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Posts Tagged ‘African Americans’

The_Great_Debaters_DVD-Denzel_Washington-Forest_Whitaker

I just watched the movie The Great Debaters on Showtime on Demand and I must say that anyone who saw “Madea Goes To Jail” before this film should be kicked out of Black Folks.  Tyler Perry has a right to make his buffoon brand of movies and TV shows and yes I watch them.  But, I can watch that mess and BET videos occasionally in its proper context after reading the newspapers, books and substantive materials online.

 We should be appalled and disgusted that Blacks before us went through hell and high waters for the opportunity to be men, women and families.  Think about the few Blacks who found scholastic sanctuary on college campus like Wiley College in Texas or my father at North Carolina A & T and Tuskegee during the same time frame as this movie.  Like the current Lexus motto, they had a relentless pursuit of excellence against unimaginable obstacles.

Fast forward to today and the fact that I break my neck every chance I get to tell the positive young Black tennis players from my high school that I am so proud of them and dam near teary-eyed about their playing a character-building, non-glamorous lifetime sport.  More importantly, I am proud that they excel in the classroom and carry themselves as gentleman and gentlewomen—when no one is watching.  Hell, I can’t stop the college age young men formerly of the team from saying “yes sir” and “no sir” when we are on court but then again I do the same thing to my elders out of respect and so they will impart their wisdom on me.  As a sidenote, a former member of the Rams tennis team won a conference championship ring at Tuskagee; and the top sister from this year’s team is heading to HBCU Fort Valley State while a brother from the team will be playing at Alabama State and a continue his scholarly academic performance. 

In the 80s, there were Black people who thought the Cosby Show was pure fiction.  “No Black folks live like that…Black folks not ‘pose to be doctors and lawyers… N’s need to know our place.”  There but for the grace of God goes me.

Longtime President of Morehouse College Dr. Benjamin Mays famously informed a slacker student that he would be on the next bus back home.  Dr. Mays refused to hear the student’s pleas and told the young man that we as a people had been through so much; we came from so far and had so far still to go; we simply can afford to have him holding us back.  

Privately among ourselves, we discuss those among us who are intentionally or inadvertently holding us back—at time, this writer might have been on that list.  The White House is occupied by a Black President with a Black First Lady and great Black children with a Black dog but many Blacks continue to live in terror in America.  That terror isn’t from White nightriders or the local police (hell, the local police chief, who happens to be Black, emails me personally regarding community improvement efforts and I appreciate that;) the terror is from young thugs and drug addicts who look like us.  Half-raised thugs and want-to-be thugs who learned gangster life from watching videos on a channel started by Robert Johnson, one of America’s first Black billionaires who this time last year was questioning Obama fitness to be president.  What profits a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul or as Public Enemy rapped “I know you got sold.”  Pun intended.

When I was watching The Great Debaters, my best fear was that the positive Black women in the film would be raped or beaten—American domestic terror that Blacks, Native Americans and Hispanics know too well.  After 911, White friends told me that for the first time in their lives their families were not safe in their own beds and on American streets.  I had to say join the club in which my folks has had membership since 1619.  Technically, those streets weren’t American until 1776.  

In politics and policy, conservatives miss the opportunity to capitalize on the fact that most Black voters and productive citizens believe that the next step in our development/struggle is not governmental but societal.  Hell, 80% of our community spends 80% of our time and effort addressing problems created by 20%.  What to do with and about that 20%?  That 20% has created a Black energy crisis because they have worn “us” out and drain the community behind foolishness. 

People talking about what would have happened if we ended our dependence on foreign oil at President Carter urging in the 1970s.  What would have happen if Newt and Bill Clinton pushed welfare reform so hard that people of any color would know that they shouldn’t have children until they are fully prepared to raise productive citizens.  But, this argument is theoretical at best because those who should not have kids at a certain time are often not logical enough to realize it.  Checkout the Great Debaters with your family.  Don’t get me started on Tyler Perry’s “Meet the Browns.”

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south-africa

My sister is an engineer with IBM and last week became the first member of my family to step foot on African soil since we arrived in the New World in the hulls of ships. Being a Georgia Tech grad as a proposed to a Black college product like me, she did not know the vibe she would get from being there until she was there—told her so.  I feel guilty for not taking the ferry from southern Spain to Africa when I had a chance but my friend Jerry, who did the Peace Corps, says North Africa is not really Africa.  

Her email from Africa: 

Greetings Family…..from South Africa!!  

It has been an interesting few days here.  I am staying at the Hilton in the Sandton area of Johannesburg.  I have visited Soweto, been on a safari/tour at Pilanesberg and Sun City……and shopped at Nelson Mandella Square.  We were so close to a couple of rhinos that one started to charge our vehicle.  I was disappointed that we didn’t see any lions or leopards….but will try again on the next trip in about four weeks.  The food here is great.  I have had ostrich and springbok…….still looking to try some kudu.  On my birthday, I had a lonely dinner at Brown’s restaurant (although they tried to make me feel special — the band played New York New York and Georgia On My Mind)…then a superb meal later Saturday night at Auberge Michel’s (one of the top restaurants in the area). I found out that most business (including restaurants and malls) close on holidays (like Friday — Workers Day). 

 Yesterday I went to an awesome worship service at Rhema Bible Church…..with seating capacity for thousands, it was packed….and this did not include children as they were in special training classes during worship!  The congregation is 95% black and the senior pastor is white (unusual for the US right?).  The senior pastor and wife were on vacation and there was a black guest pastor who spoke about “Things Do Happen”….Eccl 9:2, II Cor 11:23, Isaiah 43:2, Isaiah 41:10…..When (not if) you pass through the fire….remember, God is your source….a very present help in time of need….and don’t forget those fellows following you — Goodness and Mercy!!!   Amen, amen!!  About 40 people gave their lives to Christ….it was a wonderful experience.  The church is celebrating it’s 30th anniversary this year.  Joel and Victoria Osteen will be here in October.  The people here have been very warm and friendly. 

Right now (a little after noon), I’m at the IBM site and my official meetings start tomorrow through Thursday.  Just wanted to take a moment to say hello….from the mother land.  I should be back in the States late Friday afternoon.  Love you all……B.P.K.

