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Source: X / x
Time stops for no one, and it’s already been a year since the infamous Montgomery Riverfront Brawl that featured out of pocket white people getting their proper comeuppance. What would be Black Twitter, before Phony Stark ruined it, is celebrating the day by reminiscing on the hilarious memes the incident spawned.

In case you need a quick history lesson, on August 5, 2023, a group of white boaters put hands on a Black riverboat co-captain on the Montgomery riverfront after inquiring why they weren’t moving when his boat was scheduled to dock. What ensued was retaliation that included a co-worker swimming to help (he was dubbed “Black Aquaman”), numerous work peers and civilians uniting like The Avengers to have his back and various people who overall needed to mind their business catching fades.
Also in the mix was a hat being tossed to the heavens as a signal that the time for discuss was over and folding chairs being weaponized. The resulting memes and play by play had social media in a chokehold for days after. It was a cultural flashpoint—the theme of race relations weaved throughout thanks to this nation’s history of people of color having to grin and bear disrespect and white privilege, but not on THAT day. Even Rupert Murdoch’s own The Washington Post has recently noted that the day has become an unofficial holiday.
Fortunately, there were no serious injuries. Although, the woman who got cracked by a folding chair may disagree. But, she reportedly refused to press charges. Respect.

And as far as the legal ramifications, while various people in the boat that initiated the ruckus pleaded guilty and paid out various fines, Dameion Pickett, the co-captain of the Harriott II, who was assaulted, had the charges against him dropped.
So on the anniversary of the glorious day, let us reminisce with current and past reactions in the gallery.

1. Take heed.

2. Perfect.

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Source: Wikipedia / Sonya Massey
Imagine being a Black woman who called the police and only ended up being shot dead in your home; that was the sad and tragic reality for Sonya Massey.
*Trigger warning: this article contains detailed descriptions of violence.*
Outrage has taken over social media after body-camera footage of the fatal shooting of Sonya Massey, a 36-year-old Black woman, who was gunned down by the same police she called for help.
The footage was released as part of the case against Sangamon County Sheriff Deputy Sean Grayson, who has been slapped with murder charges.
The 36-minute chilling video (we will not be sharing) via the Illinois State Police includes body-camera footage that shows two Sangamon County Sheriff Deputies who came to Massey’s house after midnight on July 6th after Massey called 911 to report a “prowler” at her Springfield home, court documents revealed.
Per CNN:
In the footage, deputy Sean Grayson and another deputy speak calmly with Massey in her home when she goes to the stove to turn off a pot of boiling water. She then picks up the pot and the other deputy steps back, “away from your hot steaming water,” he says.
“I rebuke you in the name of Jesus,” she says in response.
“Huh?” the deputy says.
“I rebuke you in the name of Jesus,” she repeats.
“You better f**king not or I swear to God I’ll f**king shoot you in the f**king face,” Grayson says.
He then draws his firearm and points it at her, and she ducks and says, “I’m sorry” while lifting the pot, the video shows.
“Drop the f**king pot!” both deputies yell.
Three shots are heard. After a few seconds of silence, one deputy says “shots fired” and calls for emergency medical services.
“Dude, I’m not taking f**king boiling water to the f**king head. And look, it came right to our feet, too,” Grayson says.
Minutes after the shooting, Grayson speaks to another law enforcement figure. “She had boiling water and came at me with boiling water,” he says in the video. “She said she was going to rebuke me in the name of Jesus and came at (me) with boiling water.”
The Outrage Is Loud & Clear On Social Media
The release of the video comes two weeks after the fatal shooting and days after Grayson was charged with Massey’s death.
A grand jury indicted Grayson, 30, on three counts of first-degree murder and one count each of aggravated battery with a firearm and official misconduct.
According to court records, he entered a plea of not guilty.
As expected, the outrage about this latest death of a Black person at the hands of law enforcement is very loud on social media.
“A Black woman in her own home called 911 due to a burglar in her home. This officer came in and shot her and refused for his partner to render aid to her. Say her name: Sonya Massey. Don’t remain silent. Stand up for her and fight. This should not have happened…,” one user on X, formerly Twitter, wrote. 
Civil Rights attorney Ben Crump wrote on X, “Violence against Black women MUST STOP! We must demand FULL JUSTICE for Sonya Massey!”

President Biden and Vice President Harris condemned the shooting, calling on Congress to pass the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act.

You can see more reactions in the gallery below.

One of the most powerful voices of the civil rights movement, Sweet Honey in the Rock co-founder Bernice Johnson Reagon, has died at 81. Daughter and musician Toshi Reagon announced the news in a Facebook post on Wednesday (July 17) in which she announced that the “multi-award-winning force and cultural voice for freedom” passed on Tuesday; no cause of death was given.

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“As a scholar, singer, composer, organizer and activist, Dr. Reagon spent over half a century speaking out against racism and systemic inequities in the U.S. and globally,” her daughter wrote of the singer who co-founded the civil rights vocal ensemble The Freedom Singers as well as the Grammy-nominated all-female vocal group Sweet Honey in the Rock.

