ℹ DARE YOU SHARE. Sharing Factual Findings for the purposes of Unearthing, Revisiting, & Revealing Buried Dirt that continues to voicelessly Hurt Humanity.

Information sharing in America is at an all-time high, with various different platforms being used as legitimate options for those seeking to deliver individual messages or agendas through unconventional methods of broadcasting news, knowledge, history, and even controversial insight on just about any topic that you are able to name. However, it is very important that we are able to successfully identify constructive and compelling causes in our sharing of repetitive, undisclosed, and hidden information. We must remember, the information that we are sharing is simply a written description of someone's noteworthy actions or performances that are significant enough to be remembered.

After all, History despite how it may be spoken or written will remain the official handbook of how humans have either hindered or harvested healing to humanity; whether or not mankind has been a helpmate to hate or a haven to harmony.

There are thousands of effective documentation that are capable of being reshared to the massive amount of history starved and deprived Americans regarding some of the most notable injustices that have led to unjust and unsolved crimes against African Americans dating back to the founding of the United States of America. Much of this very valuable information along with its trail of terrorizing horror tales have been traditionally recycled without consequence, repercussions, and without the essential change being created as a result of our sharing. So far, no one has publicly condemned these horrendous actions, despite the enormous amount of detailed information being offered today. Although, these injustices have a familiar offender with a common identity; unfortunately they are without an individual moral violator, and therefore there is no sole ownership that willfully accepts any form of accountability. This is in spite of countless immoral stories being told and communicated throughout thousands of amateur and professional news outlets across the nation with intention of educating the uninformed. Nevertheless, the unpurposed sharing of unsolved and horrifying murders being displayed through countless hangings, lynchings, assassinations, and large massacres of Black People in America can be considered irresponsible sharing when our distribution of this graphic and disturbing material has no intended purpose.

There is no question that the enormous amount of terrifying trauma combined with generations of unaddressed grievances experienced by Black Americans is disturbingly unrivaled by any other group of people in American History. And as a result of these inhumane actions, the most troubling takeaway from a humiliating past is that there aren't any new acts of savagery that can be committed against the Black man in America; that haven’t already been attempted or carried out viciously upon him. By now we have all read the stories of tremendous torture and murders of Nat Turner, Emmit Teal, and others who were slain by a system of hate.

I would like to offer to America another important name that was viciously slain yet a name of a human being that remains overlooked and forgotten by history. On February 16, 1947, a 24-year-old black man was arrested and jailed, he was later taken from his jail cell in GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA, and LYNCHED by an angry mob of white men.

The last photo of Willie Earle taken while he was Alive at a GREENVILLE, SC JAIL.



There were 150 suspects for the lynching of this young Black man, yet only 31 white men “stood” trial for the death of Willie Earle in Greenville, SC. Predictably, every one of these men was later acquitted in what is described as a southern Jim Crow-style courtroom lynching. This was despite some of these men signing confessions to the crime and implementing others who had prominent statuses within the community. It became evident that Willie Earle had been murdered twice, once by members of a white mob and then again (after death) inside of a Greenville, SC courtroom by Corruption.


photo credit New Yorker/New York Times

We must begin to share unresolved and even controversial African American history that sometimes makes us feel uncomfortable, with a goal of discovery, understanding, and accountability in mind. Awareness sharing will ultimately lead to healing and much-needed closure for many Americans whose issues have failed to be properly addressed. As a result of this inexcusable dilemma, Black Americans' generational obstructions have never been remedied. Awareness sharing gives us the opportunity to rewrite the truth by challenging our own minds to create discovery by searching through the facts.

Many times African Americans have been given the excuse of, “no one alive is responsible for slavery,” at the time of accountability, but what about those who are alive today that are responsible for some of the most consequential race-related crimes against citizens of color? These people are still here and in many ways, their actions are responsible for poisoning the nation. Shouldn’t these people while alive be summoned to at least explain their actions to provide clarity if for nothing else? It is necessary that we begin to piece together our own theories when awareness sharing so that we are able to make crucial connections and unknown associates to unresolved racial injustices.

Just as in the case of Willie Earle, the infamous killing of Emmett Teal is one in which some of the offenders are still alive today. Carolyn Bryant lives an average life in the south, while her actions in many ways are responsible for dividing an entire country. I believe that an 88-year old Carolyn Bryant should be given a choice of testifying to the truth (providing names etc) or potentially facing criminal charges for her role in the death of Emmett Teal. I often wonder how difficult could it be for state and local legislative leaders in each state to get together and design a BIll that would make suspects of racially motivated crimes stand trial for their offenses without limitations considered. The Emmett Teal Bill would effectively address these generational obstructions.


We must also begin to challenge our minds so that we think of the most effective options in our spreading of the truth. Awareness sharing has the potential to become an interesting subject for our youth if properly presented as a form of discovery.

There are so many unknown racial injustices that have plagued American history that the majority of Americans are unaware of. The case of George Junius Stinney Jr., who was only 14 years old and the youngest child in American history to be murdered by way of execution after an unfair trial on June 16, 1944. This inhumane racial injustice also happened in the state of South Carolina. We must not forget that some of these violators are still here and therefore they are never too old to answer for the evils of yesterday. AWARENESS SHARING.

14 year old George Stinney mug shot SOUTH CAROLINA prison.

Awareness Sharing helps us to erase the generational scars from centuries of intentional damages while working to make America honest; by requesting the accountability of all those who are able to tell their own side of controversial and unexplained American history.


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A continued System of White Supremacism along with an unchanged Agenda is still dictating Change in America 🇺🇸 🪙🪙🪙🪙

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The withheld History at Clemson University🐯 may be more shocking than Thomas Jeffersons’ concealed past.