On this day, 29 November 1969 The Black Panther newspaper carried this illustration on its front page of pigs being killed. Leading Panthers had tried to think up a pejorative nickname for police, and when one of them received a postcard from their lawyer, Beverly Axelrod, depicting a sheriff’s star with a slobbering pig in the middle it was just what they were looking for. The epithet was brought to life by the drawings of Panther artist Emory Douglas, adopted widely by the Black power and countercultural movements at the time, and “pig” remains a common slang term for police officer.
You can learn more about the Panthers in this book which contains autobiographies of members of the so-called Panther 21, including Afeni Shakur, mother of rapper Tupac Shakur, here: https://shop.workingclasshistory.com/products/look-for-me-in-the-whirlwind-from-the-panther-21-to-21st-century-revolutions https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1278056512379496/?type=3