We should burn some incense, light some sage, and then do to White supremacy what White folks did to Black Wall Street and Rosewood.
They killed him, not because he was calling for little Black boys and girls to hold hands with little White boys and girls, but because he was challenging American imperialism and calling for them to dismantle capitalism.
In 1921, during the Tulsa race massacre and in 1923 in Rosewood, White people killed, destroyed, looted, and burned Black neighborhoods to the ground.
Since May 27, amid the most massive movement for Black lives, six people of color: a woman, four men and a teenage boy have been found hanging from a tree.
We fight back until the killing of Black boys and Black girls—to paraphrase Ella Baker—is as important as the killing of White boys and White girls.