I Am a Man!

He copied the original design from the Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade as a cameo in black and white.

Standing Bear (and Native Americans) were granted habeas corpus meaning that they had status in the court and were indeed human beings.

has been used as a title for books, plays, and in music[6] and film[7] to assert the rights of all people to be treated with dignity.

Additional messages include: "Black Lives Matter; Say Their Names; Vote; I Can't Breathe; Justice; Peace; Equality; Freedom; Enough; Power to the People; Justice Now; Say Her Name; Sí Se Puede (Yes We Can); Liberation; See Us; Hear Us; Respect Us; Love Us; Listen; Listen to Us; Stand Up; Ally; Anti-Racist; Speak Up; How Many More; Group Economics; Education Reform; and Mentor" according to the NBAPA.

[9] Untitled (I Am a Man),1988 painting by Glenn Ligon as a reinterpretation of the signs carried during the Memphis sanitation strike in 1968.