The “Battle” begins!!!!

August 7, 2009
Let the "Battle" begin...

Let the "Battle" begin...

The NFL is almost here.  An old friend of mine (we played together and yes he was ALOT better than me) is in the midst of a “Battle” for his spot on the depth chart…maybe even his spot on the roster.  Nez…they always seem to count you out…let ‘em have it this year!  Good luck.

-Go Niners…Go Saints…lets get the the season going.  Football is by far the best sport out there.  Oh how I have missed it!

A few predictions:

-Dallas–Cowboys will win 8-9 games…no playoff win this year although the defense will be dominant.  Sorry Wade…this is your last year.  Still not America’s team.

-San Fran–49ers will win at least 8 games.  They can compete for a division title considering the overall lack of strength in the NFC West.  If the offense gets it together…they will be a formidable opponent.

-New Orleans–Saints can go far if the defense can come alive.  Last year they were first in SCORING and TOTAL OFFENSE.  I am sure the defense was in the bottom third.  I remember sitting in the stands for many a Saints game and almost having a heart attack because of the defense…can we bring back Pat Swilling and Rickey Jackson?  Wild Card birth 8-10 wins.

-Terrell Owens–will have a quiet year in Buffalo off the field.  On the field he will be amazing and will score at least 9 touchdowns and have 1000 yards if healthy.

-I will dominate in my fantasy football league; although it is my first year playing.

Hall of Fame Ceremony/Game this weekend.  Congrats to Rod Woodson, Bruce Smith, Bob Hayes, Derrick Thomas, Randall McDaniel, and Ralph Wilson!


Where my Banana-Eating Jungle Monkeys at?

July 31, 2009
Banana-Eating Jungle Monkey...

Banana-Eating Jungle Monkey...

So the “Beer Summitt” is now over.  I am going to move on and let that die as has Officer Crowley and Dr. Gates have said they can agree to disagree on some things but both seem positive and ready to move forward.  I applaud the President for putting both parties in front of each other to discuss this situation and not let it linger.  Of course all the media outlets are covering the story releasing photos and other words about it so it will be in our ears for another few weeks.  But hey gotta love the media…

As I was watching CNN’s Larry King Live last night an interesting interview took place which left me speechless.  Larry King brought an Officer Justin Barrett on the show for a public apology.  Barrett in his own words is a former English teacher, writer, current Boston Police Officer, and military veteran.  Hey sounds like an upstanding citizen and someone we can look up to and be proud of…and then the interview starts.

(To do it justice I have to link the video)

As I listened to this I was floored.  I was angry, disappointed, and a rush of other emotions.  This is after some have said there is no racism in America.  This officer is sorry…sorry he was caught expressing some serious inner issues.  He even mentions that he has never used these words before, but prior to that there is a slight pause from him.  Are we really supposed to believe this?  If you have the “balls” to send this email to people you do not know (including fellow officers, members of the national guard and the Boston Globe); then what do you say behind closed doors?!?!

He never apologizes to Dr. Gates at all…he apologizes to his colleagues only.  Also to note his colleagues are the ones who turned him in because obviously they were insulted by his “poor choice of words”.  He mentions his family and how he has never had any work  related discipline.  In his apology, he says that he “treats everyone with dignity and respect”.  Next time I am looking to respect someone, I will make sure to call them a Banana-Eating Jungle Monkey.

Officer Barrett, I understand you messed up and now you have to suffer the consequences…the Boston Mayor has deemed you a cancer and said you will be fired.  I forgive you, but hope one day you will truly understand the depth of your words and how a person of your position should never have these thoughts.  When are people going to stand up and admit their true feeling and not mask or hide those inner ghosts.   Things like his email (see below) are what contribute to the problems in society.  Sigh…we still have a long way to go…

The email that was sent to Yvonne Abraham, a writer for the Boston Globe.  He was reponding to this article. See his response below.

barrett email


Race & Criminal Justice

July 22, 2009
A new advocate for civil rights?

A new advocate for civil rights?

Hmmmm…Does Racial Profiling still exist in Amercia?  One of the foremost thinkers and scholars in regards to race in culture in the United States  sure does think so.  A recent run-in with the Cambridge Police can help to mold these thought processes.

