Template for nationwide deployment, 501(c)(3) easy enough to obtain Panthers were feeding 10,000+ poor children in the 1960s. The FBI was saying it was poison and literally assassinating citizens. 1 Billion could deploy 200 million breakfasts for kids or approx 550K per day for a year Build Back Better. Not one member of the panthers had $3000 per day after taxes in capital. Not ONE. SKU #FREEbreakfastdotorg #21 on The Secret Menu Easy To Duplicate & Deploy Not a balla with "group economics" on your back PAY IT FORWARD Easy as calling / visiting your local restauraunt / food truck / etc. "Can you give the next 1-600 people who requst a #21 on the secret menu or ask for a freebreakfast.org a breakfast burrito on me?" Pay $5 - $3000+ Breakfast Provider * Picture Of Breakfast Burrito * Ingredients *2 eggs, protein, green vegetable, dairy/cheese, potato/brown rice.... *Location/hours to pick up ---------------------------------------------------------------- Imagine the Panthers with 25% of the lowest paid NBA player per cities capital...... Imagine every NBA player hosting their own node, NOW THAT'S POWER! Total cost 1 dinner or pair of shoes. Instead they shilling NFTs and other nonsense. This ain't the 90s when only 5 of us give or take had 30M+ (Jordan Jackson Tyson Oprah Cosby) 2022 WE have 100 per state give or take 4M Average Salary $3000 per day = 1M per year. 600 Healthy Nutrious Breakfast Burritos For Kids Per Day. Total cost to deploy each burrito $5 .....Just 1 player per city, there's other professions, other leagues...... 18,000 Daily Breakfasts served just 1 player each city..... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Breakfast_for_Children Free Breakfast for Children From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia School Children Program Products Breakfast Owner Black Panther Party Country United States Key people Huey P. Newton, Fred Hampton Established 1969 The Free Breakfast for School Children Program was a community service program run by the Black Panther Party that focused on providing free breakfast for children before school. The program began in January 1969 at Father Earl A. Neil’s St. Augustine’s Episcopal Church, located in West Oakland, California[1] and spread throughout the nation. This program was an early manifestation of the social mission envisioned by Black Panther Party founders Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale along with their founding of the Oakland Community School, which provided high-level education to 150 children from impoverished urban neighborhoods. The breakfasts formed the core of what became known as the party's Survival Programs.[2] Inspired by contemporary research about the essential role of breakfast for optimal schooling and the belief that alleviating hunger and poverty was necessary for Black liberation, the Panthers cooked and served food to the poor inner city youth of the area. The service created community centers in various cities for children and parents to simultaneously eat and learn more about black liberation and the Black Panther Party’s efforts. Site of the first Free Breakfast for Children program in Oakland, St. Augustine's Episcopal Church Contents 1 History 2 Oakland 2.1 Chicago 3 Women 4 Demise 5 Legacy 6 Black Panther Party's Survival Programs 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References History The program was initiated in January 1969 at St. Augustine's Episcopal Church in West Oakland, California. March 1969, two months later, the Black Panther Party opened its second Free Breakfast Program for Children at the Sacred Heart Church in San Francisco, California.[3] The program became so popular that by the end of the year, the Panthers set up kitchens in cities across the US, feeding over 10,000 children every day before they went to school.[4]Between 1969 and 1971, at least thirty-six Free breakfast for Kids programs were running nationwide.[1] The Free Breakfast Program quickly became the central organizing activity of the Black Panther Party. The reach and success of the program highlighted the inadequacies of the federal government's then-flagging and under-resourced lunch programs in public schools across the country. The program allowed the children of West Oakland's poor neighborhoods to eat a healthy nourishing meal in a safe, supportive environment before school, optimizing their ability to learn .[5] The party used the program to educate children and their families about anti-capitalism, Black pride, and developing revolutionary consciousness.[6] Many of these programs were held in predominantly Black neighborhoods but also served children of other ethnicities.The program was mainly run by volunteers—both party members and non-affiliated community members, most of them women. Those working closely in the program made sure that the free breakfasts were a concrete assistance to the city's poor communities. They also shaped the program to be a powerful symbol of racial injustice and ghetto marginalization in America by teaching liberation lessons while children ate their meal.[7] Volunteers would start setting up and preparing food around 6 am, and served the meal from 7-8:30. Most programs took place in churches, schools, or community centers. A typical breakfast often included some combination of bacon, eggs, grits, hotcakes, toast, sausage, and a glass of juice or milk.[8]Various chapters would also provided transportation for children, from home to the chapters free Breakfast site, then to school. Oakland The Black Panther Party initially announced their intentions to begin the Free Breakfast for Children Program in September 1968 and the first program was officially launched at St. Augustine’s Episcopal Church in Oakland in late January 1969. Parishioner Ruth Beckford-Smith was in charge of this first program.