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@Ericangelo_ms

Director @allianceforbmoc. Struggling to live a Black revolutionary life. Always learning, reflecting, evolving.

Long Beach, CA Katılım Nisan 2013
7.3K Takip Edilen13.3K Takipçiler
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E@Ericangelo_ms·
I can’t ignore how this country treats poor and working-class Black men versus how it treats the ruling elite. Men who destroy ecosystems. Men who exploit children. Men who loot entire countries. And face little to no consequences. While my grandpa — for tires — lost everything.
E@Ericangelo_ms

I decided to write something about my Grandpa Smitty that has honestly been locked away in my mind for years, because every time I really think about him, I break down and cry. And not one of those single drop tears slowly sliding down my cheek. I’m talking about curling into a cradle position, tears crashing like a thunderstorm inside my head, mumbling things like: “I wish I could have helped him” “I wish I loved him until the end”. This is about my grandfather — but it is, of course, political as well. Because what you will see is that my grandfather is simply a microcosm of everything this world produces. A Black man who grew up in poverty. Who experienced immense violence. Who tried to pick himself up and build something. And somehow did. Only to have it taken away. Some of that because of the socialized behaviors birthed into him by capitalism, patriarchy, and white supremacy — but in my perspective, far more as the result of the conditions he was brought into, alongside his family. For this piece, I am going to tell you about my Grandpa Smitty — first as I experienced him over the years. And then how I came to understand him as I matured. I hope you'll take the time to read, share, add on: thinkinginmotion.substack.com/p/smittys-boy

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E@Ericangelo_ms·
Just now realizing the video didn’t post along with the text…😅
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E@Ericangelo_ms·
Continued reading of organization means commitment by Grace Lee Boggs. Full reading here: open.substack.com/pub/thinkingin… It is not enough to oppose the system. We have to develop people, values, and vision. If we are only criticizing what’s wrong, we will lose people. People need to see what we are building and how they fit into it. They need to trust us, and one of the best ways to gain their trust is to meet their material needs. Revolution isn’t just about opposing the system—it’s about developing people capable of building something new.
E@Ericangelo_ms

Continued reading of Organization Means Commitment - The Standards of Revolutionary Cadre. Full breakdown is on Substack here: open.substack.com/pub/thinkingin… In this section of Organization Means Commitment, Grace Lee Boggs is focused on the standards of revolutionary cadre—the values, principles, and daily practices that must guide people who are trying to build revolution. She starts with a basic point: every collectivity—organization, class, race, or nation—must establish standards, meaning the values and patterns of behavior people are expected to embody in their daily practice. But a revolutionary cadre organization is different. It establishes standards not only to advance the group, but in full consciousness of its responsibility to advance the evolution of humankind…. cadre must adopt values that have proven durable over time. She names them directly: love and respect for one’s own people—not just for their sake, but as a springboard to respect other people; respect for ideas; dedication; dependability; discipline; self-reliance; accountability; and care for both body and mind.

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E@Ericangelo_ms·
Help me understand your question a bit more. The main point the text is making is that our work can’t only be about opposing or criticizing existing systems. We also have to be building and experimenting with alternatives that actually meet people’s needs. A lot of this work is already happening—locally and globally. The point isn’t that we need every detail figured out ahead of time, but that people need to be able to see and feel what we’re building toward in a real, material way. Otherwise, it’s hard to expect people to let go of the world as it currently exists.
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Patrick Durusau Seeking Demise of #WhiteSupremacy
I understand the theory of offering people a view of their place in a new order, but practically speaking, no one can plan in that level of detail. What do I saw to a lawyer about a system not based on patriarchy, racism, and its negative rights are based on wealth? Do I have to plan an entire legal system quite unlike our own, before the practical aspects become apparent? Breaking through the conditioning of the present system will take centuries of suffering. I don't see that as a reason to stay our hand now.
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Workshops4Gaza
Workshops4Gaza@Workshops4Gaza·
Encourage folks, esp those in the imperial core countries, to check out this series breaking down Grace Lee Boggs's "Organization Means Commitment." Some of these ideas came up in our last workshop and these are questions we all need to be thinking about.
E@Ericangelo_ms

