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The video my mommy send to me as an tutorial. She fucks my daddy and wanted me to show how he needed it ♠️❤️

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #raceplay#blacked #bnwo #bigblackcock

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That’s this kind of video (him fucking black womans) my daddy send to me to make me jealous🥰❤️♠️

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #raceplay#blacked #bnwo #bigblackcock

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#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #raceplay#blacked #bnwo #bigblackcock

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Imagine a black Asian baby…. It would be so sexy 🤫❤️

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #raceplay#blacked #bnwo #bigblackcock #asian #pregnant #impregnate #

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My boyfriends wife is filming me and him fucking. I looove her 🥰♠️

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #raceplay#blacked #bnwo #bigblackcock

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My stepbro is fucking me but my eyes are only on my daddy who is laying on our couch ♠️

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #raceplay #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #blacked #bnwo #bigblackcock

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♠️♠️♠️♠️♠️

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #raceplay #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #blacked #bigblackcock #bnwo

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Night before Christmas with Daddy

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #raceplay #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #blacked #bigblackcock #bnwo

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Daddy said we need to be sneaky cause mommy was in livingroom watching tv

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #raceplay #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #blacked #bigblackcock #bnwo

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♠️♠️♠️♠️

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #raceplay #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #blacked #bigblackcock #bnwo

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Daddy and me everyday!!! I love how he fucks my little teen slut hole 😍😍❤️♠️♠️♠️

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #raceplay #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #blacked #bigblackcock #bnwo

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I was at school but my daddy missed me

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #raceplay #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #blacked #bigblackcock #bnwo

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On my way to my parents ♠️❤️

#bbc #snowbunny #bbcaddict #blacklifematters #interracial #bbcslut #qos #queenofspades #raceplay #goon #porn #nsfw #blackowned #blacked #bigblackcock #bnwo

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N.J. police shooting of 68-year-old woman with disability sparks community outrage as they seek answers A video raised questions among some community members about the police's response.

Newsworthy 🚨🗞️Deborah Terrell #sayhername #blacklifematters 🖤🤜🏼🤛🏽💪🏾💪🏻💪🏿💪🏼💪🏽
www.nj.com/politics/202...

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Post: Title: The Ballad of Ransom CarterSouth Carolina, 1865–1873. Ransom Carter had never known a... Title: The Ballad of Ransom CarterSouth Carolina, 1865–1873. Ransom Carter had never known a day of freedom in his life—until one morning in early 1865, when the Union troops arrived and read from a paper declaring the enslaved of Charleston free.Ransom wept on his knees in front of the live oak trees that bordered the old Carter plantation—the land he’d been named after. He kissed the red earth, not because it was kind, but because it was finally his.Instead of leaving the South, Ransom gathered his wife Eliza, his daughters Mary and Sadie, and built a homestead from timber left behind by retreating soldiers. Within two years, their plot became Haven Grove—a free Black settlement with a single church, a one-room schoolhouse, and thirty-five families.Ransom was chosen as community elder. He read the Bible aloud to those who couldn’t read, and he taught the young men how to read land deeds. He organized food shares. He wrote letters for neighbors. He refused to let the ghosts of slavery speak louder than the promise of a new future.But not everyone welcomed Haven Grove.White planters who had lost their land to legal rulings and Union redistribution saw the thriving community as an insult. Their resentment festered into hate.In October of 1873, after Ransom testified in court against a former overseer, a white mob arrived in the night. They torched the schoolhouse. Set fire to the Carter family barn. When Ransom came outside to defend his land, they beat him in front of his family.The Grove was abandoned within weeks. But his daughter Mary, then only twelve, took the journal he kept—full of sermons, maps, and his letters to freedmens groups—and hid it in her satchel.Years later, she moved north, graduated from a Black college in Ohio, and became a writer. In 1910, she published The Ballad of Ransom Carter, part memoir, part manifesto, calling it: “The story of a man who saw freedom not as a gift—but as something to be guarded like fire.” Today, Ransom Carter’s name lives on in oral histories, in Black family genealogies, and in a rebuilt version of Haven Grove on historical maps.#blacklifematters #blackhistory

Post: Title: The Ballad of Ransom CarterSouth Carolina, 1865–1873. Ransom Carter had never known a...: Title: The Ballad of Ransom CarterSouth Carolina, 1865–1873. Ransom Carter had never known a day of freedom in his life—until one morning in… #NFLHQ #blacklifematters #blackhistory #BalladRansom