If you haven’t heard of Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. you will as some of these things continue to unfold.  My appreciation for him stems from one of my true loves, the study of history.  Dr. Gates is the director of Harvard University’s W.E.B. DuBois Institute for African and African American Research.  This in short means that he is very smart, articulate, and has access to unlimited resources when it comes to research and race.  As informaiton unfolded it was interesting to hear some of the facts.  Not only was he arrested in his own home after showing identification but it was in broad daylight.  I think most people can see the reason for anger from Gates in this situation.  Gates speaks about the entire ordeal his site www.theroot.com.

Now it is interesting that he mentions “I haven’t even come close to being arrested. I would have said it was impossible.” Maybe this will be a wake up call for the African American elite; and hopefully a call to action for many who may not have been compelled prior to this incident.

The questions I pose to all…How would you feel if the police showed up at your home and arrested you?  Was this all about race or is there more to it?


Amen…Mr. President!

July 17, 2009
My President is Black

My President is Black

I am surfing the net and run across some words from Barack Obama’s address to the NAACP for their 100th anniversary.  He has said it in only the way he can.  I applaud him for saying this and ask that everyone to echo the same sentiment to our youth.  WE HAVE TO DO BETTER FOR OUR YOUTH.

This is from allhiphop.com
By Ismael AbduSalaam

President Barack Obama made an impassioned speech to the NAACP on the topics of education and personal responsibility.

The speech marked another milestone in the young presidency of Barack Obama whose address commemorated the NAACP’s 100th anniversary convention.

President Obama acknowledged that those born in the inner-city face stronger adversity in the realms of economics and violent crimes.

Still, he argued these elements were no excuses for students or parents to neglect their responsibilities.

“Yes, if you’re African American, the odds of growing up amid crime and gangs are higher. Yes, if you live in a poor neighborhood, you will face challenges that someone in a wealthy suburb does not,’ President Obama stated. “But that’s not a reason to get bad grades, that’s not a reason to cut class, that’s not a reason to give up on your education and drop out of school. No one has written your destiny for you. Your destiny is in your hands – and don’t you forget that. To parents, we can’t tell our kids to do well in school and fail to support them when they get home. For our kids to excel, we must accept our own responsibilities. That means putting away the Xbox and putting our kids to bed at a reasonable hour. It means attending those parent-teacher conferences, reading to our kids, and helping them with their homework.”

With the undeniable huge influence of Hip-Hop and sports on African-American youth culture, Obama noted that education should be utilized by parents to show children their potential extends beyond entertainment.

“They might think they’ve got a pretty good jump shot or a pretty good flow, but our kids can’t all aspire to be the next LeBron or Lil Wayne I want them aspiring to be scientists and engineers, doctors and teachers, not just ballers and rappers,” The President detailed. “I want them aspiring to be a Supreme Court Justice. I want them aspiring to be President of the United States. So, yes, government must be a force for opportunity. Yes, government must be a force for equality. But ultimately, if we are to be true to our past, then we also have to seize our own destiny, each and every day.”

The NAACP was founded in 1909 by the nation’s most influential African-Americans, including scholar W.E.B. DuBois, activist Ida B. Wells, and attorney Archibald Grimke.


A Pioneer in his own right…

July 9, 2009
Just like the title of one of your albums you were "Off The Wall".

Just like the title of one of your albums you were "Off The Wall".

So I am thinking about all the hoopla surrounding Michael Jackson and felt compelled to write.  I have a problem with the majority of this that have happened and will say what most will not. We (Black America) are getting a little carried away.  MJ was the greatest entertainer to ever live…HANDS DOWN.

I know he was the first African American artist on MTV in 1983.

I know that Thriller is the best selling album of all time.

I know that he with the Jacksons are one of the most influential musical families ever.

I know that Thriller won 8 (EIGHT) Grammys!

If it’s Michael for the most part I KNOW it…why because I am a fan of his music.  I grew up on Michael.  I remember performing the dances moves on Thriller; listening to my Dad’s Bad CD (one of our first CDs in the house), moon walking in shoes on the tile floor, wanting the him to be innocent in the trial.

