340: Ideas To Save $1,000 Fast
Sometimes an extra $1000 can come in really handy. Whether to pay some bills, save money for an upcoming trip, or expand your emergency fund, who wouldn’t want another $1,000? […]
play_arrow
It’s Not What It’s Post to Be – When the Story Changes, So Does the Message – Guest Kalilah Wright podcast
play_arrow
3BGPodcast| Tokyo Godfathers podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
#229 “NO PHONES ALLOWED IN MY HOUSE” || Asake concert, Sol Fest, Sneaky video recordings podcast
play_arrow
Taking Inventory: “Wins, Lessons, and What’s Next” | Our 2025 Recap podcast
play_arrow
Vivek Ramaswamy Says he’s Full American~Throw Shade at J.D. Vance & Calls Out Nick Fuentes at TPUSA podcast
play_arrow
Conservative Civil War: Candace Owens, Megyn Kelly & more Respond to Ben Shapiro & TPUSA Chaos podcast
play_arrow
From Unity to Uproar: Nicki Minaj’s Turning Point USA Interview With Erica Kirk Divides The Barbz podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
The Real History of Hip-Hop & Media’s AI Future With Damion ‘Darizza’ Young podcast
Angelina Namiba serves as a possibility model for effective and sustained engagement with those vulnerable to HIV. When she was diagnosed in the early 90s, she immediately set to work to understand why Black women were being left out of national efforts to combat the spread of the virus, and she participated in and assembled groups of women committed to raising the voices of women living with HIV globally.
She is a titan within England’s HIV advocacy movement and she has worked for almost 25 years to promote and advocate for the involvement of women living with HIV in forming and informing local and national HIV strategy and policy. Today, we explore the resilience required to sustain our advocacy when our lives are systemically undervalued and the ongoing need for cultural competency within the NHS, which despite being built on the backs of Black women, still leaves so many Black women to suffer in silence.
Angelina shares the mnemonic device she created to help women remember their rights when engaging with healthcare practitioners, and the role literature, storytelling and book clubs have played in bringing her and others like her together to effect systemic change. Angelina reminds that in the face of anti-Blackness, homophobia and misogynoir, it has always been us looking after us.
Recommended reading:
Our Stories Told by Us by Angelina Namiba
Queer Footprints by Dan Glass
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sometimes an extra $1000 can come in really handy. Whether to pay some bills, save money for an upcoming trip, or expand your emergency fund, who wouldn’t want another $1,000? […]
Copyright Blackpodcasting 2025