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img-precious

Africa and Jill Scott look really good in her new HBO series The Number 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency.  The relationship between Africans and African Americans can be rocky because many Africans and West Indians view African Americans in a less than favorable light—weak, poor character, crazy, and no morals.

 

To use a term from the southern hip hop culture, I must say “naw dawg” to the idea of coming to a country we help build for free and inexplicably turning your African or Caribbean noses up at the descendants of slaves—the descendants of you.  Dr. Martin Luther King’s quote about judging a man not by the color of his skin but by the content of his character should be put into to practice.  Many African Americans think “Africans in America” reflect the whole vast continent but the only recent Africans the people in rural south Georgia have met is an occasionally pushy Nigerian businessman.  Not to say most Nigerians are pushy or to say all Nigerians in Georgia are aggressive—MLK must be really proud of me right now.

 

To the original point, Jill Scott is lovely and a great test of character: would you still love an intelligent, sharp and beauty person if they got big…really big.  Before the whole BBW movement, there were people who always like bigger people—more of them to love.  I am personally disappointed with young men who marry or “start a family” with round behind young women without understanding that that behind will change with time and the relationship should be based on more…like her smile…okay, I am kidding.

 

The relationship should be based on many factors including moral and character matters.  What about the complicity of the young lady who involves herself with a shallow guy and hopes it works out.  Maybe those Africans in America have a point.  And what about the contradiction that many bigger women would never date a successful and focused short man or the father from the projects who would never let his middle class daughter date a young man from the projects. 

 

Should this rambling collection of generalizations and half thoughts be on a political blog?   I think it should be because a better relationship with our African roots could help our American youth develop like a tree with roots—grounded and not fluttering in the wind.  And the political and policy concerns of our community are the results of personal responsibility or lack there of.  With skyrocketing government spending, we must find a way to reduce the cost of programs that address problems shouldn’t be problems at all.  Crime, drugs, fooling around at school and poor parenting should be addressed by deliberate actions and reestablishing our moral compass as Black southerners and Americans of African decent.   

 

Black, White, Yellow or Brown families should watch the whole Jill Scott series together.  In fact, Scott’s image and style is also encouraging to a growing section of the population called everyone getting big and wearing it well.  I need to run, literally.

 

http://www.hbo.com/no1ladiesdetectiveagency/cast/jill_scott.html

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Canada Lee from "Lifeboat"

Canada Lee from "Lifeboat"

In our community (code for Black folks), we are in a lifeboat like the people in that Hitchcock movie.  Decisions must be made about how far we are from safety, how long scarce resources will last, and what or who should be jettisoned.  We need the strong to row and those with self-inflicted inquires eat last.  The loudmouth mutineers who want to cause a ruckus might find a watery grave.

 

King Solomon’s palms would be on his forehead if he were struggling with our current dilemmas.  The peaceful, law-abiding majority in our community spend too much time addressing problems created by the fraction that does not “act right” and that fraction’s actions justify Blacks who don’t want to be around certain negative Blacks.  T.V. can be an education resources because “Cops” and A&E’s “Intervention” hipped me to horrible consequences of White and Black drug abuse. 

 

On this theoretical lifeboat, the thug element might toss everyone else overboard and drink half the water and rinse off their sneakers with the other half.  The skyrocketing criminal justice cost is taking away from good kids in college and vocational college.  While our best youth are fighting in foreign wars, the worst element is fighting in the street to the degree that sharecroppers’ widows in my town fortress themselves inside their modest homes—day and night.  Those widows look at me as if to say “it’s on you so be the man your daddy raised and talk with these kids.”

 

Back in the day, those neighbors would just look at us and we would respectfully take the party to the backyard or turn the music down. (Fools barbeque in the front yard)  But, these guys in the big white T-shirts who push their car seats back are about to make me move–that’s not burning leaves I am smelling. 

 

I have a Black conservative friend who always says her folks taught her that life is too short to argue with fools.  She should be a fresh congresswoman this year and leader of a movement I have termed “community conservatives.”  CCs are those in the community who have always sought to emphasis the limited role of government, personal responsibility and commitment to continuing our push drive from equality through rational decision-making.  To put in plainly, act like you have some sense in your head.

 

CCs never really thought the government should ensure prosperity for all because our governmental and economic system is designed to reward hard work and perversion while understanding that bad decision-makers will nature limit their success.  If the system provides an equal opportunity for all, those who did not make it big should understand their condition is a result of their actions.   Hell, I don’t know the answers but I do know the predators in my community don’t have white hoods, they have really big white T-shirts and the they are constantly recruiting good kids for bad activities. 

 

With all due respect to the sweet old ladies in my neighborhood, I won’t be speaking to the thug element because logic, reason and community are concepts that escape them.  On his way to federal prison, last night rapper T.I. said that “that iron” (jail cells) would straighten them out but again with the cost of “three hots and a cot.”  To me, those shackles are a modern, voluntary form of slavery.

 

My conservative friend should get with other community conservatives (sign me up) and say to liberals “enough with the grants to respond to problems; address the situation before it becomes a problem.”  If we are on this lifeboat, sound planning is the key to survival.  The old reggae lyric said we can’t sink while others float because we are all in the same big boat. 

 

Would community conservatives be more comfortable as Black Blue Dog Democrats or some needed new moderate division of Michael Steele’s GOP?

 

 

The youth need to know blacklisted actor Canada Lee from Hitchcock’s Lifeboat

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_Lee

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When hop hip was born on the streets of New York, rhymes and dances drove the battles.  As the genre traveled to the left coast, the world learned from Ice Cube, Dre and N.W.A. that south central L.A. was a powder keg ready to blow.  Their music was real gangsters reflecting the unfortunate problems in their world through the medium of rap—in the footsteps of Pablo Picasso, Zora Neal Hurston and Salvador Dali.   

 

Art imitating life or life imitating art?  Of course, the hip hop culture includes positive elements who are real artists but some parts of the thug subdivision are recklessly affecting developing minds and our community as a whole suffers.  Weak-minded kids are so brainwashed that they become detrimental to other kids and everyone else.  When the moral code established by the teachings of family, church and school is ignored, we are in trouble.  From leather jackets to Afro to punk to preppy, every generation gets to define itself but these my classmates’ children are making a concerted effort to glorify easy money, hustling, crime, and incarceration.  And don’t get me started on the stripper style dancing from college students in regular clubs—maybe I am just getting old and grumpy but back in my day we saved that for the “hotel, motel, Holiday Inn.”

