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Bakari Kwento
1 Views · 3 hours ago

⁣As part of showcasing and promoting Kantanka vehicles, their features, and the unique benefits they offer, Nana Kwadwo Safo interviews a proud owner who has been driving the Kantanka Obrempong for months.

Bakari Kwento
5 Views · 4 hours ago

New Kantanka 2025 Onantefo

Kwadwo Danmeara Tòkunbọ̀ Datɛ
3 Views · 6 hours ago

I don't know about you, but I've always appreciated such long, interesting presentations by Neil deGrasse Tyson. Btw, sorry if you watched this video before. It's a reupload of a video I accidentally deleted while taking down a bunch of older videos that didn't fit the channel. Thanks in advance for your understanding.

Music Info: Sad Dramatic Trailer by RomanSenykMusic. Music Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_1667HsejTE

Bakari Kwento
3 Views · 10 hours ago

⁣Zimbabwe is facing a severe African armyworm outbreak, with the destructive pest spreading across 30 districts. Key crops like maize, rice, wheat, and barley are under threat, raising concerns over food security.

Bakari Kwento
8 Views · 15 hours ago

⁣How this Km farmer in Ghana Lost 100+ Tons of Mangoes & Still Built a Thriving Farming Business

Kwabena Ofori Osei
3 Views · 1 day ago

In this impactful video, Dr. Amos Wilson presents **"The Seed of Self-Hatred."** In this profound talk, Dr. Wilson examines the psychological roots of self-hatred within marginalized communities and the societal factors that contribute to this pervasive issue. His insights shed light on the importance of self-love, cultural pride, and community resilience in overcoming internalized negative perceptions.**About Dr. Amos Wilson:**Dr. Amos Wilson was a prominent psychologist, educator, and author whose work focused on the psychological dynamics affecting the African diaspora. His groundbreaking contributions emphasize the need for self-awareness and cultural understanding in fostering personal and collective empowerment. Through this presentation, he challenges us to confront the roots of self-hatred and replace it with a narrative of self-affirmation.**Key Takeaways:**- Understanding the origins of self-hatred in cultural contexts.- The impact of societal perceptions on self-identity.- Strategies for cultivating self-love and community pride.Don't miss this opportunity to engage with Dr. Wilson's powerful message and start a journey toward healing and empowerment.**Subscribe** to our channel for more insightful discussions and transformative content!### Hashtags#amoswilson #selfhatred #transatlanticproductions #culturalpride #psychology #communityempowerment #mentalhealth #identity!#thenewblackmind ► Subscribe to Transatlantic Productions 💥Smash The LIKE Button👍🏿 Share↗️ & hit the Notifications Bell 🔔► Donate so we can complete the upload https://www.gofundme.com/tapvideo► Cash App: $Tapvideo $GodKingD91 $BrotherRonn $Moneymark0730► Share on video on all Social Media.► Website https://tapvideo.blogspot.comh....ttps://www.facebook. Back up Channels:https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCs9-wRHfFb7v7RQAi

Kwabena Ofori Osei
2 Views · 1 day ago

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Tata Naka
6 Views · 1 day ago

⁣From Pharmacy to Holistic Health: The Inspiring Journey of Kristyne Twum

Join us in this powerful interview with Kristyne Twum, the visionary Founder & CEO of Kedar Health Ventures Ltd and LifeSong Consult. A qualified Pharmacist, Health and Wellness Consultant, Energy Healer, and Motivational Speaker, Kristyne shares her incredible journey from managing pharmacies in the UK to pioneering Ghana’s first plant-based pharmacy and holistic wellness center.

Discover how she’s transforming lives through her passion for healthy living, grief coaching, and empowering others to embrace holistic health. Whether you're a PanAfrican in the USA or planning to visit Ghana, this video is packed with inspiration and practical insights for your wellness journey.

Timestamps:
00:00 - Intro: Meet Kristyne Twum
02:00 - From Pharmacy to Holistic Health: Kristyne’s Journey
05:00 - The Birth of Kedar Health: A Plant-Based Revolution
10:00 - Overcoming Grief: How Loss Shaped Her Mission
15:00 - Holistic Wellness: Food as Medicine
20:00 - Services at Kedar Health: Shop, Coaching, and More
25:00 - The Power of Colon Hydrotherapy and Energy Healing
30:00 - Loyalty Club: Rewards for Healthy Living
35:00 - Challenges of Doing Business in Ghana
40:00 - Final Thoughts and How to Connect with Kedar Health

📍 Visit Kedar Health:
No. 29 Senchi Street, Airport Residential Area, Accra
🌐 Online: kedarhealth.com
📱 Social Media: FB/IG @kedarhealth

💡 Use code AUTHENTIC10 for 10% off your first purchase!