But some things that I just don’t understand:

  1. During the memorial Al Sharpton mentioned that he has helped but Barack Obama in the White House…My question would be was that by political contribution?  Was Michael even living in the United States?  Did he actually vote?
  2. Today after plugging in my iPod to listen to Maxwell’s latest I click on iTunes.  I noticed that 3 MJ songs are in the top 10 singles (Man in the Mirror, Will You Be There, and Billie Jean) and 3 MJ albums are in the top 10 (Essential Collection, Number Ones, and Thriller).  Why after someone is gone that we start to appreciate them?  I have most every album since Off the Wall and the Jackson 5 Greatest Hits and have had them for years.  It shouldn’t take for someone to leave us for me to appreciate him.
  3. Some are putting him in the same breath as Jesus Christ…just look at some comments across the internet, television media, or some of your friends.  Somewhere I read he is the King of Kings…after that I almost fell out of my chair.  There is only one King…let us all remember that.  I personally can’t remember any public instances of Michael mentioning his faith (aside from the random and very common award speech).  Did he attend a church, tithe, watch a service on television?  Brooke Shields mentioned him sitting on the tip of a crescent moon…I don’t think she made a heaven reference at all.
  4. When Mike was on trial I don’t remember much public support of Michael.  I hoped it wasn’t true but the Martin Brashir interview didn’t help his cause when MJ mentioned the most loving thing to do is “Share your bed”.  Even when Michael came out and described having to take all of the photos for the investigation there was still no public outcry.
  5. What happens to the debt?  I don’t understand how you, Michael Jackson have 400 MILLION in debt?!?!?
  6. Vitiligo and the denials of plastic surgery…

I could go on and on.  The intriuge, the mystic, the magic is all there.  My only comment now is let the man rest…wherever he may be.  Michael RIP.


Black Presidents before Obama?!?!?!

June 25, 2009
Barack vs. Bill for FBP title!

Barack vs. Bill for FBP title!

Occasionally my love for  History takes over and I think of things that I either read about or have heard about that have caused me to question or do some “research” on my own.  This is all prompted recent actions by the wonderful republican governor of South Carlina Mark Sanford, which had me thinking of how everyone called Bill Clinton the “first Black President”.

I remember reading a little into the several other Presidents who had some “ethnic” in thier tank.  I then proceeded to find more information and came across a great article on DiversityInc’s website.

DiversityInc’s editioral staff states, “Presidents Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Warren Harding, and Calvin Coolidge all had Black ancestors they kept in their genealogical closets, according to historians.  Does African ancestry make these men Black? If the bar is the one-drop rule, then yes. The one-drop rule is a historical term used during the Jim Crow era that defines a person with one drop of sub-Saharan-African ancestry as not white and therefore must be Black. If that’s the bar, then there have already been other Black presidents, says historian Leroy Vaughn, author of Black People and Their Place in World History. Dr. Vaughn speaks to this throughout his book…check out this insert I found on Barack Obama’s community blog pages:

The Five Black Presidents of The United States Of America

“Joel A. Rogers and Dr. Auset Bakhufu have both written books documenting that at least five former presidents of the United States had Black people among their ancestors. If one considers the fact that European men far outnumbered European women during the founding of this country, and that the rape and impregnation of an African female slave was not considered a crime, it is even more surprising that these two authors could not document Black ancestors among an ever larger number of former presidents. The president’s names include Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Warren Harding, and Calvin Coolidge.

The best case for Black ancestry is against Warren G. Harding, our 29th president from 1921 until 1923. Harding himself never denied his ancestry. When Republican leaders called on Harding to deny the “Negro” history, he said, “How should I know whether or not one of my ancestors might have jumped the fence.” William Chancellor, a White professor of economics and politics at Wooster College in Ohio, wrote a book on the Harding family genealogy and identified Black ancestors among both parents of President Harding. Justice Department agents allegedly bought and destroyed all copies of this book. Chancellor also said that Harding’s only academic credentials included education at Iberia College, which was founded in order to educate fugitive slaves.

Andrew Jackson was our 7th president from 1829 to 1837. The Virginia Magazine of History Volume 29 says that Jackson was the son of a White woman from Ireland who had intermarried with a Negro. The magazine also said that his eldest brother had been sold as a slave in Carolina. Joel Rogers says that Andrew Jackson Sr. died long before President Andrew Jackson Jr. was born. He says the president’s mother then went to live on the Crawford farm where there were Negro slaves and that one of these men was Andrew Jr’s father. Another account of the “brother sold into slavery” story can be found in David Coyle’s book entitled “Ordeal of the Presidency” (1960).