 

Lyrics are poetry set to music; Jill Scott should be Poet Laureate; Biggie and Tupac are our dead poets.  Anyone with a strong mind can listen to music in its proper artistic context but as a community we need our youth preparing from the competitive nature of the global economy; kids in the developing are developing fast.  The hip hop culture is big business with Black, White and Brown youth but under-prepared Black youth will struggle if the music adversely influences their mindsets.

 

The kids seem to us now how we must have seemed to our parents but Grandmaster Flash & the Furious 5 a “The Message” and John Cougar Mellencamp’s “Rain on the Scarecrow” meant something in farmland.  When they reach 25 year old, they started with that “I wish I would have listened—I got caught up.”

 

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In American politics and government, the best interests of the nation should be priority one.  However, only the naïve ignore the political agendas all around us. 

 

Faith

State/Region

Political Party

Movement/Causes

Race/Gender

Profession/Industry

(Did I leave about 100 others out)?

 

Did the Founding Fathers (all landowning White males) think 2009 America would be this diverse or that a Black guy would be in the Executive Mansion without a mop in his hand?  Some southerners think public policy should directly reflect the Bible while others push issues that benefit their businesses, professions or careers.

 

Robert E. Lee’s pre-Civil War dilemma fascinates me.  The son of a former Virginia governor and the husband of Martha Washington’s great granddaughter, Lee turned down Lincoln’s offer of a senior command to fight for Virginia and the Confederacy; he loved his state deeply.  At my Black college, the history and pol sci majors would “trip” over Lee being the epitome of the southern gentleman while fighting for a “jacked up” cause while Grant was a drunk fighting for the right cause.  As a side note, many non-southern Whites did not support the expansion of slavery because slaves provided free labor in jobs White immigrants wanted. 

 

At times, Atlanta has produces liberal members of Congress who put national causes and movements before Georgia.  Residents of Georgia’s cities don’t realize that agriculture/ food processing is the economic backbone of the rural regions so we bump heads on the farm agenda. 

 

In Sunday School back in the day, we were taught, “No servant can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and wealth.”   Luke 16:13

 

The parable in Luke 16 seems to speak of political parties, unions, lobbyists and interest groups.  I am not calling them Pharisees because that group seemed to be preoccupied with the letter of the law.  

 

What about Romans 13: 1-2: “Everyone must submit himself to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established.  The authorities that exist have been established by God.  Consequently, he who rebels against the authority is rebelling against what God has instituted, and those who do so will bring judgment on themselves.” 

 

Personally, I am a Georgian, Methodist, African American, moderate Democrat, and southerner.  But, my sub-agendas must be reconciled with the best interests of the United States of America.  So help me God.

 

http://lcmssermons.com/index.php?sn=209

The parable of the unjust steward

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Every Southerner should watch M.T.V’s “T.I.’s Road to Redemption” because the heading to prison rapper is making a sincere effort reach America’s youth.  Before they take the wrong path, young people need to hear that “real talk” about choices, decisions and consequences from every angle: family, schools, churches, positive peers and reformed thugs. 

 

When I was a kid, we called “real talk” the Barbershop talk.  In the shop, a want-to-be goon walked past the retired gentlemen without speaking and sat down—trying to be hard.  Of course, my friends and I would come in the places with “how are sir…good to see you…yes sir, I am trying to staying out of trouble…yes sir, I look like my father.”  When the retired vets and pensioners started teaching that knowledge and wisdom, we listened intently and took copious mental notes. 

 

“It’s not the government’s job to take care of these babies…get a good government job on the military base…before you marry a girl, get a look at the women on both sides of her family…a bullet doesn’t have a name on it…don’t buy a new Cadillac if you are renting an apartment…they want you in jail…get your lesson at the schoolhouse…gin makes you sin…some folks are like crabs in a barrel…grown men don’t wear baseball hats to the side…don’t break your parents’ hearts.”

 

Georgia’s T.I. put himself through some things and is about to serve federal time on gun charges.  Tupac and Biggie told those rappers and ballplayers that they couldn’t be a multimillionaire and live in the same neighborhood; wearing 100K in jewelry to the sweatiest club is trouble waiting to happen and the baby mamma/child support drama is inexcusable.  President Obama is pushing sensible people to encourage the youth because the cost of the judicial and corrections systems is taking money from education and taxpayers’ pockets.

 

The federal government should get T.I. to chronicle his incarnation as a continuation of his reality show because the young man has a way of speaking that Barbershop talk that is second to none.  Most of those Barbershop talks from the last 80 years ended, “now you can do it but you can’t say you were never told.”

 

Another outstanding piece on T.V. was ABC story about Appalachia—Lord, have mercy.  I got my 9-year-old niece to watch it with me and she came away with a better appreciate for her smooth life.  Black folks don’t have a monopoly on struggling; some among us haven’t had a real rough patch yet, thank heaven. 

A Hidden America: Children of the Mountains Part 1 of 6

 

O’Reilly on Appalachia

(This blog is fair and balanced…sometimes)

 

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So some Republicans are busy tossing former President George W. Bush under the bus because everything that “could have been done better” was solely his fault; he acted alone.  To me this slighting is wrong because the decent, bipartisan governor of the nation-like state of Texas got caught up with the money-power crowd inside the D.C. Beltway and policy when off track.  Bush learned that the people who give you campaign cash so appear with a policy wish list; I am relieved that Obama got his contributions from regular folks.  Right.

 

Conspiracy theorists speculate that the military-industrial complex wanted conflict in the Middle East so they could profit from supplying the Department of Defense.  President Bush listened to Vice-President Cheney too much.  What’s up with nation building when America’s infrastructure is falling apart because our brave troops seem like they work for H.U.D.’s foreign division rather than D.O.D.  Let warriors be warriors and we will be better off.  General Colin Powell always said use quick and decisive force then get out.  Secretary Colin Powell said I am out of here like last year because these guys are flirting with disaster.

