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  • Politics Is Like Hiring A Hitman
    by Scott Woods inPolitical on2020-08-13

    For me, politics is like hiring a hitman. I have values and things I care about. I care enough about them to at least bother voting for 5 minutes every year for one issue or another. And because I care at least that much, I vote for people who align with the ability to realize the things I care about.

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  • Punching Above Our Weight
    by Roger Madison Jr. inPolitical on2020-07-24

    I believe our vote is the punctuation of our voice. Without that resounding exclamation mark, I believe our voices are just incoherent noise.

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  • BLACK PROGRESS AMIDST SOCIAL CHAOS
    by Roger Madison Jr. inPolitical on2020-06-16

    Recent events have raised the profile of historical injustice and inequities here in the USA. The entire world has taken note of the fact that BLACK LIVES MATTER.   We invite all of our friends to engage in actions that result in the greatest movement for change in our history. It is imperative that we take advantage of this opportunity to affect a positive change by ACTING IN OUR SELF-INTERESTS.

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  • Living in a Black No-Man's Land
    by Roger Madison Jr. inOur Community on2019-10-28

    There are many narratives that define the Black experience in America in this 2nd decade of the 21st century. Our striving over the centuries of our sojourn in this nation is a tapestry of every human experience -- oppression, enslavement, forced assimilation, dehumanization, exclusion, segregation, isolation, struggle, perseverance, achievement, excellence, celebration, mourning, despair, progress, setbacks, lynching, assassination, genocide, terror, self-hatred, low esteem, pride,...

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  • Fighting Racism
    by Scott Woods inOur Community on2018-10-25

    I had a boss who was racist. Not an outright bigot, of course; her toolbox was more subtle than most. We bumped heads a lot over inconsequential things. She frequently couldn’t keep my name out her mouth. Lot of gaslighting. You know…2018 style. I tried a lot of ways to combat or navigate her issues. None of them worked, and that’s saying a lot because I’m really good at fighting racism. But at the end of the day – every day – she was my boss, I had to deal with her, and that was that. Finally I...

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Whoopi and Jesse Jackson’s Actions Are Unacceptable

Though he has issued a formal apology for his use of the n-word, Reverend Jesse Jackson's actions were irresponsible, incomprehensible, and reflect poorly upon him as a supposed role model for today's African American youth.  And to compound this issue even more, Whoopi Goldberg sang praises to the n-word before a national television audience of millions of people.  Not only did she devalue herself-as she is an African-American, but also the sacred memories and history of her ancestry, and the black community in general.  This type of behavior is totally unexpected of such influential African Americans and completely unacceptable by any African American.

Today, in this 21st century, the n-word has been reduced to being only a racial slur-in that it solely refers to one's complexion, and none of the struggle, strife, degradation, and dishonor that pieced together the very foundation of the term. Thus, in this light, some people believe that the word can be desensitized; metamorphosed into this acceptable, unsubstantially mind-controlling term; and embraced by all.  These same people believe that the n-word is just a word, no different from any other negative word.  However, they are wrong.

I challenge anyone to take any word in the English language, pit it against the n-word-300-plus diabolical years of heinous acts, mental and physical bondage of a people, and tell me unequivocally and without a single doubt in your heart that neither of the terms is any worse than the other...Impossible. "N**ger" is the most infamous, profane word in the English language.

Although I do not, in any way, attempt to diminish any other race's struggles, no other term-whether it be a racial slur-equals that of the n-word. N**ger(a), because of the historical baggage and true purpose at its core, cannot be stripped down to only a racial slur that chunks ridicule at one's outer skin tone. Color is where it starts, true, but beneath the thin layer of skin, just as beneath the earth's thin crust, an extremely complex mechanic ferociously works to fulfill a higher-level, long-term, incomprehensible plot-one above that which can be seen by the naked eye.

White America claimed that the slaves were subhuman; three-fifths of a human; lesser than a brute animal; bestial and savage. This very definition, therefore, gave them the right to dehumanize the slaves by slaughtering, butchering, and maiming them; brutally raping slave wives and daughters; executing mental genocide on a race of people; sodomizing with hot pokers; boiling and burning alive innocent people; disemboweling and castrating young men; and unmercifully beating ascendants until slivers of skin, shown to the red meat, dangled from their bodies-only to be met with more unbearable pain as the ridiculers poured whiskey and kerosene on the open wounds.  As the victimized gasped for their last breath, they heard the jeers of "n**ger, n**ger, n**ger" in their final moment.

For those who say this glimpse into the past is nothing more than a hyperbole of America's racist mentality that prevailed for more than 300 years, they do not have to look any further than the recent West Virginia, Megan Williams case of kidnapping, raping and torturing to realize that this is not an exaggeration and that racism, and its foundation logic of mental enslavement, is still alive and well.

The n-word cannot be sanitized, cleansed, inverted, or redeemed as a culturally liberating word.  The argument that the n-word can be changed into this endearing and meaningless term is a fallacy of enormous proportions-regardless to who utilizes the term or the excuse for its use.  It is impossible to undo all that was executed upon African-American ancestors, so why would one believe that they could miraculously transform the meaning of the term and disregard all of the indignity attached to the idiom?

All African Americans should regard the argument for transforming the n-word as an insult to their intelligence. Regardless to how the word is used today, its sinister and evil history cannot be eradicated, transformed or successfully redefined. The term will always suggest that black people are second-class citizens, ignorant and less than human; proponents' use of the term implies that they have accepted their role as such, and informs others that it is okay to live up to the definition and expectations of a "n**ger."

Whoopi and others like her have forgotten and/or are perhaps blissfully ignorant to the pain, sacrifices, life and death struggles of their ascendants and how they survived tremendous obstacles, trials and tribulations.   Embracing the n-word is an effrontery to her ancestors' glorious legacy, a mockery of their memories.  N-word supporters fail to understand their affect on the minds of today's youth with their deleterious dysfunction and culturally degrading acceptance of this word.

The n-word is a surviving remnant of a psychological warfare conducted to create dependency and behaviors that support achievement of a devious national objective: mental enslavement of a race of people.   It is a passively slick form of psychological, social, mental, and spiritual abuse that only results in the death and destruction of a race of people at the hand of that race of people-African Americans.