my parents were publishing their black newspaper in the central valley, The Fresno Voice. So one can say I was born into journalism, thus the Sun Reporter has been a part of my life indirectly and directly since my writings have appeared in its pages off and on over the last half century. In 1966, we opened Black Arts West Theatre on Fillmore Street at Turk, around the corner from the Sun Reporter. We would encounter Sun Reporter Publisher, Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett from time to time, also managing editor, Tom Fleming and political editor Edith Austin. After Amelia Ashley's graduation from San Jose State University and her internship at the Sun Reporter, she eventually became the Editor and Publisher.


US Senator Kamala Harris
photo Adam Turner

Left to right: Pam Moore, Amelia Ashley-Ward, Senator Kamala Harris, SF Mayor London Breed
photo Adam Turner


US Senator Kamala Harris, running for next president of the USA
photo Adam Turner


 San Francisco Mayor London Breed
photo Adam Turner


Sun Reporter Publisher Amelia Ashley-Ward and SF Mayor London Breed
photo Adam Turner




Left to right: Rev. Cecil Williams, Janice Mirikitani, Marvin X, Dr. Nathan Hare
photo Adam Turner


 Left to right: Rev. Cecil Williams, fans of Dr. Nathan Hare, Dr. Nathan Hare
photo Adam Turner

Left to right: Dr. Nathan Hare, poet Marvin K, Minister of Celebration, Glide Church, poet Marvin X
photo Adam Turner

Tonight at the San Francisco Hyatt Regency Embarcadero, 800 guests from throughout this nation, paid tribute to the Sun Reporter. The event began with News Anchor Pam Moore as MC. After a few opening remarks, Pam called three women of power to the stage: San Francisco Mayor London Breed, US Senator Kamala Harris and Sun Reporter Publisher Amelia Ashley-Ward. As the product of a strong black woman, we appreciate strong black women. The only thing my mother hated was ignorance. I can't imagine how proud she would have been to see those three intelligent, powerful women on stage tonight. Mayor Breed gave honor and praise to the Sun Reporter for being the voice of truth in our community. She noted that there was no way Willie Brown would become the first African American mayor or she would become the first black female mayor without the support of the Sun Reporter.


Evan Carlton Ward
photo Adam Turner

Amelia's son, Evan Carlton Ward, had the honor of introducing Senator Kamala Harris, now running for president of the United States. Senator Harris began with a praise song for Amelia as single mother who has raised a young man now serving as a communication officer in Mayor Breed's administration. Keynote speaker Senator Harris praised the Sun Reporter for her successful run to become D.A. of San Francisco. Although there were doubters that she could win, she noted that Amelia had total faith in her victory. The possible next president of the US decried the present occupant of the White House and contradicted the Trumpian narrative that America is on the road to be great again. She noted that most US workers don't have a $400.00 emergency fund. As per education, she vowed to support pay raises for teachers with low salaries yet often pay for school supplies from their meager checks. She called for gun control that would include identity checks. Most importantly, she called for a media that has truth as its primary mission which has been the tradition of the Sun Reporter.

The Honorable Mayor Willie Brown said he became aware of the Sun Reporter after arriving from Texas. He praised Publisher Dr. Carlton Goodlett for altering the course of San Francisco with his radicalism and entrepreneurial expertise. Alas, as Mayor, Willie Brown renamed the street in front of San Francisco City Hall Carlton Goodlett Way.

And then we heard from my main man, Rev. Cecil Williams, Pastor Emeritus of Glide Church, the legendary radical church in the wretched Tenderloin District. Cecil and his wife, poet Janice Mirikitani recalled their association with Publisher Goodlett. Cecil recalled his weekly conversations with Dr. Goodlett who demanded Cecil maintain his radical stance. He note how he and Goodlett supported the 1968 student strike for Black and Ethnic studies at San Francisco State University.
Jan noted how she was Cecil's 25 year old secretary when she met Dr. Goodlett and had little understanding of his radicalism that was igniting the fire of Cecil who would become her husband.
FYI, Jan once noted it was the poetry of Marvin X that forced her to become conscious of her ethnicity. Before the event began, Jan insisted on a pic with herself, Marvin K, current Minister of Celebration at Glide, and Marvin X. Minister Marvin K assured Marvin X he will be speaking and reading at Glide Church ASAP.