 

I cannot stand around hearing Bush get the scapegoat label from his “selective amnesia” party because they pushed him toward many of those questionable decisions—with approval from Blue Dog Democrats; me included.  At the same time, the proposed solutions from the far-left were pricey and ill advised.

 

In high school in the 80s, we listened to Gill Scott Heron sing or rap about selective amnesia on the song “B-Movie.”  Heron and Muhammad Ali are considered the fathers of rap.  Okay, I am using selective amnesia to remove Rudy Ray Moore/Dolemite for his rightful status in rap’s foundation because his material offends “uppity” segments of our community but they catch Dolemite on youtube in their McMansions “on a sly note.”

 

The young people today are concerned with the 50 Cent/Rick Ross conflict; a dispute that grew out of 50’s contention that Ross was once a law enforcement officer.  Huh?  Is being a corrections officer a negative in certain areas?

 

Gill Scott Heron made you think with “B-Movie” because he launched into a classic rant/analysis of President Reagan’s election.  I will give Heron credit for pointing out that Reagan, as head of the Screen Actors Guild, stood up to McCarthyism when called before the Special Committee on Un-American Activities.  Heron wrote, “When other celluloid saviors were cringing in terror from McCarthy, Ron stool tall.”  My older brother told me that Reagan’s courage during that time meant he was presidential material despite the rest of political lyrics in the song.

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald_Reagan#SAG_president_and_television

In 1947, as SAG president, Reagan testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee regarding the influence of communists in the motion picture industry. Strongly opposed to communism, he reaffirmed his commitment to democratic principles, stating, “As a citizen, I would hesitate to see any political party outlawed on the basis of its political ideology. However, if it is proven that an organization is an agent of foreign power, or in any way not a legitimate political party—and I think the government is capable of proving that—then that is another matter… But at the same time I never as a citizen want to see our country become urged, by either fear or resentment of this group, that we ever compromise with any of our democratic principles through that fear or resentment.”

 

My friends and I saw Heron at Blues Alley in D.C. during the 90s and shaking his skeletal hand was rough—First Lady Nancy Reagan was right, “Just say no to drugs.”   First lady of my neighborhood was actress Brenda Sykes, Heron’s then wife.  Current college political junkies could learn from revisiting Reagan and Heron—always respect a worthy adversary.

How dare Heron in “Winter in America” call the U.S. Constitution a “noble piece of paper but “Angel Dust” scared many youth away from drugs.  The “Inner City Blues” line, “Money we make, even before we see it, they take it.” would make any tax reform advocate smile.

 

As I think about it, I bet the Obamas grew up on Gil Scott Heron during their Afro years also.  I can see it the first lady’s eyes because the president has moved forward from the ugliness of the campaign but F.L. Michelle (like me) is thinking unnecessary foolishness won’t be soon forgotten.  That sentiment will hit the elements in our community pulling us backwards.  Ultimately, she has the president’s ear but doesn’t have selective amnesia.  I also think she has a low tolerance for all ignorance.    

http://www.gilscottheron.com/lybmovie.html

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cN_YIPnLk1k&feature=related Winter in America

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gM_r9qDDmyc&feature=related   Inner City Blues

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0hiqWpFN0Z4    Black History

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8vkgJs3Y8E&feature=related  Angel Dust 

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Attorney General Eric Holder said yesterday that we are “nation of cowards… on race.”  First, you know some news shows would mention this statement and conveniently leave out the “on race” part—never missing an opportunity to enjoy some twisted reporting.  “Our brave troops are not cowards.”

 

Holder said, “Though this nation has proudly thought of itself as an ethnic melting pot, in things racial we have always been and I believe continue to be, in too many ways, essentially a nation of cowards.”

 

At a Little League game a few years ago, my friend called his son over and told him, “Get in where you fit in.”  We fell out laughing and the guy said he just want the kid to know school chums or not necessarily coming over for dinner. 

 

A blog post can get away from a poor writer really fast because I am almost typing a stream of thought about not coming to someone’s house for dinner not because of race but because they let the cat walk on the kitchen counters and the dog eats out of their bowls (yes, it happens in Black, White and other homes.)  How much do you love your pets?  Do you love them better than you love people you don’t know?   Who is the worst Michael: Tyson, Vick, Phelps, Jackson, Savage or Richards. 

 

While the workplace is mostly integrated, Holder points out that we are “self-segregated” on the weekends and in our private lives. Hold on Holder; Americans have a right to free association.  Black colleges, churches and organizations will always exist as long as they are voluntarily.  When I lived in D.C., we were proud that the city felt like a salad bowl rather than New York being a melting pot—the idea is that the ingredients blended together without losing their individual qualities.

 

I was in the first integrated first-grade class in my town and I wonder if anyone wanted to know if the Black kids wanted to attend school with people who looked at them in a certain way.  A properly funded “separated but equal” school might have created a smoother transition (like in post-apartheid South Africa) because we weren’t crazy about going to school with them; we just needed better resources.  Before integration, old text books from White schools were sent to Black schools but today we still have fond memories of those all Black institutions—the J.W. Holley High Wildcats. 

 

Here is an idea: what if a new Holley School was created as a charter school with vouchers and good old fashioned reading, writing and arithmetic.  In the basements of churches and in one room school houses, our parents learned more than their grandchildren get in million dollar schools but then again the motivation and mission had clarity back then; and today many kids are aimless. 

 

Like President Obama big race relations speech last year, Attorney General Holder got us think about awkwardly diverse discussions.  At the time of his speech, this moderate was in an interesting lunch conversation with some of Georgia strongest conservatives—not a coward among us.    

 

 

 

http://www.suntimes.com/news/nation/1437193,w-eric-holder-black-history-month021809.article

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(I should not go down this road…a wiser dude would press delete)

 

A few years ago Chris Rock went off about how he loves Black folks but he hates N-words.  We know the history of the word “nigger.” During college, we listen to the great Chuck D of Public Enemy say, “every brother, aint a brother because a Black hand took the life of Malcolm X, the man…the shooting of Huey P. Newton..the hands of a nigger pull the trigger.”  