Continued reading of Organization Means Commitment - The Standards of Revolutionary Cadre. Full breakdown is on Substack here: open.substack.com/pub/thinkingin… In this section of Organization Means Commitment, Grace Lee Boggs is focused on the standards of revolutionary cadre—the values, principles, and daily practices that must guide people who are trying to build revolution. She starts with a basic point: every collectivity—organization, class, race, or nation—must establish standards, meaning the values and patterns of behavior people are expected to embody in their daily practice. But a revolutionary cadre organization is different. It establishes standards not only to advance the group, but in full consciousness of its responsibility to advance the evolution of humankind…. cadre must adopt values that have proven durable over time. She names them directly: love and respect for one’s own people—not just for their sake, but as a springboard to respect other people; respect for ideas; dedication; dependability; discipline; self-reliance; accountability; and care for both body and mind.

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E@Ericangelo_ms·
Continued reading of Organization Means Commitment - The Standards of Revolutionary Cadre. Full breakdown is on Substack here: open.substack.com/pub/thinkingin… In this section of Organization Means Commitment, Grace Lee Boggs is focused on the standards of revolutionary cadre—the values, principles, and daily practices that must guide people who are trying to build revolution. She starts with a basic point: every collectivity—organization, class, race, or nation—must establish standards, meaning the values and patterns of behavior people are expected to embody in their daily practice. But a revolutionary cadre organization is different. It establishes standards not only to advance the group, but in full consciousness of its responsibility to advance the evolution of humankind…. cadre must adopt values that have proven durable over time. She names them directly: love and respect for one’s own people—not just for their sake, but as a springboard to respect other people; respect for ideas; dedication; dependability; discipline; self-reliance; accountability; and care for both body and mind.
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E@Ericangelo_ms·
“This is a dialectical relationship. The same conditions that produce harmful or reactionary behavior also produce the potential for revolutionary transformation—but that transformation does not happen automatically. It has to be organized. We can’t just wait for conditions to get so bad that they produce revolutionaries. We have to agitate, educate, and organize to create the conditions that transform people through struggle, collective practice, and accountability. Without this, people will either tap out or become reactionary.” open.substack.com/pub/thinkingin…
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E@Ericangelo_ms·
'To organize and to struggle, to struggle and to organize, again to struggle . .... One battle leads to another, and once the masses have gone into battle, they will grow all the more politically conscious, and their own experience will open their eyes to the truth and teach them which way to act."
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Vanguard News Group
Vanguard News Group@DavisVanguard·
David Greenwald on Everyday Injustice podcast interviews Eric Morrison-Smith, Executive Director of the Alliance for Boys and Men of Color. They discuss criminal justice reform, systemic inequality, and the need for a new approach to addressing harm. davisvanguard.org/2026/03/policy…
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E@Ericangelo_ms·
“We have always resisted attempts to make us slaves and now we must resist the attempts to make us capitalists.” - James Forman
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E@Ericangelo_ms·
Upper body day. ✊🏽
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E@Ericangelo_ms·
Boggs introduces the principle of democratic centralism and the dialectical interplay between democracy and centralism. Simply put: people have full discussion and input before a decision is made — but once a decision is made, everyone commits to carrying it out together. This reflects a deeper question she raises: what functions must each part of an organization perform for the collective to act effectively and continue developing.
E@Ericangelo_ms

Continued reading of organization means commitment by Grace Lee Boggs – the structure of revolutionary cadre organization. You can find the full reading on my Substack here: open.substack.com/pub/thinkingin…

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E@Ericangelo_ms·
"Are we actually prepared for it? Are we ready to step into something we don’t fully understand yet—where there are no guarantees and no clear path forward? Because there’s a part of us, individually and collectively, that gets used to the constraints. That learns how to survive inside them. That fears what happens without them. Maybe that’s why it’s easier to imagine the end of the world than it is to imagine a world beyond capitalism. And maybe that’s the part we don’t talk about enough—not just whether we want freedom, but whether we’re ready for everything that comes with it." thinkinginmotion.substack.com/p/the-weight-o…
E@Ericangelo_ms