Detroit Journalist Dorothy Leavell, Chair of the National Negro Press Association, made it plain that the Sun Reporter and its Publisher Dr. Carlton Goodlett took the NNPA to a higher level with his Renaissance Man mind, whose influence was not only local, national but international.

Our concern was that if the Sun Reporter will continue another 75 years, why were the next generation of Bay Area journalists not in attendance? Nevertheless, thank you, Tom Fleming,
Dr. Carlton Goodlett, Edith Austin, Amelia Ashley-Ward, et al., who made the first 75 years possible.
Let us now prepare for the next 75!
--Marvin X
www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com

Mother's Day at Geoffrey's Inner Circle

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We spent Mother's Day evening enjoying jazz and dinner at Geoffrey's Inner Circle, the first class venue in Oakland's Black Arts Movement Business District. I invited my associate, Nur Jehan, and my patron, Hasan James and his wife. We were entertained by Dr. David Hardiman's Sextet. Guest vocalist Nina Causey was outstanding with her renditions of Stormy Weather, My Funny Valentine and other Black classical tunes. Dr. Hardiman channeled Miles Davis when he accompanied Nina with a muffled trumpet on My Funny Valentine. 


Photo Art by Gene Hazzard






As usual the food was excellent and reasonable. Where else can you enjoy live jazz, aka, black classical music, for $10.00 and dinner for $10.00? This is every Sunday from 6-10PM. Geoffrey's Inner Circle is located at 410 14th at Franklin Street, downtown Oakland. 
--MARVIN X
www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com 

Goodbye Speedy, Wade Woods, last Fillmore "Negro" Revolutionary

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Sunrise October 19, 1945
Sunset May 31, 2019








Dr. Nathan Hare, founder of Black and Ethnic Studies, SFSU, and Marvin X, M.A., English, SFSU, BSU co-founder and lecturer in Black Studies, Journalism, Radio and TV Writing at SFSU


Left to right, bottom Dr. Nathan Hare; standing left to right: Benny Stewart, BSU/Third World Strike leader; unidentified brother; Rev. George Murray, SFSU English Lecturer, Black Panther Party Minister of Education; poet, playwright Marvin X, Negro Students Association/BSU co-founder, San Francisco State University
photo Adam Turner


SFSU BSU co-founders, left to right: Benny Stewart, Mar'yam Wadai and Marvin X
photo Adam Turner




The consensus was that longtime political and community organizer Leroy Wade Woods, aka Speedy, personified love for his community and was well loved in return. San Francisco's black radical church, Third Baptist, under Rev. Amos Brown, held a memorial service for one of our very best North American African revolutionaries. Even though people arrived on time for the 11AM service officiated by Rev. Arnold Townsend, himself a radical community organizer, it was well after 11AM when the service began due to people greeting each other and conversing because they had no seen each, some in years, others in decades, especially Speedy's revolutionary comrades, e.g., actor Danny Glover and other San Francisco State Black Student Union founders and the 1968 BSU and Third World Strike leaders who fought to establish Black and Ethnic Studies: Mar'yam Wadai, Jimmy Garett, Jerry Vernardo, Benny Stewart, Rev. George Murray, George Corbett, Marvin X, et al. Also in the audience was the Honorable Dr. Nathan Hare, first Chair of Black and Ethnic Studies on a major American college/university campus. Also present were Amelia Ashley-Ward, Publisher of the SF Sun Reporter and her son.b

It was a joyous occasion befitting the happy persona of our dearly departed revolutionary brother who was on the central committee of the BSU/Third World Strike at SFSU, this was after he joined the US military and fought in Vietnam. After he came into contact with North Vietnamese soldiers who called the blacks "soul brothers" and explained their struggle was based and patterned after the struggle for Black National Liberation in the USA, Speedy returned from 'Nam saying, "Vietnam turned my green beret Black!" His focus was organizing and strategizing for his community, especially the Fillmore District. He worked with comrade Terry Collins as a draft counselor, advising brothers not to join the US military, one brother was Marvin X who went into exile rather than become a running dog for US imperialism.


