UpdatedMon, Feb 1, 2021 at 2:17 am ET Reply We as Afrikan people need to establish more independent Black media platforms in America to force the world to respect Black perspectives, especially the radical, progressive, socialist, communist, Afrocentric, Black nationalist, and Pan Afrikanist view. Because white supremacy has distorted one of American democracy's most cherished civil liberties-the freedom speech. This fundamental principle in Americanism is not enjoyed by Afrikan people. We do not have the freedom to shape and mold political opinions about news, especially Black radical views, to the America People. Only White people, and non threatening Black people, have the freedom to shape and mold opinions about news in America. For instance, the mainstream press did not seek Black radical opinions about Trump's failed insurrection on January 6, 2021. Trump, the duly elected 45th President of the United States of America, helped to orchestrate a failed coup d'état to stop democracy on January 6, 2021. Every four years, after the national US Presidential elections are over in November, the US government passes the electoral votes through the senate in congress to certify the winning presidential candidate as the official American President. This is America's democratic process for the executive branch of the US government. The Trump supporters' organized an American a failed coup to stop this democratic process. This happened in the millennium to a country that boasts to the world as the bastion of democratic ideals in the world. Fascism manifested its ugly head in the US. The ideology behind it was white supremacy and xenophobia. Unfortunately, the narratives in the mainstream media were centered on being shocked by the current turn of events. They presented to the world that this is not America. But the Black narrative, particularly the Black radical view, differed greatly from mainstream America's perspective. Many Black perspectives, especially the Black radical view, argued that racist America is America. Many of us know that American democracy has been steep in racist hypocrisy. Many Black perspectives viewed Trump's insurrection in the United States, not as a righteous movement to protect American democracy, but as some White Americans struggle to hold on to white supremacy, systematic racism, and anti-democracy to continue to control the lives of Black and Brown people. And many Black perspectives know that both Republicans and Democrats use racism to dominate the Afrikan American community. But our analysis of America's attempted racist coup was not given in the mainstream. Black voices, and especially Black voices of resistance, are routinely prevented from being broadcast on the airways, tv, cable, and in print media in the United States.