Thomas Jefferson was our 3rd president from 1801 to 1809. The chief attack on Jefferson was in a book written by Thomas Hazard in 1867 called “The Johnny Cake Papers.” Hazard interviewed Paris Gardiner, who said he was present during the 1796 presidential campaign, when one speaker states that Thomas Jefferson was “a mean-spirited son of a half-breed Indian squaw and a Virginia mulatto father.” In his book entitled “The Slave Children of Thomas Jefferson,” Samuel Sloan wrote that Jefferson destroyed all of the papers, portraits, and personal effects of his mother, Jane Randolph Jefferson, when she died on March 31, 1776. He even wrote letters to every person who had ever received a letter from his mother, asking them to return that letter. Sloan says, “There is something strange and even psychopathic about the lengths to which Thomas Jefferson went to destroy all remembrances of his mother, while saving over 18,000 copies of his own letters and other documents for posterity.” One must ask, “What is it he was trying to hide?”

Abraham Lincoln was our 16th president from 1861 to 1865. J. A. Rogers quotes Lincoln’s mother, Nancy Hanks, as saying that Abraham Lincoln was the illegitimate son of an African man. William Herndon, Lincoln’s law partner, said that Lincoln had very dark skin and coarse hair and that his mother was from an Ethiopian tribe. In Herndon’s book entitled “The Hidden Lincoln” he says that Thomas Lincoln could not have been Abraham Lincoln’s father because he was sterile from childhood mumps and was later castrated. Lincoln’s presidential opponents made cartoon drawings depicting him as a Negro and nicknamed him “Abraham Africanus the First.”

Calvin Coolidge was our 30th president, and he succeeded Warren Harding. He proudly admitted that his mother was dark because of mixed Indian ancestry. However, Dr. Bakhufu says that by 1800 the New England Indian was hardly any longer pure Indian, because they had mixed so often with Blacks. Calvin Coolidge’s mother’s maiden name was “Moor.” In Europe the name “Moor” was given to all Black people just as the name Negro was used in America.

All of the presidents mentioned were able to pass for White and never acknowledged their Black ancestry. Millions of other children who were descendants of former slaves have also been able to pass for White. American society has had so much interracial mixing that books such as “The Bell Curve”, discussing IQ evaluations based solely on race, are totally unrealistic.


Barack Obama vs. Martin Luther King, Jr.

December 5, 2008

Does Barack replace Martin?

Does Barack replace Martin?

Does Barack replace Martin?  That is the question I pose to all.

Seriously lets think about it… recent generations of African Americans have had someone to point to as the savior of their generation…

Frederick Douglass was a prominent voice for the population in the 1800′s,,, after he faded there were a few leaders to mention as leaders in the early to late  20th century (a few would include Booker T. Washington, WEB Dubois, and Malcolm X).  Of course there were more in the 20th century with the rise of Civil Rights movement but those are bigger names that I mentioned.  I think most would agree that none of these names have ascended to the level  that Martin Luther King, Jr. has.  He is the mantle of the African American community.  Think about it, he has his own government holiday, postage stamps, memorials, Community Centers, streets (the bad one in your city) and whatever else you can think of.  You may not know much about Martin the man, but you have seen his name and you know that he had a dream to accomplish something large.

Barack Obama has done something most Americans (note I did not say African Americans) did not think was possible.  He won the Presidential election (and lets be honest he kicked a**).  Does he replace the most  prominent figure in the African American community; that being Martin Luther King, Jr.?  Just imagine that 2 or so weeks in grade school spent on Black History; for the upcoming group of adolescents.  They may never see or learn much about Martin Luther King, Jr.  In the 80s-90s when I was in grade school; I don’t remember seeing much about other leaders in the African American community.  It was Martin and Malcolm and you had to take the initiative to read and learn about other leaders and their sacrifices.

As a race we are quick to forget our past and we look to the future.  I am excited on the election of Barack Obama (and I am praying for his family and their safety) as President of the United States.  In my humble opinion he was the most qualified of the candidates and deserved this opportunity at the White House.  I have typed this to ask…Does Barack replace Martin?

Comments and emails are welcome…watch for a later entry about my thoughts on Barack Obama and how he relates to the current state of Black America.  Be blessed.


Fraternity Reflection and Renewal

December 5, 2008

The following is from Brother Roderick L. Smothers, a candidate for Southwestern Regional Vice President.  The email was sent in light of our fraternity anniversary, and he asked to share with others.  For more info about Bro. Smothers, please click here.

December 4th, 1906...

December 4th, 1906...

Over the past 102 years, many have marveled while others have stood in total amazement at the intellectual fortitude and ingenuity that formed the foundation for the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc.  Today, we study the past of our illustrious organization, to apply to our present, to form our future, and to shape our destiny.