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Post: Title: The Daughters of Dorie MillerWaco, Texas — 1945. After the news of Dorie Millers... Title: The Daughters of Dorie MillerWaco, Texas — 1945. After the news of Dorie Millers heroism at Pearl Harbor reached Waco, the small Texas town where he was born, Lenora, Jeanette, and Ruth Taylor—three sisters aged 17, 19, and 21—gathered around their family’s radio in awe. A Black man had fired anti-aircraft guns during the attack and saved lives, despite being trained only to serve food. He became a symbol of Black bravery in a country that barely acknowledged their existence.The sisters had lost their brother, Thomas, in the European theater just months earlier. He’d been assigned to a supply unit, denied frontline honors despite his skills. His death—and Dorie Miller’s bravery—ignited something fierce in all three.They decided to enlist in the Women’s Army Corps (WAC).Their family was split—Mama feared for them, and Papa, a retired sharecropper, didn’t trust the military. But the sisters insisted: “If Dorie Miller can serve under fire, so can we.”They joined WAC training at Fort Des Moines, one of the only facilities that accepted Black women at the time. Life there was hard—segregated bunks, secondhand uniforms, and instructors who made their disgust known.Still, they called themselves the Daughters of Dorie, writing his name in chalk over their cots, reciting his story like a prayer before bed. They were stationed in New Jersey, then Tennessee, where they sorted secret correspondence and volunteered in segregated infirmaries. When not in uniform, they taught local children to read.One evening, Jeanette received word that a white officer had filed a false misconduct complaint against her. Instead of caving, Lenora, Ruth, and several other Black WACs wrote formal grievances, demanding fair investigation. Their unity saved Jeanette’s record.After the war, the sisters returned to Waco—but not to silence. Ruth became a school principal. Jeanette, a postal supervisor. Lenora, a civil rights organizer who helped integrate the local library.In 1971, Ruth gave a speech at a military women’s conference, calling for Dorie Miller’s Medal of Honor and sharing her sisters’ story.Their bravery paved the way for generations of Black women in service—quiet heroes in uniform.#blacklifematters #historical #blackwomen

Post: Title: The Daughters of Dorie MillerWaco, Texas — 1945. After the news of Dorie Millers...: Title: The Daughters of Dorie MillerWaco, Texas — 1945. After the news of Dorie Millers heroism at Pearl Harbor reached Waco, the small Texas… #AnthonyBourdain #blacklifematters #historical #blackwomen

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Post: Title: The Freedom Train of 1947Birmingham, Alabama — 1947. Jeremiah Washington was twelve... Title: The Freedom Train of 1947Birmingham, Alabama — 1947. Jeremiah Washington was twelve years old the first time he saw the Freedom Train—a gleaming red, white, and blue locomotive that looked like it had rolled straight out of a dream. It was said to carry the very soul of America: the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, the Emancipation Proclamation. The country was still reeling from the war, and this train was meant to unite everyone.But not in Birmingham.At Lamar Station, the Freedom Train was open to whites only. A rope line was drawn. Armed guards stood watch. Black citizens were told they could not board—not even to see the documents that promised their freedom.Jeremiah had spent weeks preparing. His teacher, Miss Holloway, had led the class through lessons on the Constitution and civil rights. His father, a decorated WWII veteran, had promised to take him.> They let me bleed for this flag in Europe, his father said, but they wont let me show it to my boy back home.Anger flared in Jeremiah like a lit match. He had written an essay titled What Freedom Means to Me and planned to recite it in front of the train. Now, he wasn’t even allowed on the platform.But Miss Holloway wasn’t finished.She called for a protest. The next day, Jeremiah and fourteen classmates stood outside the train station holding signs:The Bill of Rights is for Everyone.We Built This Country Too.Let Us See Our Freedom.The local police tried to disperse them. Reporters snapped photos. One captured Jeremiah holding a sign over his head, tears in his eyes but standing tall.The picture made it into a Northern newspaper. Letters poured in. Activists called the train’s organizers. Within two months, the Freedom Train revised its rules in several cities, allowing integrated viewings.Jeremiah never did get to board in Birmingham. But he would go on to attend Howard University, become a civil rights lawyer, and argue cases involving equal access to education.He kept the protest sign his entire life.> “We couldn’t ride that train,” he later said, “but we helped lay the tracks for the ones who came after us.”#blacklifematters #blackhistory #socialcommunity