Speedy, who got his name because of his outstanding track skills, but he soon honed skills in community organizing as director of the Western Addition Project Area Committee, WAPAC. He oversaw community efforts to develop low-income housing. He guided the development of the 100% owned and operated Victorian Square Complex located at Sutter and Fillmore Streets. He helped save many Victorian homes owned by North American Africans. Wade was a co-founder of KPOO 89.5FM radio station.

A prayer was delivered by Rev. George Murray, BSU strike leader and Black Panther Party Minister of Education. SF Mayor London Breed sent a letter on behave of the citizens of San Francisco. Judge emeritus George Corbett spoke of his inseparable friend and the good times they shared. Hunters Point businessman Charlie Walker told how Speedy helped him win the contract to clean up an oil spill under the Golden Gate Bridge. BSU Strike leader Benny Stewart told how working under Speedy qualified him to win a 100 million dollar contract for the Marin City Development Corporation.
Rev. Regnaldo J. Woods, brother of Speedy
photo Adam Turner
 

In my remarks, I spoke to the family. "You are his family, but sometimes family don't know how great one of their own can be. Many times you will think a family member ain't nothing. But you should see from the remarks today how great Speedy was. Until my family visited the Smithsonian and saw me in there, they treated me like I wasn't nothing. We know who and what Speedy was and he was family to us revolutionaries. Anytime you know a person over fifty years, they family. Thank you Speedy for sharing your love for us and with us."
The climax was the eulogy from his brother, Rev. Regnaldo J. Woods, a street brother who found the Lord! He simplified his brothers life as love for the people and love of God. In working for the people, Rev. Woods said, Speedy was working for the love of God. He when chided his brother for always helping other people and not himself, Speedy replied, "Don't worry about it. I will be all right." Rev. Woods said Speedy knew the source of his riches.

At the repast, we sat at the table with Dr. Nathan Hare, Rev. George Murray, Mar'yam Wadai, and Benny Stewart. Benny asked was it possible for us revolutionaries to meet on an occasion that is not a funeral or memorial service?
--Marvin X
6/7/19

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Marvin X, Bay Area Juneteenth book tour

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As Marvin X signed books at San Francisco Juneteenth, he noticed a "fine" black female officer standing a few feet from him with a white officer. Aside from her beauty, he noticed she had a Muslim name. He called her over and asked if she would arrest him. She replied, "No, because there are too many black people already in jail", and returned to her post. 

Is Marvin X under surveillance? A few weeks ago when he boarded the Amtrak to Fresno, an Oakland police officer got on board behind him and came to his seat. The Black uniformed officer said loudly, "Oh, I see we have a celebrity on board this morning!"  

For Fresno Juneteenth, Marvin X and Dr. Nathan Hare donated five boxes of books from their libraries to give out to his hometown folks (he grew up in Fresno and Oakland; in 1969 he attempted to lecture in the Black Studies Department at Fresno State University but was removed on orders of then Governor Ronald Reagan, who also removed Angela Davis from teaching at UCLA the same year). 

Marvin later taught at UC Berkeley, 1972, San Francisco State University, 1974, UC San Diego, 1975, University of Nevada, Reno, 1979. He has authored and/or edited 30 books and has received writing awards from Columbia University and the National Endowment for the Arts; planning grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities. He is honored in the African American Museum at the Smithsonian, Washington DC. 

As one of the founders of the Black Arts Movement (the most radical artistic and literary movement in American history), Marvin X was recently praised by George Miles, a fellow alumni of Harlem's New Lafayette Theatre, "HONORS. Our Own Very Very Very Dear and Beloved Friend/Brother/Man, Supreme Warrior, Activist, Advocate Poet, Essayist, Author, Educator and Honored New Lafayette Alumni Marvin X (Jackmon). HONORS!"

His archives were acquired by the Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.

Berkeley Juneteenth



 
Berkeley Juneteenth 

At Berkeley Juneteenth, Berkeley's Chief of Police stopped by Marvin X's booth. The chief said he was drawn to the poet's booth by a sign "White Awake, Challenge Racism." Marvin told the chief it is a movement. He could Google it.

FYI, Marvin X's friends used to shoot police, e g., Eldridge Cleaver, Bobby Seale, Huey Newton, and other members of the Black Panther Party.
And the police used to kill Panthers.

