NewsPronto

 

Opinion

  • Written by a Guest Writer

Ever since the early days of the American civilization when black people were brought to the mainland as slaves to help build the world’s most powerful country that we know today, the African American community has always been at a disadvantage. The earlier generations suffered levels of racism, discrimination, and oppression that could not be fathomed today.


Although the situation has improved since the abolishment of slavery and the right for black people to vote, African Americans are still not seen as equal to white people. The inequalities eventually prompted the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement.


The Needed Change


The Black Lives Matter movement started in 2013 in the United States in response to state-sanctioned violence against black communities and anti-black racism. It was a call to unite black people around the world who suffered from oppression in diverse cultures. The BLM movement was a cry that said ‘enough is enough.’


It was a call to fight for a future where a black person had nothing to hold them back from becoming and achieving whatever they wanted, just like the white people—a future where people were not judged or discriminated against for the color of their skin.


While the BLM movement started in America, it was a freedom cry for black people in all parts of the world suffering from anti-Black racism to this day.


How Did the BLM Movement Start


The term BLM was coined in 2013 by Alicia Garza, an American civil rights activist after a 17-year-old black American named Trayvon Martin was shot and killed by a cop named George Zimmerman. The policeman was also later acquitted in trial after claiming self-defense. This led several activists to start the BLM movement to protect black citizens' rights from state-approved and racially motivated attacks.


Seven years and numerous cases of police brutality on unarmed African Americans later, George Floyd, a 46-year-old black American from Minnesota, was suffocated to death by a white officer named Derek Chauvin to restrain and arrest Floyd for allegedly using a counterfeit bill. 


How Did the BLM Movement Change the World


The death of Floyd sparked nationwide uproar and rioting in the streets of Minneapolis. The outrage soon engulfed the entire country, with protests being held in all states. People of all races and ethnicities took part in these protests. Many of these protestors were inflicted with serious injuries after the police tried to contain and disperse the crowds with anti-riot gear, such as tear gas, shields, batons, and rubber bullets. There were even some reported deaths during the skirmishes.


The resultant situation in America received a global audience through mainstream media. The movement quickly spread across all many outsides of the states, including Canada, England, New Zealand, and France. People from diverse cultures and ethnicities in these countries came together to support the black community. Social media was undoubtedly the biggest medium for the BLM mission statement 2020 to spread.


These historical events, with George Floyd as the face of the BLM movement, paved the way for a world that identifies racism and takes strong action against it instead of normalizing the status quo.

Dr. Robert Owens' Book

Hope a book of Christian hope, Skid Marks in the Sky an autobiography covering my days as a rock-n-roll musician and hippie, and Make America Great Again - AGAIN! a book filled with the positive accomplishments of President Trumps first term (to-date).  All of these are available through Amazon at

https://www.amazon.com/author/drrobertowens


Dr. Robert Owens

Buy it today at Amazon


Dr. Robert Owens’ Newest Book 

 

While neither the first nor the last Hippie, Backstreet was in many ways the quintessential Hippie.  Today the Hippie experience has been glamorized and sanitized by the dreaming of the young and the gleaning of the old. 

Backstreet's experiences covered the whole range of experimentation and rebellion that the Hippies came to symbolize.  From the "Summer of Love" in People's Park and Haight Ashbury, (he helped bury the Hippie in San Francisco) through Drop City, Colorado to the Armadillo in Austin, Texas Backstreet was there. 

More than the Lost Generation of the post-World War I era or the Beat Generation of the 1950's the Hippie Generation represents the ultimate in missed opportunities, lost dreams, and eventually counterproductive goals. 

This book is available at: 

https://www.amazon.com/author/drrobertowens 



Make America Great Again - AGAIN!

This book is filled with some of the positive accomplishments of President Trump’s first Administration.  Most of this has never been covered by the echo-chamber megaphone pretending to be an objective media.  Some of it has been covered as if through a carnival mirror, distorted and reshaped to fit the negative agenda of the Left. 

Though the media elites, the perpetually re-elected, and the bureaucrats of the deep state are united in their determination to defeat Donald Trump they’ve forgotten one thing … most Americans still believe in America.  And though they’ve used the Plandemic to shut down our economy and their shock troops are burning down our cities they’ll not be able to terrorize us into staying home on election day. 

And when the dust settles,  

four more years may give us enough breathing space to: 

Make America Great Again – Again! 

All of Dr. Owens’ books are available in paperback and kindle at: https://www.amazon.com/author/drrobertowens