 

Change in my community that starts with the election of Barrack Obama is a good time to stop using the N-word.  Obama and his Red, Black, White and Brown supporters grew up in sweeter parts of the nation than me or the southern ones are the next generation of less bitter people—that’s wonderful. 

 

Reality dilemma: what do we do about identifying and labeling actual negative elements and subcultures.  There are sub-groups inside Black, White and any group who should be identified, prayed for, but in the mean time avoided.  “This _______ just robbed his grandmother.”  This blond_____refused medical treatment from an Asian paramedic and bled to death.”  “I have had it with _______ driving in my subdivision with foul music blasting at 3a.m…. some folks had zero home training.”  “_________ never believed Obama could win because they felt ________ are not suppose to be in the White House.”

“Those rotten high school _______ are making school unbearable for good students.” 

 

Don’t get me started about the denial of righteous sisters about the existence of B-words.  No, people should not walk around calling all women out of their names but we need a word for the worst females.  “That _________ was with that woman’s husband in his wife’s bed and put her panties in the lady’s jewel box.”   “That ______ laughs about getting the money dude should be paying in child support.”  “This stupid ________ killed her sweet kids because her new boyfriend doesn’t like children.”

 

We should have compassion for those who are “limited” for whatever reason.  In doing my little part for “change,” I will refrain using the N-word and I have never been big on the B-word.  I am replacing both words with “fool.”  As children, we could not say fool in my family—which was odd because we clearly had some fools around. 

 

While we are at it, “fool” should replace “cracker” when referring to the worst White element also.  Cracker is an interesting word in Georgia because the minor league baseball team in Atlanta before the Braves was the Atlanta Crackers and the Negro League team was the Atlanta Black Crackers.  (I had better leave that alone.) 

black-crackers

 

Obama likes JFK so in 2009 “Ask not what your country can do for you…ask what you can do to deal with the fool subcultures messing up America.”

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My daddy play college football at North Carolina A&T during the one platoon, leatherhat days—let him tell it, he was on the field for every play for four years.  He taught me that in sports a guy can make head and feet moves all day but watch his waist or his belt buckle—that’s where he is going.

 

President-elect Obama plays basketball with the best of them.  I have been “watching his waist” on team-building and I think where he is not going is telling us the sections of the Democrat Team that he has quietly and inadvertently put on the bench.  For example, Obama is a member of the Congressional Black Caucus but Sanford Bishop is the only member of the CBC who was seriously considered for a cabinet position.  There is one school of thought that dictates that Obama is a CBC member at the top of the table so why should others be there. 

 

Obama clearly respects Bishop and fellow Harvard Law grad Rep. Artur Davis; but I am starting to think he wonders why other CBC members and other Democrats did not provide better congressional oversight during the Bush years.  Are CBC members mostly interested in keeping themselves in office?  Rangel, Thompson, Waters, Holmes-Norton and Clyburn are major players on the Hill but most members of the CBC could have or should have done more with policy and legislation for the years they have been in office.  How does a skinny kid with a funny name blow pass you in route to the White House in a few years?

 

Listen to my daddy and read Obama moves.  We had a pastor at my AME Church who uses to say she was tired of hearing people pray “Lord, they need you over here and they need you over there.” Pastor said God must be thinking, “Why do you think I put you down there…you fix it, then come back and tell me about it.”  Obama must be pissed with so-called leaders who fail to see these huge problems or messes coming and must be think how dare those guys think change starts with them when they help get us in the ditch in the first place.

 

Obama promised change but my friends are wondering if some oldheads will be surprised when he starts calling Dems out for being asleep at the wheel.  He can start with me: I confess that I believed Vice-President Cheney when he said that if we can get to the Iraqi oil fields before Saddam Hussein sets them on fire again, we will pump enough oil to fund the war.  Then again, I am not a baller in the game.

 

Before the primary season, old school Black leaders and many CBC members lined up behind Clinton and Edwards because those leaders had clout with those teams.  I like the way Black leaders did not automatically get with the Black guy.  But reading their waists in retrospect, they knew changing the politics, methods and policies of old would mean they were old dogs who need to learn new tricks.  The same thing applies to Republicans: conservatives who are sincerely interested in ensure that the new administration’s initiates include sound fiscal and budgetary provisions are good Americans.  Conservatives who want failure so they can get political power again should be ashamed.     

 

President-elect Obama is like Michael Jeffery Jordan standing at the top of the key explaining exactly what moves he is about to make on the way to scoring.  If you stepped into the arena with a weak game and much mouth—you better eat your Wheaties.  

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I just finished reading Toni Morrison’s book A Mercy and may I keep it real by saying Nobel Prize or not, I just don’t understand her writing.  The book focuses on slavery and indentured servitude in the Americas in the1680s. 

 

One good part of the book includes the section “You say you see slaves freer than free men.  One is a lion in the skin of an ass.  The other is an ass in the skin of a lion.  That it is the withering inside that enslaves and opens the door for what is wild.”

 

The last lines in the book are the best: “It was not a miracle.  Bestowed by God.  It was a mercy.  Offered by a human.  I stayed on my knees.  In the dust where my heart will remain each night and every day until you understand what I know and long to tell you: to be given dominion over another is a hard thing; to wrest dominion over another is a wrong thing: to give dominion of yourself to another is a wicked thing.”

 

Morrison’s writing has always been over my head and I am man enough to acknowledge my limitations.   Can you believe that some small-minded people are bracing for President-Elect Obama’s “dominion” over them; somebody did not play attention in high school government class.  Anyway, a person or system can only enslave your body; not your spirit or soul.  Obama is one good guy who will govern (not rule over) and people who have never been around good people need some new friends.

 

Strangely, I am writing about personnel management—I use to be in “personnel hell” while working with good people in an odd operation–“have mercy.”  Some former coworkers still complain that they were “done wrong for years.”  That statement is a contradiction in terms because no one can do you wrong for years if you are there voluntarily.  As Dr. Phil would say, you did yourself wrong for staying in that situation for such a long time.  Ms. Morrison said it best when she wrote that it is wicked to give someone dominion over you. 

 

Psalm 34:13-14 Keep thy tongue from evil, And thy lips from speaking guile. Depart from evil, and do good; Seek peace, and purse it.  

