LataraSpeaksTruth+FollowDecember 22, 1969 arrived with anger that refused to sit still. Weeks after Fred Hampton was killed in his sleep, the shock had worn off. What remained was clarity. The Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party understood exactly what had happened, and they weren’t willing to let it be buried under official lies. On that day, organizers met, spoke to the press, and forced the issue into public view. No theatrics. No panic. Just deliberate pressure. They rejected police accounts that didn’t hold up and refused to let authorities control the narrative through silence and delay. December 22 marked the turn from mourning to method. What they named was concrete: police violence, coordinated surveillance, and the familiar machinery of repression later exposed as COINTELPRO. They didn’t need leaked files to recognize the pattern. Instead of retreating, they widened the frame and demanded the country look straight at it. This date matters because it shows how resistance often works in real time. Not as spectacle, but as persistence. Showing up again. Speaking clearly. Refusing to let a political killing be quietly filed away. That kind of action doesn’t fade. It leaves a record. #December22 #1969 #FredHampton #ChicagoHistory #PoliticalOrganizing #PoliceAccountability #HistoricalMemory #CivilRightsEra #MovementHistory #TruthOnRecord484Share
Gary Dunlap+FollowFred Hampton’s Legacy at Just 21Did you know Fred Hampton was only 21 when he became a legend? As chairman of the Illinois Black Panther Party, he pushed for free breakfast programs, community clinics, and unity across races. His famous line, “I am a revolutionary,” still hits hard. Even after his tragic assassination, his fight for justice, education, and equality lives on. Proof that you can kill a revolutionary, but you can’t kill a revolution. If you didn’t know his story, now you do! #Safety #FredHampton #BlackPantherParty10Share