Marvin X recalls when he traveled with Cleaver during his Born Again Christian days, on one occasion the former BPP Minister of Information gave his testimony before a group of white Christians, including police who confessed they had murder squads killing black people in general and Panthers in particular. The police told Cleaver that since they had found the Lord, they no longer hated black people. Cleaver and the police embraced and the audience shouted praise the Lord, hallelujah. 



Marin City Juneteenth
 
On Saturday, June 29, Marvin X will speak at the Marin City Juneteenth Festival. Aside from speaking and autographing his latest book Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X, he will be interviewed by Duke University Professor Ellen McLarney for her book project on Muslim writers in America. Marvin X is considered the father of Muslim American literature (Dr. Mohja Kahf). Ishmael Reed calls him, "Plato teaching on the streets of Oakland." Bob Holman says, "He's the USAs Rumi...the ecstasy of Hafiz, the wisdom of Saadi, the politics of Baraka, the humor of Pietri...."




Coming Soon
save the date
 
Dr. Cornel West and Marvin X
A Conversation

Dr. Cornel West has agreed to an on-stage conversation with his dear friend, Marvin X, December, 2019. Date, time and place to be arranged. If you would like to be a sponsor or patron of this event, please call 510-575-7148. 

"Can't wait to see you both together again!"
--Clifton West



for more information or to invite Marvin X to speak and/or read from his works
www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com
mxjackmon@gmail.com
 

General Kumasi orders Black August soldiers to read Marvin X's Notes

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 George Jackson, Messiah of the Black Prison Movement
Assassinated by prison guards at San Quentin Prison



Black August founders,organizers and participants, left to right: Mama Efia Nwangaza, Human Rights Advocate, Greensville, SC,Shaka Al Thinin. Back left: Kumasi and Marvin X 
photo Wanda Sabir, SF Bayview Newspaper

Brother Kumasi, Black August Prison Movement co-founder and undisputed griot (historian) of the Black and American Prison Movement has issued orders to all Black August soldiers to read Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X!  ASAP! After reading the book twice, Kumasi says it is a narrative from the horse's mouth. Marvin X visited Soledad Prison's Black Culture Club, the beginning of the Black and American Prison Movement, 1966. The club was chaired by Eldridge Cleaver and Alprintice Bunchy Carter, When Eldridge Cleaver was released from prison and came to the Bay Area, Marvin X was the first person Cleaver hooked up with. They established a political/cultural center called Black House, 1967. Marvin introduced Eldridge to Bobby Seale and Huey Newton, his classmates from Oakland's Merritt College. Other soon to be members of the BPP also came through Black House: Samuel Napier, became Minister of Distribution of the Black Panther Newspaper. George Murray became Minister of Education. Emory Douglas became Minister of Culture.

Marvin X also recruited for the Nation of Islam., "fishing" Nadar Ali, who became Director of Imports. He mentored writer Fahizah Alim who wrote for Muhammad Speaks and the Sacramento Bee. More recently, his star student from his Laney College Drama class founded her own theatre and is founder of the Black Arts Movement Business District, CDC, Dr. Ayodele Nzinga.

Master Teacher Marvin X and his star student, Dr. Ayodele Nzinga
photo Adam Turner


All the above history is covered in Notes. Again, General Kumasi says it is a must read for radical activists.


 Marvin X and Nadar Ali, Marvin's "fish" for the Nation of Islam. Nadar became director of imports and was responsible for importing the Whiting fish Muslims sold by the boatload from Peru. On a business trip to Chile, Nadar was on the balcony of his hotel when Chile's President Allende was overthrown.

Panel of woman discussing the Black Arts Movement on the 50th Anniversary of BAM at Laney College, Oakland. Left to right: Elaine Brown, Halifu Osumare, Judy Juanita, Portia Anderson, Phavia Kujichagulia and Aries Jordan. Marvin X was producer, 2015
photo Ken Johnson

 Amiri Baraka and Marvin X, co-founders of the Black Arts Movement coast to coast. They enjoyed 47 years of friendship and revolutionary art projects.

