In late August, a group of African-American women from Brooklyn’s Central Park decided to hold a protest against the honey bee.
They called themselves the “Black Lives Makers,” and the group has now garnered the attention of the media.
“They are very much Africanized bees,” said the lead organizer of the protest, the writer and activist Amy Ladd.
“The fact that we’re calling them honey bees, is the biggest difference.”
The protesters have been staging protests against the use of honey by companies, but they also want to get their point across about the harm that the bees are causing.
They’ve been called the “honey mafia,” and they’ve taken up space in the park, creating a scene that has made national headlines.
“We are trying to create an environment where people are talking about the importance of beekeeping, and they are talking more about the health of the bee, and the health and safety of the bees,” Ladd told Newsweek.
Ladd said that the group was planning a protest on Saturday at the New York City Beekeepers Association, and she was hoping to get a few hundred people to come to the event.
“I’m hoping to do it in a safe, organic way,” Laddon said.
The protest has been held in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn since February.
The group of women, some in their early 30s, said they had been protesting against the pesticides used in the industry for years.
“It’s not just a problem for us, it’s a problem in the whole world,” said Ladd, a member of the Beekeepers Assoc.
The bees pollinate more than 80 percent of the crops grown in the U.S., and pollination is vital to many crops.
“There’s not enough beekeeping around to make it sustainable for the bee population to continue to thrive,” said Mandy O’Connor, the executive director of the Association.
“People need to understand that this is a systemic problem that affects the entire beekeeping industry.”
In the past year, the beekeepers association has been criticized for trying to regulate the pesticide industry, and it has been pushing for tougher regulations.
According to the American Beekeeping Association, more than 100 million pounds of pesticides are used annually in the United States, but the pesticides in question are banned in the state of New York, which accounts for 90 percent of U..
S. honey production.
The pesticide, neonicotinoids, have been blamed for causing a decline in honeybees, which are considered a key food source for pollinators.
In New York state, the pesticides were outlawed in 2000, and were reinstated in 2007.
“In New York they’re saying that there’s a new problem with bees, that they’re in danger, and that they should regulate this, and we should do it,” LADD said.
LADD has been trying to get people to hear about the bees for years, but her group is trying to do something different.
“When I started out I was kind of scared, because it wasn’t exactly what I thought I’d be doing,” she said.
“But now I feel like it’s just the right thing to do.”
Ladd has written and spoken about the dangers of pesticides on her blog and in interviews.
In a blog post titled “The Truth About Honey Bee Apidomites,” she wrote that bees are pollinating crops around the world, and there’s no question that honey is essential to our food supply.
“If we can’t even produce enough honey for the people that are using it, then we’re in big trouble,” she added.
“As the world grows increasingly dependent on honey, we need to look beyond the honey industry and understand that the bee is our most important food source.”
The activists have also created an online petition to demand stricter rules on pesticides, and to lobby state and federal officials to require more beekeeping permits.
In the meantime, LADD says she has been able to keep the bees in the parks, and her group hopes that people will support them.
“Hopefully, they can do what we need them to do, which is be a part of the solution,” she told Newsweek about the group’s efforts.
“This is about more than just the bees.”