WHO WE RE

What we were forbidden to know is unveiled now. Knowledge is power. Or as Afro Newspaper affectionately states:

WHAT WE MEAN

She discovered she’s not just a Black woman, but a California woman by definition. Evil arose when this lady wrote her first book on California’s queen, “Who is the Black Queen Calafia of Golden California?: The Real Wonder Woman”. So she showed her resiliance with her second comic book: Queen Calafia Queen of California This Kansas City, Missouri native decended from an American monarchy, a place of royal chiefdom and always had a thirst for mathematics and debate in high school. So she troted off to Tuskegee University and as a chemical engineering alumna, immediately recognized California had a problem: the name and image did not match. It was then Ms. Dicus decided to unveil California’s hidden Queen Calafia, with a snap of her fingers she authored her first book, “Who is the Black Queen Calafia of Golden California?: The Real Wonder Woman”. Visiting Beverly Hills, California for her KC coworker’s kings birthday party ignited her soul after a friends death from a rare cancer. Upon return to Washington D.C. her Black magic girlfriend, Rashida recognized her “whole auora had changed.” Inflamed with California passion, Ms. Dicus attended Thomas Jefferson School of Law, transformed her skillset combining engineering and law to become the “social engineer” Charles Hamilton Houston, Civil Rights Architect for the Brown vs. Topeka, Kansas Board of Education, defined in what a lawyer should be. With the sway of her hips and knowledge from her lips gathered law professors, law students, California assemblypersons and her San Diegoan community to charge forward. All became in awe as they watched her make major moves for California, one male noted to her, “You’re becoming her!.”. Media attention swirled and evil rose but Ms. Tamra L. Dicus charged forward to start petitions for restoration of truth in officializing the invisible Black women: Queen Calafia and California Amazons. AFRO newspaper and the Kansas City Call and Thomas Jefferson School of Law took note as Wonder Woman debuted and soared, Ms. Dicus still had a fight on her hands to galvanize the people for restoration of the Black heritage of Calafia’s California.