MX and Fahizah Alim. Mentored by MX, she became a writer for Muhammad Speaks and is Writer Emeritus of the Sacramento Bee. Marvin considers her his muse.
MX and his mentor and associate, Dr. Nathan Hare, considered the Father of Black and Ethnic Studies. Hare was first chair of Black Studies at San Francisco State University and founding publisher of the Black Scholar Magazine.
photo Adam Turner



Marvin X met Eldridge and Bunchy on a visit to Soledad Prison's Black Culture Club, 1966.
Shorty after Bunchy and Huggins were assassinated in the BSU meeting room at UCLA by members of the US organization, on a speaking tour of Los Angeles colleges and universities during his fight to teach black studies at Fresno State University, Marvin X spoke at UCLA and was shown the BSU meeting room with the blood of Bunchy and John still on the walls. He was also shown the headquarters of the Black Panther Party that was site of a BPP/LAPD gun battle with bullet holes on the facade.

Founding members of the SFSU Black Students Union: Benny Stewart, Mar'yam Wadai and Marvin X. Benny was a strike leader, but before the strike Benny was a performer in Amiri Baraka's Communication Project that radicalized students with plays from the Black Arts Movement, including the works of Jimmy Garrett,
Baraka, Sonia Sanchez, Ben Caldwell and Marvin X.
photo Adam Turner

SFSU founding members Mar'yam Wadai, Danny Glover and Marvin X. Danny performed at Black Arts West Theatre, founded by Marvin X and playwright Ed Bullins.
photo Adam Turner

Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton, co-founders of the Black Panther Party.
Bobby, Huey and Marvin X were students at Oakland's Merritt College. Prior to co-founding the BPP, Bobby Seale performed in Come Next Summer, Marvin X's second play, circa 1965. Bobby portrayed a young black man trying to find himself, discover his revolutionary black consciousness. Huey Newton said, "Marvin X was my teacher, many of our comrades came through is Black Arts Theatre and The Black House.e.g., Bobby Seale, Eldridge Cleaver, George Murray, Samuel Napier, Judy Juanita, JoAnn Mitchell, Ellendar Barnes, et al.



The only known picture of Eldridge Cleaver and Marvin X. Pic is outside the house where BPP and OPD had shootout in which Lil' Bobby Hutton was murdered in cold blood by the OPD
photo Muhammad Kareem


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The Marvin X Tribe: Jazmin Jackmon graduates from University of Oregon, drafted by Houston Dash, Women's Professional Soccer Team

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Congratulations on your graduation from the University of Oregon and joining the Houston Dash, Women's professional soccer team. Love you granddaughter Jazmin.
--Marvin X (Jackmon)

FYI, like all families, my family has suffered much trauma and grief, yet we rise, we rise, we rise. Ache!








Update:

Update: Dr. Cornel West/Marvin X Conversationj

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Update: Dr. Cornel West/Marvin X Conversation on Critical Issues
Local, National, International
December, 2019
Date, Time, Place TBA

 Dr. Cornel West and Marvin X in Philly at the 65th B-Day of Mumia Abu Jamal

The December, 2019 on-stage conversation between Dr. Cornel West and Marvin X is rapidly taking shape although the date, time and place has not been finalized, but Berkeley will likely be the city. Berkeley Juneteenth board member, Delores Noche, has confirmed as a sponsor. B-Tech Math instructor, Ramal Lamar, has confirmed the B-Tech PTA as a sponsor. Paul Smith of the Bay Area Jazz Society will be music director. Co-producer will be Dr. Ayodele Nzinga of Oakland's Lower Bottom Playaz and the Black Arts Movement Business District, CDC.

The event is a conversation between two of America's greatest minds. While Dr. Cornel West is a well known public intellectual, Marvin X has been a force in the black revolutionary underground as co-founder of the Black Arts Movement and unofficial recruiter of the Black Panther Party and the Nation of Islam.


 Left to right: Bobby Seale and Huey Newton, co-founders of the BPP


In the introduction to his latest book, Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X, Dr. Nathan  Hare writes, "With the return of 'white nationalism' to the international stage and the White House and new threats of nuclear war, the black revolutionary occupies a crucial position in society today. Yet a black revolutionary of historic promise can live among us almost unknown on the radar screen, even when his name is as conspicuous as Marvin X (who may be the last to wear an X in public view since the assassination of Malcolm X)...."
Ishmael Reed calls him, "Plato teaching on the streets of Oakland." Bob Holman says, "He's the USAs Rumi...." Dr. Mohja Kahf says, "He's the father of Muslim
American literature." Next week, Duke University Professor Ellen McLarney is flying into Oakland to conduct a three-day interview with Marvin X for her book on Black Islamic influenced writers. She has chapters on Amiri Baraka and Sonia Sanchez and will include a chapter on Marvin X.
 
