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watch this insightful interview with Jim Douglass on the trial surrounding the U.S. gov’t’s role in the assassination of Dr. MLK: “When we have a terrorist threat out there, don’t think Saddam Hussein. Don’t think North Korea. Don’t think Algeria. Think CIA – number one and then go down from there. Certainly there are other terrorist threats besides the government of the United States, but the primary terrorist group in the world today is the same government that assassinated Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and John and Robert Kennedy.”
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fraudulently appointed Arbitrator Timothy K. Lewis GRANTS William Morris and Loeb & Loeb LLP’s Motion to Terminate and DISMISSES my Claims with “PREJUDICE and on the merits”! Awards Respondents $43,707.60 for “fees and costs” and CLOSES the arbitration!!!
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Bradley A. Nankerville is doing all of this “legal research” on behalf of Timothy K. Lewis, but did either bother to read section 10 of the Federal Arbitration Act, which CLEARLY states that ONLY THE FEDERAL COURT CAN VACATE THE AWARD OF AN ARBITRATOR!? #fraud #unjustenrichment #payme
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Section 703(m) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 states that “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this [title], an unlawful employment practice is established when the complaining party demonstrates [that a protected characteristic] was a motivating factor for any employment practice.”
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“Exhibit 31” is not the only evidence presented that demonstrates William Morris’ “unvarnished racial animus” and systemic disparate treatment against African Americans.
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“As [Eric Williams] grew intellectually at Oxford, the young colonial came to question, and ultimately reject, an imperial-centered analysis of his people’s history.”
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“[Eric Williams’ Captialism & Slavery] is not an essay in ideas or interpretation. It is strictly an economic study of the role of Negro slavery and the slave trade in providing the capital which financed the Industrial Revolution in England and of mature industrial capitalism in destroying the slave system. It is therefore first a study in English economic history and second in West Indian and Negro history. It is not a study of the institution of slavery but of the contribution of slavery to the development of British capitalism.”