Reagon was a key part of the civil rights fight in the 1960s, lending her voice to anthems illustrating the struggle by African-Americans via her founding of the Freedom Singers, who came together at Albany State College in Albany, GA in 1962. The group’s powerful combination of Baptist church-influenced singing and protest anthems, anchored by Reagon’s soulful, expressive vocals, led to a collaboration with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), a group of Black college students who led peaceful direct action protests across the country, including Freedom Rides and voter registration campaigns that often elicited violent reactions from police and racist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan.

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Johnson, the daughter of Baptist minster J.J. Johnson, was born in Dougherty County, GA on Oct. 4, 1942 and enrolled in the historically black public college Albany State College (now known as Albany State University) in 1959 at age 16. She was active in civil rights activities and protests on campus, though she was in jail when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested in December 1961 in Albany along with hundreds of others on charges of obstructing the sidewalk and parading without a permit.

“I was already in jail, so I missed most of that,” she told WHYY’s Fresh Air in 1988. “But what they began to write about… no matter what the article said, they talked about singing.” Those revamped church songs, which Reagon would say often swapped “freedom” in for “Jesus,” as well as her activism got the singer expelled from Albany state after her arrest for protesting. That led to Reagon founding the a cappella Freedom Singers in 1962, whose songs often served as a record of the civil rights struggle, from tributes to fallen leaders (“They Laid Medgar Evers in His Grave”), to a revamp of the movement’s anthem, “We Shall Overcome” and “Free At Last,” which took its name from a quote in Dr. King’s “I Have a Dream” speech at the March on Washington. She also co-founded the Atlanta-based group the Harambee Singers in 1966, whose work was tied to the growing Black Consciousness Movement at the time.

Following her divorce from Freedom Singer’s co-founder Cordell Reagon in 1967, Reagon went back to school at Spelman College in 1970 to complete her undergraduate degree. A Ford Foundation fellowship to study at another HBCU, Howard University, led to Reagon receiving a Ph.D. from the school, one of a number academic honors she would collect over the the course of her life.

Among her many academic titles, Reagon was a Professor Emeritus of History at American University, Curator Emeritus at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History and the Cosby Chair of Fine Arts at Spelman College. She was also the principal scholar and host of the 26-part Peabody Award-winning 1994 NPR series/Smithsonian series Wade in the Water and the score composer for the Peabody-winning 1998 film series Africans in America. She was awarded a MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship in 1989 in honor of her work in music performance and composition, musicology and ethnomusicology as an upholder of the Black oral, performance, protest and worship traditions.

Reagon co-founded the six-member all-female a cappella group Sweet Honey in the Rock in 1973, a vocal ensemble that toured the world with a rotating group of singers who combined Gospel music, jazz, blues and African traditions, with hymns and song stories that touched on topics ranging from love and spirituality to racism and domestic violence. Among their signature tracks are “Ella’s Song” in honor of civil rights leader Ella Baker and “Biko,” a tribute to South African freedom fighter Steve Biko.

The group, which Reagon directed for three decades before retiring from in 2003, has released more than two dozen albums since their eponymous 1976 debut LP. Reagon wrote the group’s memoir, We Who Believe in Freedom: Sweet Honey in the Rock, Still on the Journey in 1993 and also compiled the booklet for the 2-CD collection Voices of the Civil Rights: Black American Freedom Songs 1960-1965 from Smithsonian Folkways Records. In addition to her work singing in and producing Sweet Honey in the Rock, Reagon released solo efforts, including 1975’s Give Your Hands to Struggle and 1986’s River of Life.

Check out some of Sweet Honey in the Rock’s songs below.

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Source: Foundation to Combat Antisemitism / FCAS
The Foundation to Combat Antisemitism (FCAS) has announced it will be running a Super Bowl LVIII commercial that will feature Dr. Clarence B. Jones, a confidante of the late, great Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Jones helped King draft his historic “I Have a Dream” speech which he delivered at March on Washington back on August 28, 1963. Now a lawyer, entrepreneur, and investment banker, Jones was also King’s legal counsel and one of his strategic advisors. Currently, Jones is the Chairman of the Spill the Honey Foundation, which was founded by New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft and acts to fight against racism and antisemitism via art and education.
The commercial’s goal is to foster unity between Black and Jewish groups in the face of hate.

“I know I can speak for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. when I say without a doubt that the Civil Rights movement (including the passage of the Civil Rights and Voting Acts) would not have occurred without the unwavering and largely unsung efforts of the Jewish people,” said Dr. Jones in a statement. “With hate on the rise, it is as important as ever that all of us stand together and speak out. Silence is not an option. I’m glad that I have lived long enough to partner with Robert Kraft and FCAS to continue to spread the message to the widest possible audience – the Super Bowl.”
Added Robert Kraft, “The work Dr. Jones has done over the course of his entire life and career is the embodiment of FCAS’ mission to build bridges and stand up to Jewish hate and all forms of hate. In the time we have spent together and through his work, I have become a huge fan of Dr. Jones, and I am proud to spotlight all that he has done for our nation.”
Watch Kraft give Jones the news below. Super Bowl LVIII kicks off Sunday, February 11 at 6:30PM ET.
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