 

(okay, I just added the free Bible to my smart phone; but I am far from righteous…yet)  http://www.olivetree.com/resources/bibles/

 

Rough times at home or work remind me of the quote “all that does not kill you, makes you stronger.”  Being in a tough situation can be a welcomed opportunity to grow and develop—some of us grew up soft while others were strengthen by circumstances and conditions that children should not experience.

 

bushafrica 

Reading about Black and White slaves and near-slaves who arrived here in the hulls of ships made me think about Africa.  History should remember that President Bush’s policies and efforts in Africa were outstanding and I thank him for that—he actually walked the walk.  If two others were not all up in his ear with incorrect counsel, things might have been different.  (Like Ms. Morrison, I am going to be peculiarly vague about the “two others” but maybe some Rice would have been better for his Colin than a  R.C.)  

 rc

 

 

 

http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSL17797120080217?feedType=RSS&feedName=politicsNews&rpc=22&sp=true

Unpopular at home, Bush basks in African praise

 

Banners across the route, decorated with Bush’s image against a backdrop of Tanzania’s Mt. Kilimanjaro, read: “We cherish democracy. Karibu (welcome) to President and Mrs Bush.”

Others read: “Thank you for helping fight malaria and HIV.” Dancers at the airport and at Kikwete’s state house to greet Bush on Sunday, wore skirts and shirts decorated with his face.

Although many Africans, especially Muslims, share negative perceptions of Bush’s foreign policy with other parts of the world, there is widespread recognition of his successful humanitarian and health initiatives on the continent.

Bush has spent more money on aid to Africa than his predecessor, Bill Clinton, and is popular for his personal programs to fight AIDS and malaria and to help hospitals and schools.

Bush has stressed new-style partnerships with Africa based on trade and investment and not purely on aid handouts.

His Millennium Challenge Corp. rewards countries that continue to satisfy criteria for democratic governance, anti-corruption and free-market economic policies.

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talmadge-bridge

We created Project Logic Ga (P.L.Ga) during the 2008 election season as a blog for African Americans to discuss political and policy issues in an effort to foster political diversity for our community.

 

P.L.Ga evolved into a meeting place for anyone (regardless of race) to debate and interact on these matters.  In short, the topics were unique and new to people in Georgia and the South with an interest in hearing and learning what is on Black moderates’ minds. 

 

Government functions better when leaders and policymakers take the time of become familiar with the whole community—not just their “base”- because our system of government is design for all voices to be heard.  Americans are impressed with leaders who know all sides of the issues and recognize that every group has many sub-groups. 

 

Our focus has been pushing the fact that African-Americans in the South are more moderate and conservative than the nation might think.

 

P.L.Ga will spend the next year posting only one or two new post a week.  Our aim is gradually discussing federal, state and local matters so our readers will develop a deep knowledge and insight over time.  Also, the range of topics might seem unrelated to public policy at times but the goal is to address indirect and direct concerns and solutions.

 

We have a new administration in the White House; our nation is in a period of transition. An African-America President with mid-western roots will have plenty to say to every community about choices, decisions and consequences.  Contributors on this blog will analysis his actions with the same fair, constructive approach we have given previous presidents and congresses. 

 

The ultimate goal for reasonable Americans is a better America.  It is not the government’s role to fix every problem in everyone’s’ lives.  Good Americans always want the country to function soundly and those who hope for failure of any leaders so their party can make political gains are misguided. 

 

When the current President Bush was Governor of Texas, he operated with a consensus-building technique that should have been the model for his federal administration—I don’t know what happen.  Clearly, President-elect Obama is trying to “bridge the divide” and this blog will support him as we would have supported President McCain’s efforts to do the same.  Yes, some people have unrealistic anticipation and some campaign ideas won’t pan out but know this: this new young president is a respectful listener and the country wants more of that. 

 

Readers of this blog will gain a better understand of the southern African American community so future debates and dialog will be based on facts and reason rather than hastily conceived misinformation.   The core principles of conservatism are needed in every community on some level; the presentation and political techniques current employed my some could use improvement. 

 

If you want to function in the southern political arena which includes our community, reading this blog could be beneficial to your research efforts and growth—get prepared because talking nonsense makes our great region appear backwards and justifies economic opportunities going elsewhere.   “Moving the company or plant south would be sunny and affordable, but what we see on T.V. makes us question the traditional divisions there and the social livability.”

 

In the future, I will work on brevity—first New Year’s resolution. 

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This transition period is better than Fantasy Football because President-Elect Obama is sincerely committed to bridging the partisan divide.  What happens with Senator Clinton or Governor Richardson as Secretary of State makes me wonder if there will a position available in the cabinet for Richardson above his previous status?

 

Hopefully, a Georgian will be the Agriculture Secretary and the natural selection would be Congressman Sanford Bishop but what about Senator Chambliss if he comes up short in his senate runoff.  We must remember that ag policy is more regional than partisan and does Saxby want to be in the minority in the Senate.  The farmers, ranchers, producers and ag community respects him so Ag Sec might be a good fit.  

 

Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue would appoint a Republican to replace Bishop in the House if he was the pick and I can’t think of a viable African American GOPer here in southwest Georgia who could hold that seat in two years…Dylan Glenn, Deborah Honeycutt or Herman Cain moves to Columbus?  One thing is certain: the GOP needs to get some moderate congressional candidates in districts that are over 20% African American or stop wasting time, resources and energy. 

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Anyone familiar with the Black conservative efforts nationally knows Don Scoggins of Maryland.  Mr. Scoggins is about as GOP as you can get; but, I received the following today.  Hats off to Don for putting country over party by voting for Obama/Biden and I hope that a better GOP mergers from this election process.     

 

 

 

Obama Saves the GOP

 

Without question next week American voters will participate in the undisputed most historic presidential election ever.

 

Unfortunately – though it should be no surprise – because one candidate is black and the other white race not political ideology, has become the predominant theme and sorry to say the unavoidable bugaboo of this election.

 

Discounting skin color and politics, factors most people consider worthy attributes for White House aspirants are personal character, superb communication skills, intellectual prowess, mental acuity, serene of temperament, ability to lead and presidential bearing.  