Post: Title: The Freedom Train of 1947Birmingham, Alabama — 1947. Jeremiah Washington was twelve...: Title: The Freedom Train of 1947Birmingham, Alabama — 1947. Jeremiah Washington was twelve years old the first time he saw the Freedom… #BIGGIE #blacklifematters #blackhistory #socialcommunity

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Viral Video Shows Fla. Officers Punch Black Man After He Questions Why Headlights Were Required in Daylight Viral Video Shows Fla. Officers Punch Black Man After He Questions Why Headlights Were Required in Daylight

people.com/william-mcne...

#blackLifeMatters
Stop this fucking racism

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Post: Title: The Strike at White Ash Mill1919, Pennsylvania. In the steel-gray heart of the coal belt,... Title: The Strike at White Ash Mill1919, Pennsylvania. In the steel-gray heart of the coal belt, where the fires of the White Ash Steel Mill never slept, Black workers labored in the shadows. They loaded molten iron, inhaled toxic fumes, and received half the pay of their white counterparts.Jonas Tillery, a former coal miner and son of freed slaves, had had enough. After a foreman struck his nephew for “talking back,” Jonas called a meeting in the old Baptist church basement.> “They call us expendable,” he said. “But without us, this mill don’t spin. Not one inch.”On a frosty November morning, 47 Black workers walked off the job, standing in front of the gates with crude wooden signs. “FAIR PAY OR NO PAY,” “WE BLEED IRON TOO.” The strike lasted 94 days.They were harassed. Food was cut off. Fires were set at night near their homes. Even Black churches were warned not to support them.The strike ended without a contract, but Jonass words were picked up by The Crisis, the NAACP’s magazine. His photograph—a man in a soot-covered coat holding a child’s drawing that said “My Dad’s a Fighter”—circulated across the country.Decades later, when union laws changed, Jonas was posthumously honored for starting one of the first Black-led industrial labor strikes in U.S. history. His story became the foundation of a workers’ rights movement in the South.#blacklifematters #historical

Post: Title: The Strike at White Ash Mill1919, Pennsylvania. In the steel-gray heart of the coal belt,...: Title: The Strike at White Ash Mill1919, Pennsylvania. In the steel-gray heart of the coal belt, where the fires of the White… #Dlou #blacklifematters #historical #StrikeWhite #WhiteMill1919

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Post: Title: Threads of Freedom Charleston, South Carolina — 1862. The city buzzed with unrest as... Title: Threads of Freedom Charleston, South Carolina — 1862. The city buzzed with unrest as the Civil War raged in the distance. Soldiers marched through the streets, cannons boomed in the night, and enslaved people whispered of Union armies drawing near.But in a quiet corner of Charleston, in a small shack tucked behind a weaving shop, lived Amara Johnson—a young Black woman with nimble fingers and an unwavering spirit.Amara had been born into slavery on a rice plantation outside the city. Her mother, Mama Effie, was a skilled weaver, known for crafting the finest quilts in the region. Effie had taught Amara to sew before she could even write her name. But their quilts weren’t ordinary. They were messages. Each quilt square held a secret—a symbol passed down from their ancestors, taught in whispers at night. Patterns of knots, zigzags, and stars weren’t just decorations. They were codes.Some patterns told when it was safe to run. Others pointed the way north. Some warned of danger ahead. Mama Effie called them “freedom threads.”For years, Amara and her mother worked in secret, stitching these coded quilts for enslaved people planning escapes. They hung the quilts outside on wash lines, pretending to dry them, but those who knew the meaning understood—they were roadmaps to freedom.As the war worsened, danger grew. Slave catchers watched every move, and the punishment for helping others escape was death.One evening, Amara’s mother was caught giving bread to a runaway. She was arrested and dragged away in chains, leaving Amara alone and heartbroken. But Amara didn’t stop. With trembling hands and tearful eyes, she picked up her mother’s needle and kept sewing. She worked by candlelight, pouring every ounce of her grief and courage into each quilt.Soon, she became known among those traveling the Underground Railroad as The Night Weaver.Her quilts were passed from plantation to plantation, each one marking a new step toward freedom.One rainy night, as soldiers patrolled the streets, Amara finished her boldest quilt yet—a massive, star-patterned design with hidden maps sewn in fine thread, showing the safest paths toward Union lines.She knew it was dangerous to hang it outside, but something inside her told her it was time.The next morning, under the gray dawn, she hung the quilt on the wash line, her heart pounding in her chest.By sundown, it was gone—taken by someone in need.Weeks later, word reached Amara that a group of freedom seekers had safely reached Union territory, guided by her quilt.And then, a miracle—her mother returned.Mama Effie had escaped during a prisoner transfer, aided by Union soldiers who recognized the quilt patterns she’d once taught others. She found her way back to Amara, and together, they wept with relief.As the war came to an end and freedom rang through the South, Amara and her mother became known not just for their quilts but for their courage.Years later, their home became a school, where they taught young girls how to sew—not just for beauty, but for power.And in the center of that school hung Amara’s star-patterned quilt, faded with time but still bright in meaning.Underneath it, a plaque read: Every stitch was a step toward freedom.#blacklifematters #blackhistory #socialcommunity

