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  2. Black Panther Party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Panther_Party

    Black Panther Party leaders Huey P. Newton, Eldridge Cleaver, and Bobby Seale spoke on a 10-point program they wanted from the administration which was to include full employment, decent housing and education, an end to police brutality, and black people to be exempt from the military. Black Panther Party members are shown as they marched in ...

  3. Who were the Black Panthers? It's complicated - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2016-02-16-who-were-the-black...

    Director Stanley Nelson said of the Black Panther Party. The Black Panthers were founded in Oakland, California, in 1966 and upon their founding had a relatively simple goal — stop police brutality.

  4. Black power movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_power_movement

    [25] [26] By 1969, the Black Panthers and their allies had become primary COINTELPRO targets, singled out in 233 of the 295 authorized "black nationalist" COINTELPRO actions. In 1968, the Republic of New Afrika was founded, a separatist group seeking a black country in the southern United States, only to dissolve by the early 1970s.

  5. Huey P. Newton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huey_P._Newton

    The Black Panther Party was an African-American left-wing organization advocating for the right of self-defense for black people in the United States. The Black Panther Party's beliefs were greatly influenced by Malcolm X. Newton stated: "Therefore, the words on this page cannot convey the effect that Malcolm has had on the Black Panther Party ...

  6. Black nationalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_nationalism

    The Black Panther Party advocated for class struggle, claiming to represent the proletarian vanguard. [198] The party was active in the United States between 1966 and 1982, with chapters in many major American cities, including San Francisco, New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle, and Philadelphia. [199]

  7. Black separatism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_separatism

    Conceptual breakdown of black separatism. In his discussion of black nationalism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the historian Wilson Jeremiah Moses observes that "black separatism, or self-containment, which in its extreme form advocated the perpetual physical separation of the races, usually referred only to a simple institutional separatism, or the desire to see black ...

  8. How the Clenched Fist Became a Black Power Symbol

    www.aol.com/clenched-fist-became-black-power...

    The black fist is perhaps most closely identified in the United States with the Black struggle for civil rights (it was also referred to as the Black Power fist), but the clenched fist’s ...

  9. Ten-Point Program (Black Panther Party) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten-Point_Program_(Black...

    Each one of the statements were put in place for all of the Black Panther Party members to live by and actively practice every day. The Ten-Point program was released on May 15, 1967, in the second issue of the party's weekly newspaper, The Black Panther. All succeeding 537 issues contained the program, titled "What We Want Now!." [2]