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"Welcome back to Let’s Get To It, where we cut through the noise and get straight to what everybody’s talking about."
“Welcome to Let’s Get to It, the podcast where we skip the small talk and dive straight into the stories, issues, and conversations shaping our world." The Educator
Example:
Maafa 21 - Black Genocide in 21st Century America - full documentary
https://youtu.be/I6XfU8KVkzI?si=CIJUr2h1q76LPiuI
The New Black American
https://youtu.be/46WGjlqSXXI?si=08F4A4YNP7r0sLSZ
Let’s Get to It
Every moment of change has a lineage. When people push forward with clarity and purpose, they’re never doing it alone — they’re standing on the shoulders of those who challenged limits before them. So let’s get to it.
For generations, powerful voices have reshaped what identity, dignity, and direction look like. Marcus Garvey spoke to global pride, economic independence, and the strength of collective self‑determination. W.E.B. Du Bois pushed for intellectual excellence, political engagement, and the right to shape the future through strategy and knowledge. Malcolm X demanded dignity, self‑respect, and the freedom to define one’s own path with uncompromising clarity.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. carried a disciplined, faith‑rooted vision of justice and moral courage. Medgar Evers fought for voting rights and everyday dignity, showing the bravery required to confront systems designed to silence people. Angela Davis brought sharp analysis and fearless truth‑telling, reminding the world that liberation requires both clarity and courage. The Black Panther Party demonstrated that empowerment also means building — community programs, neighborhood protection, and disciplined self‑determination.
These leaders didn’t always agree, but they shared one essential thread: refusing to accept boundaries placed on Black thought, Black voice, or Black identity. They proved that identity evolves, expands, and adapts with each generation.
Today, people are stepping into their own definitions with that same spirit — challenging expectations, speaking with conviction, and choosing direction with intention. This isn’t about repeating the past. It’s about evolving from it. It’s about taking the wisdom, the struggle, and the courage of those who came before and shaping something new.
This is a moment of presence. A moment of clarity. A moment where a new chapter is being written.
Let’s get to it.
Email Comments: [email protected]
Comments: [email protected]
By The Educator"Welcome back to Let’s Get To It, where we cut through the noise and get straight to what everybody’s talking about."
“Welcome to Let’s Get to It, the podcast where we skip the small talk and dive straight into the stories, issues, and conversations shaping our world." The Educator
Example:
Maafa 21 - Black Genocide in 21st Century America - full documentary
https://youtu.be/I6XfU8KVkzI?si=CIJUr2h1q76LPiuI
The New Black American
https://youtu.be/46WGjlqSXXI?si=08F4A4YNP7r0sLSZ
Let’s Get to It
Every moment of change has a lineage. When people push forward with clarity and purpose, they’re never doing it alone — they’re standing on the shoulders of those who challenged limits before them. So let’s get to it.
For generations, powerful voices have reshaped what identity, dignity, and direction look like. Marcus Garvey spoke to global pride, economic independence, and the strength of collective self‑determination. W.E.B. Du Bois pushed for intellectual excellence, political engagement, and the right to shape the future through strategy and knowledge. Malcolm X demanded dignity, self‑respect, and the freedom to define one’s own path with uncompromising clarity.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. carried a disciplined, faith‑rooted vision of justice and moral courage. Medgar Evers fought for voting rights and everyday dignity, showing the bravery required to confront systems designed to silence people. Angela Davis brought sharp analysis and fearless truth‑telling, reminding the world that liberation requires both clarity and courage. The Black Panther Party demonstrated that empowerment also means building — community programs, neighborhood protection, and disciplined self‑determination.
These leaders didn’t always agree, but they shared one essential thread: refusing to accept boundaries placed on Black thought, Black voice, or Black identity. They proved that identity evolves, expands, and adapts with each generation.
Today, people are stepping into their own definitions with that same spirit — challenging expectations, speaking with conviction, and choosing direction with intention. This isn’t about repeating the past. It’s about evolving from it. It’s about taking the wisdom, the struggle, and the courage of those who came before and shaping something new.
This is a moment of presence. A moment of clarity. A moment where a new chapter is being written.
Let’s get to it.
Email Comments: [email protected]
Comments: [email protected]