Post: Title: Threads of Freedom Charleston, South Carolina — 1862. The city buzzed with unrest as...: Title: Threads of Freedom Charleston, South Carolina — 1862. The city buzzed with unrest as the Civil War raged in the distance.… #Wordle1482X #blacklifematters #blackhistory #socialcommunity

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Black America's are great people. The culture and society paint them evil. Get close to them and have your king. #US #Blacklifematters

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Bundeszentrale f. pol. Bildung (@bpb@social.bund.de) Attached: 1 image Am 25. Mai 2020 wurde George Floyd in Minneapolis durch einen brutalen Polizeieinsatz getötet. Das Video seines Todes ging um die Welt - und löste auf globaler Ebene Demonstrationen...

Am 25. Mai 2020 wurde George Floyd in Minneapolis durch einen brutalen Polizeieinsatz getötet. Das Video seines Todes ging um die Welt - und löste auf globaler Ebene Demonstrationen gegen Polizeigewalt und strukturellen Rassismus aus

social.bund.de/@bpb/1145739...
#Blacklifematters #Fediverse

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Black Boys Matter: Why Are They Disappearing From Schools? Despite rising attention to college and workforce gaps, Black male students continue to be pushed out of K-12 schools.

wordinblack.com/2025/04/blac...
#SchoolSky
#Education
#BlackLifeMatters

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Family outraged after firefighter arrested, accused of sharing Bell Mountain crime scene photo of twin brothers found dead The GBI arrested Towns County Volunteer firefighter Scott Kerlin for allegedly sharing a crime scene photo of twin brothers Qaadir and Naazir Lewis.

Newsworthy 🚨🗞️🚨 This is truly heartbreaking 💔 I am baffled that this is not being reported on everywhere #blm #blackchildrenmatter #protectchildren #nojusticenopeace #blacklifematters THIS is WHY we #stayloud THIS is WHY we #kneelattheflag

www.11alive.com/article/news...

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A dzisiaj tak 😅😅😅
#polishboy #brrbrrpatatim #piwo #polish #photo #funny #brainrot #jebaćpsykochaćpieski #blacklifematters #peaceniepis #smile #hwdp #jp #szanujepolicje #szlachtaniepracuje #kurwakurwiełbanieurwie #bezrobotni #wiekszezasiłki #500+ #polskadlapolaków #news #senszyn #japierdolekurwamać

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Anderson Cooper calls out Trump for targeting the Smithsonian in new executive order | CNN Politics CNN’s Anderson Cooper reacts to President Donald Trump extending his efforts to influence American cultural and artistic institutions to the Smithsonian Institution – a sprawling organization that enc...

This is awful. Denying history and hindering it from showcasing in museums.
#museum
#smithsonian
#blacklifematters

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Black civics lesson: Hard head makes soft behind Discover the hard lessons Blackfolk are learning about voting, federal vs local impact, and the differences between the two major political parties.

defendernetwork.com/news/opinion...
#BlackLifeMatters
#BlackSky News
#BlackVote
#Vote

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Tradewar👊🏻New Boycott logo, use it for free✌🏻🕊️
#fyp #💙 #peace #freedom #NoFascism #freedomofspeech #freespeech #united #fn #eu #un #nato #humanity #powertothepeople #blacklifematters #lgbtq #europe #gulfofmexico #resistance #notrump #boycottusa #usa #mexico #canada #panama #gaza #greenland #denmark

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