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Sunday
Dec042011

Are These Men Really Raping Women Wholesale?

Previously I wrote that we should stop coddling Pookie, Ray Ray and Africa.  I was told that mainstream media will not show you the truth and beauty of Africa.  That mainstream media will continue to show us the negative things of Africa in order that we think negatively about Africa.  In 1986 Dr. Ali Mazrui produced a series on Africa entitled The Africans: A Triple Heritage (based on his book of the same name) that opened my eyes to Africa as I had never seen before.  I grew up in the era of Tarzan and the Naked Preyso you may understand the images were we fed concerning Africa and Africans.   My mother often would remind me that we had cities here in the U.S.,  Africa had major cities in their countries just the same.  Dr. Mazrui's documentary confirmed what I had been taught and what I believed.  Since my imbibing of The Africans: A Triple Heritage, I have learned to glean information I received about Africa with a very discerning eye.  Understanding that corporate news and television is a big business and has a mission to create a profit for their sponsors, I knew and still know their message is tainted.  Rarely do I accept corporate mainstream media as a trust worthy source of information.

 

As such, I take the following video with a bit of curiosity as to it's full truthfulness.  Yet, at the same time I realize there is a possibility that there very well may be some truth to what is being spoken about in the video.  I wondered if these men really participate in the rapine they describe.  Or, I wonder, if they have been asked to portray these characters to feed the world mis-information about Africa.  Are they really in the DRC?  How would we know if they weren't?  But, maybe these men are describing truthful events they have actually been involved in or actually seen with their own eyes.  Assuredly, the fight for conflict minerals to power this here PC that I bang out these letters upon, are a great source of the violence in the DRC.  And, actual facts tell us rape as a weapon in the DRC is occurring.  If these men are telling the interviewer the truth, and they did do these horrific things, why should any one that considers themselves awake and aware coddle them?  They are not children they know what we know about right and wrong.  Why then should I feel sorry for them and their actions?  Why should I feel white European (U.S.) culture influenced them to do this? 

I have reached a state of mind about black people, and who I would call brother or sister.  There are black men here in the U.S. that savagely raped and sexually assaulted women.  There are black people that have robbed and defrauded other black people in America.  These people are not my brothers and sisters.  I share no world with them.  I have no mind or spirit about me that would allow me to stoop to the lower nature, the animal level of humanness.  These people are not related to me.  This is the feeling I maintain about other people, melanin rich people, that live and act on such a level, including the supposed Africans in the video.

 

 

Saturday
Dec032011

God-Hop!

Saturday
Dec032011

An Explaination of Fiat Currency, Fractional Banking, Inflation And The Death Throws Of The U.S. Federal Reserve Note.

Georgia analyst announced via the mainstream media that we can likely expect to continue on this economic pace for the next eight years.  Todays sufferation will be tomorrows norm.  Voting for Ron Paul is not the solution, he alone cannot and is really not willing to face the "elite" that run the U.S. and the world.  Ron Paul, is likely an agent of them as most candidates for president are, including those the take the positon of POTUS.

 

Wednesday
Nov302011

Message in the Music

Sunday
Nov132011

Colored People

 

One day I woke up and found that things were much different than I had believed them to be.  I didn't wake up as if startled coming out of a deep dream state, it was a gradual awakening to how things may really be.  So,  for many years I  believed certain things to be actual fact when they may not be. Or at least not facts as I understood them to be.  I much believed that one day all of the inequities put uopn black people would be redeemed.  Even if that day were resurrection day when Jesus sat on the right hand of his father in judgement of our eternal souls.  Yeah, I believed we black people would acheive freedom and liberty one day.  Much like many in ancient Israel looked for a messiah to come and release them from the tyranny of Rome, we black people would hope for a messiah or Thee Messiah to free us from the tyranny of racism, bigotry and prejudice. 

 

My household was built on the foundation of the Mid-South and deep south. So, there was always an air of rebellion, stemming from my mother due to her experiences growing up in Memphis, TN, working with the NAACP.   As such we children were taught certain phrases were meant to be derogatory towards we black people when used by whites.  Like, eeney meemey miney mo, catch a tiger by his toe.  My mother looked at me very sternly when she heard me chanting what I thought was a childhood song and game.  Not so for her, because when she was growing up it was eeney meeney miney mo, catch a nigger by the toe.  I learned quickly.  I also leanred the term 
"colored people" was one of those that my mother detested when someone white would say it and she would literally bristle and say "colored people"  under her breath and tell us that we are black people not colored people. We're black and we're proud.  Of course this stuck with me and I in turn accepted I should be equally irritated by the use of "colored people" when whites were referring to us.  But, just maybe, we are colored people.

After the Civil War the question arose concerning the recently emancipated Negros and their citizenship in the U.S.  By legal definition a slave is a stateless person.  As such, the nation had to deal with a large population of of recently emancipated Negros and how they could be counted as citizens.  During their enslavment they couldn't have been counted as Ctizens of the state in which they were held captive due  to their status as Negros.  Even if they were born in that state they could not be Citizens of it.  There needed to be a remedy for the statelessness of the Negro population.   By 1868 the solution was the passing of the 14th amendment which granted the now emancipated Negros citizenship under the federal government.  Giving them full rights as citizens of the Unites States, because the federal government could not  grant them Citizenship of the states they were born or resided.  This created colorable citizenship or citizens under the color of law.

 

If a person dressed in a police officer's uniform, presents themselves as a police officer, but are not, they are acting under the color of law.  They are not acting lawfully.  The color of law is not the law, but, however can be acted upon as if it were.  For instance the Supreme Court of the United States has made it legal for a police officer, in the course of an investigaton, to lie to you.  Lying then is a legal practice, used under the color of law.   It's used in a legal format, but is not the law, this is a colorable usage.   The 14th amendment made legal citizens of the former slaves by making them citizens of the United States, because they could not make them Citizens of their respecitves states.  True Citizens are Citizens of their States, each State united make up the Unites States.  A union of States.  The 14th amendment made citizens of the Negro to a fictional entity since it is through a state that one is a Citizen. Negros, black people, and African Americans that are descendants of slaves (all of us are not descendants of slaves) are citizens under the color of law, colorable citizenship.  Colored people.