Left to right: Mrs. Amina Baraka, Sonia Sanchez, Marvin X and Amiri Baraka, RIP, at the memorial for Dr. Betty Shabazz, Riverside Church, NYC.
Photo Risasi

Professor McLarney was so humbled the poet agreed to be interviewed, she told him, "What shall I call you? I cannot just call you Marvin X?" When one of his students heard of her remarks, he said, "I don't care what people say, Marvin X is my Sheikh!"
  
 Marvin X and his mentor/associate in BAM, Master Teacher Sun Ra, Father of Afro-futurism (Octavia Butler is Mother). Marvin and Sun Ra taught in the Black Studies Department, UC Berkeley, 1972.

Minister Khalid Muhammad (RIP) told Marvin X repeatedly whenever they met, "I studied your writings in college. I love your early writings influenced by the Nation of Islam!" Marvin X says, "I shall forever love and respect Khalid. He came to Oakland searching the Crack houses trying to save Huey Newton and myself. I was so deep into Crack addiction, when Muslim brothers told me Khalid was looking for me and Huey, I didn't know who the fuck they were talking about. Who in the fuck is Khalid, I remember saying!"

Left to right, fellow BSU founders at SFSU: Mar'yam Wadai, Danny Glover and Marvin X
photo Adam Turner

Marvin is one of the founders of the Black Students Union at San Francisco State University and has taught at Fresno State University, UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, San Francisco State University, Mills College, University of Nevada, Reno, and elsewhere. He appears in the film: Black Panthers, Vanguard of the Revolution, directed by Stanley Nelson. His archives were acquired by the Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley.

 Black Panther, Vanguard of the Revolution Director Stanley Nelson,
Marvin X, Fred Hampton, Jr. at the San Francisco Film Festival


Left to right: Marvin X, grandson Jahmeel, Director Stanley Nelson, MX's daughter, Attorney Amira Jackmon and daughter Naeemah at Berkeley screening of film.
The poet has been commissioned by the Austin, Texas Black Cultural District, Six Square, to write and produce a dramatic work on the 400th Anniversary of our presence in the American slave system, November, 2019.

Marvin X is the author of thirty books, most of which are out of print. This event is a benefit to enable Black Bird Press to reprint his catalogue of writings.

The poet/playwright/essayist turned 75 on May 29. His radical career began in 1962 at Oakland's Merritt College where he became friends with fellow students Huey P. Newton, Bobby Seale, and others of the neo-black intelligentsia as Bobby Seale described their coming into black consciousness at Merritt College on Grove Street/MLK, Jr. Drive.

He introduced Eldridge Cleaver to Black Panther co-founder Bobby Seale. Cleaver immediately joined the BPP and became Minister of Information.

Among the topics Dr. Cornel West and Marvin X will discuss include:
gentrification and homelessness, health issues of senior citizens, incarceration, 2020 elections, immigration, reparations, religiosity vs. spirituality, the MeToo Movement, Black Lives Matter, Pan Africanism, including Blaxit, and other critical issues. A Q and A will follow. Cat Brooks has been invited to be moderator.

The last time these two gentlemen were on stage together was 2001 at San Francisco State University when Marvin produced the Kings and Queens of Black Consciousness Concert.

This conversation will surely be an historic event you won't want to miss. Tickets will be available soon as a date, time and place are finalized.

For more information, stay turned to www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com
Call 510-575-7148. We need sponsors, supporters and generous donations. Your donations can be tax deductible.

Review by Marvin X: Last Black Man in San Francisco

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 Danny Glover, grandfather


 The Nigga Greek Chorus

 Jimmy Fails as Jimmy and co-writer

 Jimmy Fails and Johnathan Majors as Jimmy and Mont

 Tichina Arnold as Aunti

Last weekend, writer Cecil Brown stopped by my Academy of da Corner, Lakeshore Ave., Oakland, and asked if I'd seen Last Black Man in San Francisco? I replied that I hadn't and he said he hadn't either, but from what he'd heard, it was the gentrification of gentrification, referring to the white director,Joe Talbot, although co-written by Rob Reichert and Jimmy Fails, also the co-star. Cecil Brown was saying the process of the  production itself was gentrified, and it certainly was, e.g., European music dominated the soundtrack of a film essentially about hip hop characters, although the film was definitely inter-generational, including a mythic ancestor grandfather, who supposedly built a Victorian house in the 1940s when the wave of North American Africans migrated West to work in the war industry and replaced Japanese in the Fillmore when they were put in concentration camps.

