It's written in plain English, the full objectives cannot be realised until the finalized agenda is detailed under each of the topics.
For instance
Ending the war on black people:
What does militarization of the Police mean and how can they be demilitarized and what is the alternative?
Militarization of the police is pretty self-explanatory. It's the change in focus of police forces from training to be officers of the law that are part of the communities they help police to training like they are an occupying force in a warzone that they are not part of. It includes local police forces receiving military grade material and equipment for deployment against civilians.
They can be demilitarized by taking their military grade equipment away, refocusing their training away from acting like an occupying force and holding them accountable for their actions. Even members of the military are held more accountable than US police forces are.
The alternative is going back to a community policing mindset rather than an occupying force mindset.
Reparations:
Too vague to understand at this point what is meant by reparations
I don't find it vague at all. Which part are you having trouble with? Economic harm has been done to the black community from slavery to Jim Crow to redlining. Normally when economic harm is done to someone the offender is expected to make it right.
Invest-divest:
Is there special funding used to criminalize Afro Americans?
No, why? Does there need to be in order for there to be a problem?
It doesn't seem too much for a community to ask that society shift funding that ends up oppressing that community to funding that helps raise that community up. One of the things they ask for is more local control over spending in their communities. Normally the Right is all for local control. The more local the better . . . usually.
Economic justice:
It is not yet clear what the restructure of tax codes means though it indicates a fairer system. Details required.
It's pretty clear "restructure the tax code" means make it more progressive. It even says so right in the OP.
Community control:
More details required. (A lot of this will no doubt be internally debated and drawn up)
They want more local control over what goes on in their communities. Again, it says it right in the OP.
I am not aware of any Blacks who have less voting rights than others.
Maybe you're not aware of the recent attempts at voter suppression that have been going on?
https://www.aclu.org/issues/voting-rights/fighting-voter-suppression
And the issue raised isn't that they have less rights. It's that roadblocks have been put into place to hinder them from fully exercising those rights.
How is the group proposing this will be done?
Democratically.
Political power:
Are Afro-American voting rights not protected? Details required.
See the ACLU link above.
What political activities (to be decriminalized) are being referred to. Generally activities that are criminal or against public order are criminalized. Examples are needed.
I don't know about that one.
Though there is nothing wrong with the way it is written but the meaning of the agenda is not at this point capable of being clearly understood or conceptualized by the reader as this framework has to be detailed.
A framework is just that, a framework. Details are typically debated and argued until some sort of consensus is reached. It's unrealistic to reject a framework because it's not presented a complete bill ready for congressional action. That's not the purpose of a framework.