It was on a cold winter night at an upstate New York Ivy League university when several, not seven, brave 18-30 year old young men made the official motion and vote to turn their social study/literary society into the first collegiate fraternity founded for scholarly gentlemen of color.  Little did these gentlemen know, that a single motion, laced with the optimism of some and the uncertainty of others would manifest into a brotherhood that would transform America and indeed the world through leadership, scholarship and service.

Founder’s Day celebrates the great evolution of the motion made over 102 years ago by young men who were largely unacquainted with fraternal structure but cognizant of the need to fill a void.  Tuesday, December 4, 1906, holds much significance for any Alpha Man because it causes us to reflect (1) on the internal and external struggles associated with starting such a great organization,  (2) on the young men who were well ahead of their time,  (3) on the service and educational arm of the Fraternity, and (4) on the vision and mission of our great fraternity and how we honor it today.

Many of us find ourselves at a crossroads – reflecting on the catharsis of the struggle of one side ready for greatness and one side content with the status quo. Let us use the founding of our Fraternity as a source of “self-examination” and “revival” as we look at the lives and contributions of Jewels Callis, Chapman, Jones, Kelley, Murray, Ogle, and Tandy.  Are we living the values that our founders espoused?  What can we do to further the vision of our founders?

Allow this founders day to serve as the impetus for unlocking the power of our history and spirit of those implicit within it to overcome our challenges of today.  Take time to revisit the Fraternity’s history book written by Bro. Charles Wesley;  read books, such as The Talented Tenth written by our President-elect, Herman “Skip” Mason, The Divine Nine, by Brother Lawrence C. Ross, Jr., Black Greek 101 by Brother Walter Kimbrough and Jewels by Brother Darrius Jerome Gourdine.  These readings and even online Historical Moments give us our framework and purpose to go on, but more importantly, the power to change our future and shape our destiny.  Happy 102nd Brothers!


Process

January 26, 2008

 -Courtesy of Bryant Robertson, UT Arlington graduate

(Open Your Mind for This One, read it slowly and understand it.)

Process, noun: a natural phenomenon marked by gradual changes that lead toward a particular (Merriam-Webster Dictionary)

This word is a key element to live life expectantly and to understand purpose thoroughly. When we understand this word we gain higher insight (wisdom), inconvenience without complaint (patience), and character.

There are processes in life that when we come to understand, we
acquire this higher insight, this wisdom, that only seems apparent in more seasoned human beings and almost obsolete in our generation. Though some in our generation understand process, the majority of us do not open their mind to the understanding that it assuredly provides. When process is thought about, the first thing that may come to mind is steps. One step must be completed before another step is taken. When one step is rushed, the ultimate result may end up in tripping and falling. Remember our definition of process (natural phenomenon, gradual changes, particular result). Another consequence to skipping or rushing steps may be taking steps backwards because of failure to complete or fully understand a previous step. When a step is comprehended, especially when completed under ones own adeptness, YOU FEEL GOOD!!! You feel accomplished, you feel knowledgeable, and you can teach (I wish I could go in depth about that). When a series of steps is completed (a process) and the “particular result” is evident, the ability to look over the steps and analyze what appears effective and ineffective, proficient and non proficient, beneficial and not beneficial, is WISDOM. You actually KNOW (v: to perceive directly; grasp in the mind with clarity or certainty).

Everything in life becomes a series of steps that lead to a particular result, a process: School (diploma), work (promotion), team (championship), leadership (vision), mind (understanding), character (patience), relationships (LOVE{main step skipper}), christianity (god-like).

1.
Understanding that movement, motion, action, physically or mentally, though they mean the same thing, is the only solution to move up the steps, to start, engage, and end the process. This, first off, is what some fail to do. Take Action, move!
2.
Hardship will come during process, but hardship is what builds character. When you endure you grow physically and mentally. Gradual change builds character because it allows you to understand. If the definition of process read quick change then understanding and knowledge will be destroyed. Have you ever rushed through something? Think about the true end result!
3.
When process is complete and looked upon, when each steps meaning is understood and valued into learning, then wisdom is obtain. Wisdom is defined as the ability to discern or judge what is true, right, or lasting; insight. Commen Sense!

When we say, “That is a wise person” we are saying that they have been through processes and know its properties. They know that process are natural phenomenoms that bring hardship that builds character, gradual change that builds patience and understanding, and discernment of the particular result that gains wisdom.

(Bryant; thanks for the thoughtful words.)


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