Former Black Party Member Slams the Black Lives Matter Movement

Elaine Brown isn’t impressed by the Black Lives Matter movement.

Ebony writes:

“I don’t know what Black Lives Matter does, so I can’t tell you how it compares to what the Black Panther Party was. I know what the BPP was. I know the lives we lost, the struggle we put into place, the efforts we made, the assaults on us by the police and government – I know all that. I don’t know what Black Lives Matter does. So if you can tell me, I’ll give you my thoughts.”

Singer and former Chairwoman of the Black Panther Party (BPP), Elaine Brown, doesn’t seem to be a fan of the Black Lives Matter movement.

The above remarks were made during a recent interview with Spiked Deputy Editor Tom Slater. This year marks the 50th anniversary of the Black Panther Party, and like many critics of the movement, Brown doesn’t take the party’s comparison to the Black Lives Matter movement lightly.

“There is no comparison,” she told Slater. “The next wave of young people running out here, who are complaining and protesting about the murders of young Black men and women by the police all over the country, they will protest but they will not rise up in an organized fashion, with and agenda, to create revolutionary change…”

…“We [BPP] advocated community self-defense organizations to be formed, so that we would not be assaulted by the police, so that we would bear arms and assume our human rights,” Brown continued. “This to me is a plantation mentality. It smacks of ‘master, if you would just treat me right.’ And it has nothing to do with self-determination, empowerment and a sense of justice, or anything else.”

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9 comments

  1. I’m sorry but I’m sure that folk in the civil rights movement especially the non-violent ones didn’t care for the militancy of the Black Panthers either. This is all generational and one group ‘ever seems to approve of the other. I hope the BLM doesn’t let people like this stop them even though I understand what she’s saying.

  2. I get what she’s saying but why say this on a public platform? Why not contact the founders in private and help them organize?

  3. What has the BPP been doing in order to feel ok to critizize ?! WHy not reach out and support & lead?

    Miss me

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