 

Acknowledging these perilous times facing our country today the person elected the next president should also embody an ability to inspire people, encouraging them to do for themselves what this nation cannot and must not do for them.

 

Many folks come up to me asking who I will support this year given my over forty years of staunch GOP activism, conservative leanings and the fact of being black. Candidly I became very apathetic towards this election after my initial preferences, Fred Thompson and then Mike Huckabee failed to win the Republican Party nomination.

 

Always active during presidential elections and wanting some how to make a difference this year I began to wonder who could best lead this nation and also help restore the GOP to its once enviable reputation as a world class political party. To arrive at some kind of decision required some major thinking outside the box or better yet, building a box.  

 

Great credit should be accorded Senator John McCain and his fellow Vietnam prisoners of war three decades ago, however after considering many years of public life with an inconsistent record of racial inclusiveness and weak GOP credentials Senator John McCain at this time is not the person our country needs leading it. Voting third party or for a liberal was out of the question.

 

After much soul searching and conceding not agreeing totally with his political views I concluded Senator Barack Obama is the person most fitting to lead the U. S. and reinvigorate the GOP.

 

Just as happened during the twelve years of Reagan/Bush out of the White House the Democratic Party came back very united and wiser. One day the GOP will rebound too, more inclusive, united, and principled – steadfast adhering to its much heralded founding precepts.   

 

My decision also honors others no longer with us – black and white who gave their lives advocating for civil rights at home, preserving opportunities for those who apply themselves regardless of familial status, race, color or creed.

 

Who else this election year has so captured the nation bringing millions of new voters into the political process? No one else has.  

 

I have nothing to lose and everything to gain differing with my beloved Republican Party.

 

 

Don Scoggins, Prince William County resident, local and national Republican Party activist.

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I can’t believe the GOP is taking about the redistribution of wealth and socialism—are you kidding me?  I went to college in the early 80s after doing my best K through 12.  While I am no Condi Rice, Barrack Obama or Hemingway, I did well at country county high and was disappointed to learn that I would be paying for college with student loans.  What?

 

You know the students from families in the middle-income range—to much money for grants but not enough money to write a tuition, room and board check.  If President Reagan thought my parents had the money to fund my education, he should have required them to do so.  To add insult to injury, the guys who played and “cut the fool” for 12 years were in college also—taking remedial classes for a year and a half—wait for it—free!  Because of family income (or lack there of), these students graduated debt free and I ended up graduating with honors and a student loan—the redistribution of wealth. 

 

Don’t get me wrong, it warms the heart to see friends who grew up facing constant adversity as current homeowners, great parents and pillars of the community.  In retrospect, the route I should have taken was to declare myself an emancipated minor with a mall job and qualified for grants also.

 

Like the Obamas, my student loan was/is around into my forties and like Senator Obama, I worked as a community service person.  Check this out: if your student loan was based on lack of family income, the federal government will forgive it for doing that type work, i.e. teaching in a rough school.  But, my loan can’t be forgiven because of my family’s income decades ago.  Really?

 

Republican President Ford signed the Earned Income Tax Credit into law in 1976.  The EITC was designed to offset the burden of payroll taxes for low-income working families and to provide incentives to work.  Presidents Reagan, Bush, Clinton and Bush have expanded the program and I must say helping the working poor get above the poverty level is much better than welfare.  The program taxes one group to give money to another group—Ford, Reagan, Bush and Bush.  What’s the definition of socialism again.

 

Some people feel that the federal government should think Darwinism or the “Survival of the fittest” went making policy.  While these concepts are controversial, socialism v. Darwinism in the congress in the 90s was Cynthia McKinney v. Newt Gingrich.  Congresswoman McKinney and the well-intended liberals argued that the government should ensure a minimum quality of life for everyone while Speaker Gingrich crafted policies that worked toward giving people the opportunity to achieve if they stayed focused and worked hard.  But, if you did not make it; hey, that’s life, law of the jungle.

 

Funny thing: those guys from my community who went to college on Pell Grants are with Newt in their mindsets—and Newt is one of the only conservatives who realizes the political potential.  The money they received for college has been paid back many times over in middle class taxes.  

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You be the judge: is this email cute humor, useful information or somewhat offensive.

November 5th Etiquette

 

After watching the final debate, it dawned on me that Obama could actually win this thing.  If that happens, there will be a lot of people (some of our co-workers included) who will be afraid that an Obama presidency will usher in the end of days.  They’ll be watching us on November 5th (the day after the election) for signs of the end of times.

 

To keep the peace and keep a lot of folks from getting nervous, I think we should develop a list of acceptable celebrations and behaviors we should probably avoid- at least for the first few days.

 

  1. No crying, hugging or shouting “Thank you Lord” – at least not in public.
  2. No high-fives- at least not unless the area is clear and there are no witnesses.
  3. No laughing at the McCain/Palin supporters.
  4. No calling in sick on November 5th.  They’ll get nervous if too many of us don’t show up.
  5. We’re allowed to give each other knowing winks or nods in passing.  Just try to keep from grinning too hard.
  6. No singing loudly, “We’ve come this Far By Faith” (it will be acceptable to hum softly)
  7. No bringing of Bar-b-Que ribs or fried chicken for lunch in the company lunchroom for at least a week (no chitterlings at all) (this may make us seem to ethnic)
  8. No leaving kool-aid packages at the water fountain (this might be a sign that poor folks might be getting a break through)
  9. No Cupid Shuffle during breaks (this could indicate a little to much excitement)
  10. Please no “Moving on Up” music (we are going to try to remain humble)
  11. No doing the George Jefferson dance (unless you’re in your office with the door closed)
  12. Please try not to yell — BOOOO YAH!
  13. Just in case your’re wondering, Doing the Running Man, cabbage patch, or a backhand spring on the highway is 100% okay.

 

If I’ve missed anything feel free to add to the list.  I just want to make sure we’re all in the same page when Obama brings this thing home on November 5th.

 

Now go get your early vote on and let’s make this thing happen!!!     

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Just because you can do it, does not mean you should.  Why are the young men in my neighborhood riding around with stereo speakers in the grill of their cars and why do they play crude music at 11:49 on Sunday morning while passing my A.M.E. church in Sylvester, Georgia.  Like Eddie Murphy said about the guy who shot the Pope, “Make sure he goes to Hell.”