In addition to my longer essays, I’m starting a new series where I revisit old journal entries—poems, reflections, fragments of ideas I wrote years ago. This isn’t just about looking at how far I’ve come. It’s about interrogating what I believed at the time, what parts I got right versus what I got wrong, and what I’m still working through. I’ve been journaling since I was about 14. I don’t even remember exactly how it started, but early on it was rooted in religion. I would rewrite Bible verses and use journaling as a way to process my feelings and hold myself accountable to God. If I could name my mistakes—my sins, my contradictions—maybe I could move beyond them. Over time, that practice evolved. My journals became a place to write poems, to process what I was learning, and to try to make sense of the world in my own words. For this first reflection, I want to share a poem I wrote about my father in 2019 after he was released from prison and the beauty and struggle of freedom. open.substack.com/pub/thinkingin…

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E@Ericangelo_ms·
"This experience didn’t just change how I understood his freedom—it changed how I think about ours. We talk about freedom like it’s something clean. Like once we get there, everything opens up and gets easier. But what I saw was something more complicated. Freedom comes with responsibility. With uncertainty. With the possibility of failure. With struggle." Full read here: thinkinginmotion.substack.com/p/the-weight-o…
E@Ericangelo_ms

In addition to my longer essays, I’m starting a new series where I revisit old journal entries—poems, reflections, fragments of ideas I wrote years ago. This isn’t just about looking at how far I’ve come. It’s about interrogating what I believed at the time, what parts I got right versus what I got wrong, and what I’m still working through. I’ve been journaling since I was about 14. I don’t even remember exactly how it started, but early on it was rooted in religion. I would rewrite Bible verses and use journaling as a way to process my feelings and hold myself accountable to God. If I could name my mistakes—my sins, my contradictions—maybe I could move beyond them. Over time, that practice evolved. My journals became a place to write poems, to process what I was learning, and to try to make sense of the world in my own words. For this first reflection, I want to share a poem I wrote about my father in 2019 after he was released from prison and the beauty and struggle of freedom. open.substack.com/pub/thinkingin…

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E@Ericangelo_ms·
Continued reading of organization means commitment by Grace Lee Boggs – the structure of revolutionary cadre organization. You can find the full reading on my Substack here: open.substack.com/pub/thinkingin…
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E@Ericangelo_ms·
In addition to my longer essays, I’m starting a new series where I revisit old journal entries—poems, reflections, fragments of ideas I wrote years ago. This isn’t just about looking at how far I’ve come. It’s about interrogating what I believed at the time, what parts I got right versus what I got wrong, and what I’m still working through. I’ve been journaling since I was about 14. I don’t even remember exactly how it started, but early on it was rooted in religion. I would rewrite Bible verses and use journaling as a way to process my feelings and hold myself accountable to God. If I could name my mistakes—my sins, my contradictions—maybe I could move beyond them. Over time, that practice evolved. My journals became a place to write poems, to process what I was learning, and to try to make sense of the world in my own words. For this first reflection, I want to share a poem I wrote about my father in 2019 after he was released from prison and the beauty and struggle of freedom. open.substack.com/pub/thinkingin…
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Dr. CBS
Dr. CBS@drcbs_·
I am striving, always, to unthink and rid myself of liberalism. It's a process.
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E@Ericangelo_ms·
“Now, taken together, unity and struggle mean that for struggle unity is necessary, but to have unity it is also necessary to struggle. And this means that even among ourselves, we are struggling; perhaps you have not understood this properly. The significance of our struggle is not only in respect of colonialism, it is also in respect of ourselves. Unity and struggle. Unity for us to struggle against the colonialists and struggle for us to achieve our unity, for us to construct our land as it should be.” - Amilcar Cabral
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