Jonathan Majors and Jimmie Fails are the main characters, Mont and Jimmy respectively. Like many North American Africans disconnected from their history, we often construct mythology to placate our psychological trauma that transcends amnesia which assumes we forgot, but Dr. Nathan Hare says we simply never knew, as any victim of physical trauma is unable to recall what happened to them. Jimmy comes to believes, or rather constructs the myth that his grandfather built the house but eventually deed history reveals it was constructed a hundred years before, as a tour guide attempted to tell his group.

During probate by the white owners, Mont and Jimmy occupy the house but are forced to move when a "friendly" real estate agent puts it up for sale. Before they depart, Mont produces a play in the house that reveals the myth Jimmy has been living by at which point Jimmy declares he must be the last black man in San Francisco because all his relatives are living precariously or have departed.

This film about brotherly and family love has value as North American Africans are being gentrified coast to coast. But as Tina Turner said, "What's love got to do with it?"

We don't expect film writers to be sociologists and city planners, so although we appreciate the film, it presents the problem but no solution, and perhaps there is none when the median cost of a home in San Francisco is 1.4 million dollars. Will any amount of creative financing solve problem of affordability? Most certainly, a livable wage won't!

And most especially, a communal problem will not be solved with an individual solution. We know films must be focused, and although we can deduct from the specific to the general, we need to see that the severity of the problem is communal.



We recently celebrated the memorial of Wade "Speedy" Woods, and I titled my story on him as "The Last Fillmore Revolutionary Negro". Ironically, as per this film, Speedy headed WAPAC, the Fillmore or Western Addition
Project Area Committee, a redevelopment agency that tried to save, and did save, many of the Victorians like the one depicted in Last Black Man in San Francisco. If I were to write a film on Speedy, it would reveal his efforts to save community as opposed to a narrative of him as an individual. He did have a team! And WAPAC save some elements of the Fillmore, but we must note that years later as the Fillmore, aka, Harlem of the West, suffered gentrification, former Mayor Joe Alioto publically apologized for "destroying the cultural and economic vitality of the Fillmore."

Left to write, SFSU BSU co-founders Mar'yam, Danny Glover and Marvin X.
Danny portrayed Jimmy's grandfather in Last Black Man in SF.

As was noted in the Rolling Stone review, Last Black Man floated between fantasy and documentary, or mythology and reality, and this is okay, except our condition is so critical, do we have time for fantasy? We are being moved on and thus we are on the move. The film revealed our desperate straits, from family members to the hopeless Greek chorus on the corner in the hills of Hunters Point, to the sick white people in downtown San Francisco who want nudity as a normality. They have even opened a cafe where they can enjoy rats as they eat and drink!

SF Mayor London Breed at SF Juneteenth in the Fillmore
photo Marvin X

As we came off the Bay Bridge into San Francisco, we noted the skyscrapers under construction, then wondered how city planners can approve these constructions without giving equity to the displaced with affordable housing and living wages? Nevertheless, our beloved Mayor London Breed spoke at the Fillmore Juneteenth and assured the crowd of North American African we would not suffer the fate of the Last Black Man in San Francisco! We shall survive, the Mayor assured  the crowd!
--Marvin X
6/23/19






Marvin X Speaks, autographs books at Marin City Juneteenth

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Marvin X speaks and autographs Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter at 
Marin City Juneteenth, Saturday, June 29, 2019

 Marvin X speaks, Third Baptist Church, San Francisco
photo Adam Turner


freedom 

Saturday, June 29, 2019- 10am-6:30pm

A Special Place

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The Marin City Festival is special. Set in a natural grove of trees, intimate yet dynamic. A perfect place to get out of the race.  A  time to relax with friends. Bring a lounge chair and blanket. Support local merchants.  Celebrate our theme:

ECONOMIC CONNECTIONS: INTERNATIONAL

Our Food Vendors serve up a diverse selection of delicious meals, beverages and desserts.

