In November 1968,
Fifth Estate published the "White Panther State/meant". This
manifesto, emulating the Black Panthers, ended with a ten-point program: • We want freedom. We want the power for all people to determine our own destinies. • We want justice. We want an immediate and total end to all cultural and political repression of the people by the vicious pig power structure and their mad dog lackies the police, courts and military. We want the end of all police and military violence against the people all over the world right now! • We want a free world economy based on the free exchange of energy and materials and the end of money. • We want free access to all information media and to all technology for all the people. • We want a free educational system, utilizing the best procedures and machinery our modern technology can produce, that will teach each man, woman and child on earth exactly what each needs to know to survive and grow into his or her full human potential. • We want to free all structures from corporate rule and turn the buildings over to the people at once! • We want free time and space for all humans—dissolve all unnatural boundaries! • We want the freedom of all prisoners held in federal, state, county or city jails and prisons since the so-called legal system in America makes it impossible for any man to obtain a fair and impartial trial by a jury of his peers. • We want the freedom of all people who are held against their will in the conscripted armies of the oppressors throughout the world. • We want free land, free food, free shelter, free clothing, free music, free medical care, free education, free media, EVERYTHING FREE FOR EVERYBODY! The ten-point program and "White Panther State/meant" were also published in the
Ann Arbor Sun, which was a newspaper founded by John Sinclair in November 1968. The newspaper was originally called the
Detroit Warren-Forrest Sun before being renamed the
Ann Arbor Sun when
Trans-Love Energies moved to Ann Arbor in 1968. The organization, founded by John Sinclair, his wife Leni Arndt Sinclair and artist Gary Grimshaw in 1967, set up shop at 1510 and 1520 Hill St, where the
Ann Arbor Sun was produced and edited by the members of the group. On July 28, 1969, the
Ann Arbor Sun printed a revised copy of the White Panther's ten-point program. The newspaper was considered the mouthpiece of the White Panther Party for quite some time before transitioning to an independent publication that spread views on local issues, left-wing politics, music, and the arts. Finally in 1976, the publication of the
Ann Arbor Sun was suspended indefinitely. ==See also==