Garvey was every bit the grifter folks say Tariq is. Atleast Tariq actually went to Africa what happened with that boat Garvey was panhandling the community for again?Garvey met with the klan. And had some slick things to say about black ppl who saw their homeland in America and had no desire to go to some random African country. There’s a lot to unpack about Garvey that a lot of ppl don’t wanna touch.![]()

No go on Try to make a case for Brother Garvey being a c00n.Garvey met with the klan. And had some slick things to say about black ppl who saw their homeland in America and had no desire to go to some random African country. There’s a lot to unpack about Garvey that a lot of ppl don’t wanna touch.![]()
That´s a wild thing to put on his jacket, I don´t see what a Name change would do to take a sex offender charge off him.Yep. I heard he changed his name to avoid a sex offender charge, off of a technicality.
A Black American c00n agent backdoored him.Garvey was every bit the grifter folks say Tariq is. Atleast Tariq actually went to Africa what happened with that boat Garvey was panhandling the community for again?
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Uh huhA Black American c00n agent backdoored him.
Uh huh
James Wormley Jones - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
This was different than the c00n captain that was the one who stole the UNIA money that Garvey got charged for.

But by 1920, A. Philip Randolph and other black leaders, some of whom had supported Garvey after his arrival in the United States, came to believe that Garvey's program for black advancement was unsound, and that Garvey himself was a charlatan. Though they admired his skills as a propagandist, these prominent black critics derided Garvey's proposed solutions for the problems of African Americans.
A. Philip Randolph, who had introduced Garvey to his first American audience on a Harlem street corner, said Garvey had "succeeded in making the Negro the laughingstock of the world."
Federal investigations into the finances of the Black Star Line, along with a blistering analysis of the shipping line by W.E.B. Du Bois in the NAACP's Crisis magazine, gave fuel to Garvey's black critics. Randolph personally critiqued the economic feasibility of the Black Star Line in The Messenger , an influential magazine he co-edited with Chandler Owen, and accused Garvey of squandering the hard-earned money of his hard-working, poor supporters.
The "Garvey Must Go" Campaign gained momentum after Garvey held a secret meeting with Edward Young Clarke, the leader of the Ku Klux Klan, in June 1922. Immediately afterward, Randolph and Owen's Messenger magazine published an article entitled "Marcus Garvey! The Black Imperial Wizard Becomes Messenger Boy of the White Klu Klux Kleagle." Black leaders were further infuriated when they learned that Garvey, at a speaking engagement in New Orleans, remarked that because black people had not built the railroad system, they should not insist on riding in the same cars with white patrons.