Many people from American only think the struggle against racist imperial rule was in America. I was so glad to find a wall that represented a wide variety of melanated people who fought just as hard against the nonsense of their say. Much respect ✊🏾

Kwabena Ofori Osei
5 Views · 1 day ago

- In the very first episode of the show, Charlie talks to City College professor Leonard Jeffries about a controversial speech he delivered on July 20, 1991. -- Journalists Jerry Nachman, Utrice Leid, and Sam Roberts debate Professor Jeffries's contentious ideas. -- David Grubin discusses his four-hour PBS documentary about former President Lyndon Baines Johnson, "LBJ: The American Experience." --Charlie remembers jazz musician Miles Davis with performance clips of the legendary trumpeter. (Not Included because of music rights that we do not own or have permission to utilize) People in this videoUtrice LeidJerry NachmanDavid GrubinLeonard JeffriesMiles DavisSam Roberts** Link to program transcript https://charlierose.com/videos/28319Leonard Jeffries and his ideas about race, history, and cultural politics have caused a raging controversy both in the halls of academia and in American society at large. Vilified in some quarters as a racist and demagogue, Jeffries has also been hailed as an educator who uses his classroom to raise the consciousness of African Americans. His career as chairman of the Department of African-American Studies at the City College of New York has “given a sense of urgency to the notion of expanding African-American studies in classrooms everywhere,” according to Emerge correspondent Michael H. Cottman. “It also has highlighted the growing concern for … black scholars who are now subject to ridicule and branded as incompetents and anti-Semites, as well as being second-guessed by those who object to blacks reexamining world history and offering a dramatically different perspective on the African impact on society.”In his capacity as a college professor and also as a speaker in public forums, Jeffries has stood as an exponent of several controversial theories: that the presence of different levels of melanin—a skin coloration pigment—has caused biological and psychological differences between blacks and whites; that the slave trade was run and financed by wealthy Europeans, including Jews; and that Africa’s role as a force in the creation of modern Western civilization has been systematically undermined by white, Eurocentric historians.Leonard Jeffries was born and raised in Newark, New Jersey, the older of two sons in a close-knit blue-collar family. “It was an extraordinarily happy home,” he recalled in New York. “I grew up with the idea of becoming a lawyer to save the race in the civil-rights movement and to be mayor of Newark.” Like other black youngsters coming of age in the late 1940s and early 1950s, Jeffries faced racism from his white schoolmates as well as from some of his teachers, but he buried his rage and strove to excel. He was popular enough to be elected president of his grammar school class and later president of his high school class.Jeffries won a scholarship to Lafayette College and arrived there in 1955 as one of four black students on the campus that year. An honors student almost from the outset of his undergraduate years, he decided to pledge the only fraternity on campus that would accept black members: Pi Lambda Phi, the Jewish fraternity. He was accepted and spent the last three years at Lafayette rooming with Jewish friends and participating actively in the fraternity’s affairs. “The Jews in that frat operated on the African value system—communal, cooperative, and collective,” Jeffries recounted in New York. “It was us against the world. We had very strong relationships because I was the leader…. I was trying to make them men.”In his senior year Jeffries was named president of Pi Lambda Phi, the first black in history to hold that position in the fraternity. The honor further helped to defray his college expenses by paying for his food and lodging. It also provided Jeffries with an ironic title that amused him greatly. “They called the president a Rex—I had to go through college as king of the Jews,” he told New York. “But I managed it. I managed it. Me and my Jews knew what we were about.”Graduating with honors in 1959, Jeffries won a Rotary International fellowship to study at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland. Upon his return to New York in 1961 he enrolled in the graduate program at Columbia University’s School of International Affairs. As he worked toward his master’s and doctorate degrees, he supported himself by working for Operation Crossroads Africa, a private organization that developed community projects in Africa. Jeffries’s association with Operation Crossroads Africa provided him with opportunities to spend time in Guinea, Mali, Senegal, and the Ivory Coast. In 1965, the year he earned his master’s degree, he became the company’s program coordinator for West Africa.*** Read More about Professor leonard Jeffries Here https://www.encyclopedia.com/e....ducation/news-wires- https://www.c-span.org/person/....?35272/LeonardJeffri




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