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Like two intrepid leftist sleuths, Herb Boyd and Don Rojas take a deep dive into the files of the CIA, mainly inspired by Malcolm X's belief that he was under surveillance. They unearth and disclose enough evidence to confirm Malcolm's suspicion as well as to suggest, through circumstantial documentation, at least one agent stalking him. The book offers valuable insight into the history of government agencies spying on Black activists, and targeting Malcolm was just among the most notable of those in the CIA's crosshairs. Plummeting the depths of secrecy and intrigue of the CIA and Black…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Like two intrepid leftist sleuths, Herb Boyd and Don Rojas take a deep dive into the files of the CIA, mainly inspired by Malcolm X's belief that he was under surveillance. They unearth and disclose enough evidence to confirm Malcolm's suspicion as well as to suggest, through circumstantial documentation, at least one agent stalking him. The book offers valuable insight into the history of government agencies spying on Black activists, and targeting Malcolm was just among the most notable of those in the CIA's crosshairs. Plummeting the depths of secrecy and intrigue of the CIA and Black radicals, Boyd and Rojas provide a promising blueprint and when, if ever, the agencies decide to declassify more documents on Malcolm, their work will be pivotal in the further pursuit of this ignominious truth.
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Autorenporträt
Don Rojas is the Director of Communications and International Relations for the Institute of the Black World 21st Century (IBW) and its National African American Reparations Commission (NAARC), as well as the General Manager of the Black World Media Network. Before joining IBW in 2013, Rojas served as Executive Director and CEO of Free Speech TV, a Denver-based, multiplatform, national media network. Before that as the general manager of Pacifica Radio's WBAI in New York City. In the early 1990s, he was the executive editor of The Amsterdam News; and shortly after that he joined the NAACP and established its Department of Communications. From 2002 to 2005 he was general manager of WBAI, a Pacifica Radio Station. Much earlier in his career, he earned an international reputation as the press secretary for Maurice Bishop, the martyred Prime Minister of Grenada.