Mission for Malone University Online

Permanent Home for all Black Truth, Politics, History, and Culture. The quality of information on social media is so low that it forced the founder to build this website.

What Is Pan-Africanism?

You asked what Pan-Africanism means. Defined clearly:

Pan-Africanism is a political ideology that seeks the unity of all African-descended people worldwide, based on shared struggle, shared history, and shared destiny—built around sovereignty, resource control, and cultural renewal.

To do away with vague slogans my version of Pan-African unity means in practice:

political literacy, economic independence, shared infrastructure, and security alliances.

UMAR JOHNSON AND FAILED BLACK LEADERSHIP

Vital questions:


My criticism strikes at the recurring wound in Black movements: “Credibility and actionable information.”

I'm right to point out contradictions:


Since my platform is about replacing confusion with clarity my cause is just and my actions are noble.
This is yet another example of me stating my argument with pride while not virtue signaling false humility I clearly have the moral high ground.

What I've Built

I've made something tangible already:


This approach rejects the NGO model. It rejects phony rent-a-performance activism. I am not pretending to be altruistic, but still doing more for Black advancement than many who claim that mantle. My transparency has built and continues to build trust but I need suggestions. Here is what I am asking for based on my platform's intent:

1. List of Problems Black People Need Addressed

Start with these categories:

  1. Political
    • Local government underrepresentation
    • Voter suppression laws
    • Redistricting/gerrymandering
    • Environmental and health issues
  2. Economic
    • Lack of Black-controlled credit unions or investment networks at scale
    • Predatory lending in Black neighborhoods
    • Lack of business incubators owned and run by Black entrepreneurs
  3. Education
    • Biased curriculum in schools
    • Absence of trade/tech programs accessible to Black youth
    • No central database of Black intellectual work
  4. Media
    • No Black-controlled mass media platforms
    • Black voices filtered/censored by white-owned social media
  5. Justice System
    • Legal representation gaps
    • Systemic police abuse
    • Unequal sentencing and mass incarceration
  6. Mental/Physical Health
    • Lack of trauma-informed healing models for Black men
    • Food deserts
    • Overmedication and underdiagnosis of Black youth
  7. Cultural
    • Lack of rites of passage for young Black males
    • Erosion of trust between generations

2. Features my Site needs Implemented

  1. Forum/Message Board
  2. Roundtable Pages
  3. Skill Registry
  4. Black Paper Archive
  5. Submit a Problem
  6. Weekly Roundups
  7. Zero Censorship Rules

Features my Site needs Explained

Feature Purpose Tools to Use
Forum/Message Board Decentralized Black discourse Flarum (free, PHP-based), or integrate Discourse
Roundtable Pages Host tiered dialogs: Initiate, Strategist, Commander Static HTML pages with embedded comment tools or private Git-based collaboration
Skill Registry Vet and log Black contributors by skillset Supabase table + form + GitHub login or email invite
Black Paper Archive Public library of essays, frameworks, and blueprints for Black liberation Markdown-based GitHub repo mirrored to the site (free, resilient)
Submit a Problem Let users name issues and propose solutions Supabase + form submission
Weekly Roundups Curate ideas posted by others with editorial comment Auto-generated HTML from text files or a manual blog
Zero Censorship Rules Published site's speech code so people know they won't be silenced ever again Static HTML code of conduct

CLOSING THOUGHTS

My offer is grounded, uncompromising, and clearly:

Honest representation demands drawing a clear line: