The reverberations of these racial drum beats have sent seismic shifts through the American soil resulting in the King of Love turning over in his grave so much he has rolled right off of the American soil. The composer of the King of Love’s birthday song, Stevie Wonder, announced he too was feeling these same racial seismic shifts and concluded it was time for him to “roll out” and head for Ghana in Africa.
ARMY CHAPLAIN DR. JAMES DARREN KEY SHARES A MESSAGE OF HOPE, FAITH AND MORE
Author and U.S. Army chaplain James Darren Key highlights 40 lessons and stories about race, love, honor, and faith to inspire people during changing times in his new memoir A Long Way from Crenshaw: Lessons and Stories about Race, Love, Honor, and Faith for These Changing Times (published by WestBow Press).
With the purpose of being accessible to all, the author writes in a conversational style. Exploring how life can change, and not always positively, he demonstrates how the human spirit can overcome those circumstances.
Additionally, Key speaks candidly about growing up Black in California in the 1970s and 1980s. Wanting to empower others, the author examines his own weaknesses and fears.
Through this study, he hopes to help people:
• recognize failures and successes along their journey;
• approach race and diversity with sensitivity and courage;
• heal from an unhealthy relationship before starting a new one;
• face trials and controversy with unshakable faith.
You can order "A Long Way from Crenshaw" at Amazon and Barnes & Noble
Learn More About Dr. Key Click Here
Leaders of the March On Washington in front of the statue of Abraham Lincoln: (sitting L-R) Whitney Young, Cleveland Robinson, A. Philip Randolph, Martin Luther King Jr., and Roy Wilkins; (standing L-R) Mathew Ahmann, Joachim Prinz, John Lewis, Eugene Carson Blake, Floyd McKissick, and Walter Reuther Photo courtesy Wikipedia |
The Court ruled voting laws formulated by certain states and localities with a history of discrimination no longer needed to be cleared by the federal government before they went into effect. According to TheHill.com, since January 2021, 48 states have introduced 389 bills to mount their voter suppression tactics.
It should come as no surprise that both For The People Act and the John Lewis Act hang in the balance as part of our democratic process. Both Acts seek to restore our full voting rights without restrictive measures that suppress our voting power. When Lani Guinier, the first black woman to become a tenured professor at Harvard Law School (certainly not the first qualified), advocated for updating our democracy not many echoed her sentiments, especially in the Civil Rights circles. One update that Guinier espoused was ranked-choice voting which allows voters to rank candidates by preference. Another updating measure was cumulative voting which allows each voter as many votes as there are candidates. A misstep? American democracy says it is fair; her incestuous kin capitalists say it’s ok to be greedy! Can you be fair in greed?
The Democratic Party in their quest to gain the edge in Congress rationalized that using the Defund The Police measure might ostracize the very group of red-state voters whose racial intolerance gave birth to the Black Lives Matter Movement. If it walked like a duck, quacked like a duck, they were told not to call it a duck! Huh? A misstep? The result is we continue to wobble in our daily lives.
According to the Washington Post, the filibuster has been used to deny Black rights for 100 years. Today, the Democratic Party will not strike down this procedural rule in order to win passage of the John Lewis Act and the For the People Act. Now we are caught between the fox or the wolf, as Malcolm X so eloquently exclaimed years ago. We were Lincoln Republicans following the Civil War and later became Democrats when we were offered a New Deal. An independent party wouldn’t seem so out of step for our progress? A misstep? Leveraging our voting block would yield us a greater return on our investment.
On the heels of George Floyd, Trayvon Martin, Breonna Taylor, Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Tamir Rice, Atatiana Jefferson, Charleena Lyles, Deborah Danner, and a host of others, Senator Tim Scott hailing from South Carolina, and Vice President Kamala Harris when asked whether America was racist both said a resounding NO! A Paul Lawrence Dunbar translation: “Ifa der is, I ain't seent nun.”
The Bill Alfred Project, a DC-based spoken word and vocal group penned this song commemorating the Million Man March, “Reflections: The Day of the Butterfly.” The lyrics went something like this: “ …time to re-strategize, to reorganize, to re-energize... eyes still on the prize.” Now that WOULD be a right step in the right direction.
Bayer Mack, a nationally-published Black American entertainment journalist, record executive and award-winning documentary filmmaker has his epic two-part independent documentary BLACK SEEDS: THE HISTORY OF AFRICANS IN AMERICA featured on Amazon.com Prime.
The powerful 70-minute film that is available now as Book I of the documentary uses dramatic historical reenactments, rare period illustrations, and an original music score to explain the socioeconomic reasons behind the transatlantic slave trade.
It reveals how the institution of chattel slavery took root in the United States and the bloody resistance Blacks waged every step of the way. It is a tale 400 years in the making.
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