 

Delicious Food...Art...Fashion & More

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Jewelry, fashion, crafts, music, local & celebrity talent, Childcare with games, jumping tent and more. We encourage attendees to support our local businesses by spending, a minimum of $25 on food and $100 for goods.

Inspirational Entertainment

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Talented performers share Spoken Word and historical tributes. An "Open Mic"provides space for locals to shine, along with our Juneteenth Vendor "commercials" which will compel you to purchase their goods & services over corporate competitors.

There is no cost to attend the Festival

However, we offer VIP seating for those desiring a catered experience. 

Reserved seating,meal/beverage voucher
Wait service and a reserved parking space. 

$125 per couple. $75 Single.

Treat yourself or a beloved elder with special needs.


Theme: Economic Connections-International

Juneteeth is a holiday commemorating the political end to over 400 years of legalized mass enslavement, an institution that created a legacy of systemic economic imbalance.  
We aspire to heal this imbalance by creating an African Marketplace where goods and services are lovingly offered in a spirit of  Pan-Africanism and Economic Liberation.  


Questions?


Marin City Juneteenth Community Festival

A Project of the Marin City Community Services District

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Location

530 Drake Avenue. Marin City, CA. 94965
 Behind Rocky Graham Park.  Parking available on site or nearby.

Save the date, early bird tickets on eventbrite: In Conversation, Dr. Cornel West and Marvin X

Photo Essay Marvin X by Adam Turner

Parable of the man who went to Ignutville

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There was a man who traveled to Stupidville on his way to Ignutville. In Stupidville he observed people doing the most stupid shit imaginable. They talked stupid shit, did stupid shit, lived stupid lives, went to the malls to buy stupid shit, came home and made stupid love in the dark without saying a stupid word to each other. Why say shit to a stupid motherfucker?

The man departed Stupidville and traveled on to Ignutville. After observing the people in Ignutville, he went into shock and was taken to the hospital. After a few days he was released and continued his observation of the citizens of ignutville.

They didn't know the time of day, the year. Didn't know they were slaves and/or descendents of slaves. After all they drove bigger cars than the slave master. While the slave master drove Fords and Toyotas, the slaves drove Escalades and Masaraties, yes, even while they lived in the projects.

If the master knew nothing else, he knew he was white, but the slave wasn't sure if he was black African or white European in black face. He loved the white Jesus, worshipped the white woman standard of beauty. His ignut woman loved wearing a blond wig and in the deep structure of her mind, she wanted her man to be a white man. She would be satisfied if he would become a white man dipped in chocolate. She was so ignut she called 911 so the white man, her real man, would rescue her from any abuse her black man inflicted on her, whether verbal, emotional, spiritual and/or physical. 

The white man was her true husband, boyfriend, lover, protector. Such was the level of ignorance in Ignutville.

Parents were so ignut in Ignutville, they sent their children to public schools where the enemy could teach their children the proper white supremacy mis-education. They sent their children to white colleges and universities, then were shocked when their children came home hating them and everything they were about even though the ignut children didn't even know what their parents were about.

The parents didn't understand the children had been taught they were nothing ass black nigga students who were so ignut they couldn't think logically or write coherently. Some of the students suffered mental breakdowns. When the students came home, parents knew their children were not the same. They suspected their children were on drugs.
The ignut parents never imagined their children were in full blown addiction to white supremacy. 

The man fled Ignutville trying to figure out how to get to Saneville. He called upon his GPS device to guide him to Saneville.
--Marvin X
7-28-29






Save the date, early bird tickets

Marvin X on the rights/rites of women

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If truth be told, and it must, many religious based myth-rituals must be cast into the dustbin of history. Aspects of patriarchal manhood and womanhood rites of passage are archaic and dehumanizing and female genital mutilation is chief among them. Why should women be deprived the pleasure of their clitoris? Only a man would originate such a myth-ritual. It is past time for men to stay out of the affairs of women. It is her body, not man's. What right do men have  determining what women do with their bodies, whether it is deprivation of sexual pleasure or abortion? I'm against abortion, but it is none of my business! If you are against abortion, don't put your seed into a woman who is pro-abortion!
--MARVIN X




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