Omali Yeshitela
Goodreads Author
Born
St Petersburg, The United States
Website
Influences
Marcus Garvey, Malcolm X, Frantz Fanon, Black Power Movement of 1960s
...more
Member Since
May 2013
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Omali Yeshitela Speaks
3 editions
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published
2005
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An Uneasy Equilibrium: The African Revolution versus Parasitic Capitalism
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published
2015
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Stolen Black Labor: The Political Economy of Domestic Colonialism
4 editions
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published
1983
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One Africa! One Nation!
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published
2006
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The dialectics of Black revolution: The struggle to defeat the counterinsurgency in the U.S
2 editions
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published
1997
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One People! One Party! One Destiny! The Political Report to the Fifth Congress of the African People's Socialist Party-USA
2 editions
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published
2010
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Quotations From Chairman Omali Yeshitela
3 editions
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published
2012
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Social justice and economic development for the African community: Why I became a revolutionary
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published
1997
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An Uneasy Equilibrium - Commemorative Edition: The African Revolution versus Parasitic Capitalism
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published
2014
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Vanguard: The Advanced Detachment of the African Revolution
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“Sometimes our positions are unpopular in the short term, even among the masses, only to be vindicated as events unfold to reveal a truth that was obscured by the faulty analysis of the prevailing common perception. On such occasions we must move in opposition to the direction the masses are attempting to go. Otherwise, what is the meaning of leadership?”
― An Uneasy Equilibrium: The African Revolution versus Parasitic Capitalism
― An Uneasy Equilibrium: The African Revolution versus Parasitic Capitalism
“As a historical materialist and African Internationalist, Yeshitela is not a Marxist, but uses his critique of the works of Karl Marx as a building block for the theory of African Internationalism. Chairman Omali quotes Marx to show that, limited by his own European viewpoint on the pedestal of colonialism and slavery, Marx was not capable of understanding the significance of his own words. Marx summed up the ruthless and bloody enslavement of African people, genocide of the Indigenous people, the conquest and looting of India with the term “primitive accumulation” of capital. If Marx had comprehended his own words, he would have “been forced to declare that the road to socialism is painted black,” the Chairman argues.”
― An Uneasy Equilibrium: The African Revolution versus Parasitic Capitalism
― An Uneasy Equilibrium: The African Revolution versus Parasitic Capitalism