 

Sometimes we all do things that we will regret in the future.  Last week, the nation was buzzing about former Alabama Governor George Wallace.  We know now that Governor Wallace’s incendiary rhetoric was driven by a lust for power and fame; that his statements and actions did not reflect what was truly in his heart.  Toward the end of his life, Wallace had the support of the many Alabama African Americans—take the time to read the following Time Magazine article from 1982. 

 

George Wallace Overcomes — Printout — TIME

http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,922988,00.html

 

It is spiritually disorienting to see a black driving a car with Alabama plates and a Wallace bumper sticker. It is surreal to walk into Wallace’s state campaign headquarters, a neobellum low-rise former furniture store on the edge of Montgomery. There, amid the deep shag carpeting and the clickity-click of computer printers churning out voter lists, sits Mrs. Ollie Carter, a black Wallace worker. All day she phones around the state with a gentle, churchgoing courtesy, asking blacks for their support, reminding them to vote.

Mrs. Carter claims that 98% of the blacks she calls say they are supporting Wallace. She taught elementary school for 19 years in rural Shelby County, and remembers that none of her pupils had their own textbooks until George Wallace became Governor. Wallace people almost always mention his record in improving Alabama education (though the state still ranks among the lowest in literacy), especially those free textbooks for the children, and the system of 26 junior colleges he started around the state. And the fact is that, leaving aside the low growls of race, Wallace was generally quite a good Governor. As for all of that racial viciousness, Mrs. Carter squares her frank and open countenance, earnest and astonishing: “He has made some mistakes. But haven’t we all? You have to understand. The races are more bold and honest with each other in the South.” That is true. So is the opposite; the exchange between the races in the South has also been a drama of long silences, of the unstated.

One theory has it that Alabama blacks have always been cynically knowing about George Wallace, that they have figured all along that his segregationist behavior and rhetoric were matters of political expediency.

 

We are at a crossroads in southern politics.  I am concerned with the temperament of the next generation of the GOP.  Sarah Palin and I finished high school in 1982 (same year as the above article) and I don’t want to see this charismatic leader turned into the early George Wallace for “political expediency.” If she makes the right moves and avoids the nutty elements, she could be the positive head of the new conservative movement. 

 

There was a great article on the AJC Political Insider recently about who would be the next leader of the Republican National Committee—Georgians Newt Gingrich and Bainbridge’s Alec Poitevint were mentioned. I worked in the House when Gingrich was speaker and we Dems must respect his intellect.  Newt always wanted the best results for America; the question becomes how do we get there.  Newt is a Republican who knows those rural Black voters are conservative—Rep. Sanford Bishop’s long service proves this fact.  

 

Obama success to date is not necessarily Democrat success.  It could be a statement by the American people that bickering and bitterness is unbecoming.  In the AJC article, State GOP Georgia chairwoman Sue Everhart emerges as a sensible leader for the future of her party.  Does she know that African Americans could sway several Georgia congressional races and the senatorial race next month?  (Obama keeps saying “and some Republicans”.)

 

Newt knows and Everhart is learning that the African American community in the South is moderate and the opportunity for cooperation with conservative is there; but the far right sounds like the George Wallace of old rather than the last George Wallace.   Colin Powell always said that the party that gets the “sensible center” runs America.  We will learn next year if the far right or the far left repels the center into the other major party.  

 

 

In the coming race for chairmanship of the RNC, the name of Newt Gingrich comes to mind | Political Insider

“But on the other side of the GOP gulf are those who worry who worry that the GOP has limited itself by catering too forcefully to the Christian right and other interests. This is the “narrowing” that former secretary of state Colin Powell spoke of on Sunday, just before endorsing Obama.

Everhart counts herself among those who want to broaden the GOP reach, not purify it. “[Gov.] Sonny Perdue wasn’t elected by Republicans. He was elected by Democrats and independents, too,” she said.”

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Voter Verification

I received an email today from a prominent McCain supporter regarding the recent Georgia citizenship verification lawsuit.  Is that voter id?

 

I personally don’t understand how any adult functions without government id.  It would have been “to much like right” to simple require ids to vote and offer free ids to non-drivers.  Bill Shipp op-ed this morning goes into details about the possibility of election problems this year.  May I say that I am one African American who thinks the Voting Rights Act provisions on congressional districts are dated—yes, I agree with Lynn Westmoreland.  The districts are to divided.

 

Let’s open a thread for discussion.

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Have you seen the bumper sticker “Mess with me, mess with the whole trailer park”?   Well, mess with Gwen Ifill and you mess with me because she is clearly a good person.  When Don Imus called her the cleaning lady covering the White House, she personified grace and dignity with her handling of the matter.  Now, extremists eager to find any angle to influence the presidential election content that Ifill will moderate the Vice-President candidates debate in a way that will help her promote a book she is writing about Blacks in politics.

 

Enough.  Stop the madness. Kenny Rogers’s song “the Gambler” had a line that said, “Son, I have made a life out of reading people’s face; Knowing what their cards are by the way they hold their eyes and if you don’t mind me saying, I can see you’re out of aces.”

 

Country people can read eyes and faces, and I see that Gwen Ifill (like Arthur Ashe and Colin Powell) is salt of the earth.  Because her late father was an AME Church Minister, this meek woman should read the Beatitudes today because she will inherit the earth—not trampled underfoot by men.  Okay, I listened in AME Sunday School a little as a kid because the teacher was pretty. President Reagan spoke of America as a shining city upon a hill whose beacon light guides freedom-loving people everywhere—also from Matthew.  The world is watching as the swift-boating begins from both sides.

 

As we enter into the final stage of this election year, I read in the faces of Obama and McCain that they find the party bickering and bitterness distasteful.  One man will be president and the other one will buck his party by being a positive senator.  Like most African Americans, I am a Democrat but I support the sensible division of the Republican Party. 

 

I told a local Republican that voted for him and he smiled while saying, “I am unopposed.”  Let’s support GOP candidates when possible or when they are simply better, because improving both major parties reduces extremism on both ends of the political spectrum.    

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