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Economic Imperialism - 2 -

Writer's picture: Michael FolkMichael Folk

First, some videos...


We speak with historian Kelly Lytle Hernández, whose new book "Bad Mexicans: Race, Empire, and Revolution in the Borderlands" tells the story of the often-overlooked men and women who incited the Mexican Revolution and how it relates to the rise of U.S. imperialism. The movement included intellectuals, workers and others who opposed Mexico's dictatorial President Porfirio Díaz, who ruled for decades with support from the U.S. government and U.S. business elites. "What we have is Latinx protagonists at the center of the American story," says Hernández, who teaches history, African American studies and urban planning at UCLA. "If you want to understand the rise of U.S. empire, you want to understand U.S. immigration history, you want to understand the issues of policing we are confronting today, we have to know that these are Latinx histories."



The FBI and New York Police Department are facing renewed calls to open their records into the assassination of Malcolm X, after the release of a deathbed confession of a former undercover NYPD officer who admitted to being part of a conspiracy targeting Malcolm. In the confession, Raymond Wood, who died last year, admitted he entrapped two members of Malcolm’s security team in another crime — a plot to blow up the Statue of Liberty — just days before the assassination. This left the Black civil rights leader vulnerable at the Audubon Ballroom in Harlem, where he was fatally shot on February 21, 1965. Raymond Wood’s cousin Reggie Wood, who released the confession last week at a press conference, tells Democracy Now! his cousin’s involvement in the plot haunted him for much of his life. “Ray was told by his handlers not to repeat anything that he had seen or heard, or he would join Malcolm,” says Reggie Wood. “He trusted me enough to reveal this information and asked me not to say anything until he passed away, but at the same time not to allow him to take it to his grave.”



Israeli forces have shot and killed Shireen Abu Akleh, a veteran Palestinian American journalist working for Al Jazeera, as she covered an Israeli army raid on the Jenin refugee camp early Wednesday morning. Video released by Al Jazeera shows Abu Akleh was wearing a press uniform when she was shot in the head by what the network says was a single round fired by an Israeli sniper. "She gave voice to the struggles of Palestinians over a career spanning nearly three decades," says journalist Dalia Hatuqa, remembering her friend and colleague. "Her killing is not an isolated incident. This has been happening for a long time: Israeli attacks against media workers, especially Palestinians, and the relative impunity under which they operate."



Comments:


- Isreal not only killed the journalist but also didn't let the Palestinian mourn for her. Israel's cruelty and inhumanity is epic. So disgusting


-Whatever her job role, she was first and foremost a human being that deserved to be laid to rest in a peaceful way. Crowd's of Mourners Carrying her casket and being treated with such violence along the procession was highly disrespectful towards the dead. Totally disgusted.


-May god bless her and her family and all journalists in this increasingly darkening climate


-Tragic. Unspeakable disrespect.


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