[1] Parishioner Ruth Beckford-Smith, working with Father Earl A. Neil, constructed a healthy menu that would nourish children and properly created a kitchen and dining hall that passed health inspections. The program's launch day served 11 children and gained popularity, as by the end of the week 135 children were being served daily at St. Augustine’s Episcopal Church. The programs success influenced other chapters of the Black Panther Party, and soon the Free Breakfast Program was mandatory in all chapters nationwide.[9] Chicago Fred Hampton, leader of the Chicago local, helped organize a number of community programs. These included five different breakfast programs on the West Side, a free medical center, a door to door program of health services (which offered testing for sickle cell anemia), and blood drives for the Cook County Hospital.[10] The Chicago party also reached out to local gangs to clean up their acts, get them away from crime and bring them into the class war. The Party's efforts met with wide success, and Hampton's audiences and organized contingent grew by the day.[11] Women The Black Panther Party began as a predominantly male organization, but later grew to recruit large numbers of women. The Party recruited primarily women to staff the Free Breakfast for Children program. This often reinforced traditional gender norms, which gained push back from the Party's women in the effort to achieve gender equality.[1] The Party's service programs were deeply gendered and often relied on women to fill service roles. The Free Breakfast program highlighted the gender struggles within the Black Panther program, as women were reinforced into maternal roles in the programs kitchens and serving roles.[1] Demise Despite its successes, federal authorities attempted to discredit and derail the Free Breakfast Program. Among other actions, authorities targeted the party with rumors of poisoned food[12] and raided breakfast program locations while children were eating.The program gained FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover’s attention because of its success in gaining the support of many black children and liberal whites.[13] The FBI would view the program as threat because of its appearance “as a front for indoctrinating children with Panther propaganda”[1] and FBI director Hoover wrote: “The [Program] represents the best and most influential activity going for the BPP and, as such, is potentially the greatest threat to efforts by authorities to neutralize the BPP and destroy what it stands for”.[14] As a result many agencies, such as the police, FBI, and other federal agents, were documented to be a force in harassing and discrediting the program, the people it benefited, and the Black Panther Party organization.[14] Police raids were documented at various program sites as an effort to end the Free Breakfast for Kids program. The US government recognized the success of the program and would soon implement a national breakfast program of its own built on the framework of the Panthers' innovation.[1] Legacy The success of the Black Panther Party's Free Breakfast for Children program helped reduce hunger and food insecurity, while pressuring state and federal governments to expand their own services. The program showed how hunger could affect a child's ability to learn and advocated for the need of similar programs nationwide. The program showed the governments failure in the War on Poverty and their lack for support for childhood hunger.[8] It would be a decade or more before free breakfasts would become almost universally available to poor children.[15] In California, the party pushed Ronald Reagan's administration to create a state-wide free breakfast program, and while the federally funded School Breakfast Program was first piloted in 1966, congress only permanently authorized it in 1975.[16] Black Panther Party's Survival Programs The Free Breakfast for Children Program was one among more than 60 community social programs created by the Black Panther Party.[9] They were renamed Survival Programs in 1971.[17] These were operated by party members under the slogan "survival pending revolution." In addition to feeding school children, the party started People's Free Food Programs, delivering groceries, and encouraging community members to vote.[8] Following the creation of the breakfast program came the founding of Liberation Schools.[18] The installment of the Intercommunal Youth Institute and the People's Free Medical Research Health Institute followed in 1970.[19] The Sickle Cell Anemia Foundation, which provided free sickle cell anemia testing, came in 1971.[20] Another Survival Program started by the Black Panther Party was referred to as "medical self-defense" with the creation of healthcare clinics and their own ambulance services.[21] Other survival programs included children development center, free clothing, free busing to prisons, free housing cooperative, free ambulance, etc.[22] These programs had multiple goals including drawing community members to political rallies, dramatizing social inequalities, providing needed community services, and educating people in the ideas and program of the party.[23] The Survival Programs solidified the Panthers standing in the larger community. The party's daily presence in the neighborhoods with breakfast, child care, and other programs changed the impression of the Panthers.[24] They were seen as community leaders that actively worked to help the people around them. See also The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution COINTELPRO List of breakfast topics Child Nutrition Act Food Justice Movement