Friday, November 26, 2010

Give Thanks To The Fullest


I’m a nerd when it comes to movies.

I were to count all of the movies that I have seen in my entire life, I would probably have a library that easily reaches over a million.

Recently, I saw “Darfur.”

Seeing this movie and thinking about Thanksgiving, I immediately was blessed with the thought of giving thanks to the fullest.

I’m not going to be an advocate for bad film critiques, but I will tell you that we should all feel blessed.

Waking up every morning praying for the safety of our lives is not something that we are forced to endure on a daily basis.

We are not having our babies snatched from our arms and brutally murdered in front of our eyes.

Men, we don’t have to sit helpless and watch our women get rapped multiple times.

Women you aren’t being forced to watch your men die horrific deaths by being set on fire.

People, we can give thanks to the fullest.

We aren’t forced to watch our kids being butchered as limb after limb is amputated from their bodies.

People, I am guilty of this as well; so my intention is not to single others out – truthfully, we all have no reason to not have the capability to give thanks to the fullest this thanksgiving.

I’m not saying that our that none of our issues should be viewed as not being problematic; I’m saying that many things that we see as being issues are very minor.

We experience financial difficulties, and we allow that to stop us from giving thanks.

We lose our jobs and we allow our world to crumble around us.

Why are we constantly influenced by this failing mindset?

I want everyone to see Darfur because after I saw it I felt ashamed for those everyday complaints that I make.

We aren’t missing legs and left without transportation and forced to find ways to get our children to school every morning.

We don’t have to hide the fact that we are receiving an education.

People we need to give thanks to the fullest.

Don’t get angry if your family can’t afford the expensive turkey this year; be happy with the other food that you are blessed with.

Don’t be upset because you have to spend time with family members that you don’t like; others don’t have family members to spend thanksgiving with.

My heart goes out to all people that have real problems and still find the strength to give thanks to the fullest.

This thanksgiving, we all need to think about what is stopping us from giving thanks and eliminate it.

One for the week: Sing to the LORD with grateful praise; make music to our God on the harp. Psalm 147:7

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Internet Etiquette


Minimizing chances of employment, enrollment in well known respected universities, and creating new reputations for ourselves are all things that we are doing, unknowingly.

People, there is nothing wrong with socializing on the web; but there is something wrong with sharing too much information about our personal lives on the Internet.

The web is worldwide people; we shouldn’t forget this.

Everybody in the world shouldn’t know about your sexual relations with others.

Everybody in the world shouldn’t have the opportunity to get on the Internet and read about your baby daddy and baby momma drama.

If we all respect ourselves, then we should all care enough to have some internet etiquette.

We never when our next employers are monitoring us on the Internet.

We never know when younger people see us as mentors and follow our every move on the Internet.

We all should think the next time we do a status update on Facebook; we should ask ourselves if it’s necessary to incorporate profanity in our status.

Young adolescents can be easily influenced and don’t need to know that you sell drugs; so stop saying it on the web.

Some people are always looking to take what is yours, so please stop laying out your money in your pictures.

Young women, there are some men that occupy their time by stalking you. Please put on some clothes in your pictures.

Young men, keep your gang signs to yourself because ultimately attracting attention from others may not be what you want.

People, we have to be careful we have to have Internet etiquette.

One for this week: Isaiah 29:14 - Therefore once more I will astound these people with wonder upon wonder; the wisdom of the wise will perish, the intelligence of the intelligent will vanish.

We Have Lost A Generation Of Black Boys: We Have Nobody To Blame But Ourselves


The Grand Rapids Times
11-21-2010

Yes, we have lost most of our black boys and there are plenty of statistics to prove it.

There is no longer a need for dire predictions, hand-wringing, or apprehension about losing a generation of black boys. It is too late! In education, employment, economics, incarceration, health, housing, and parenting, we have lost a generation of young black men. The question that remains is will we lose the next two or three generations, or possibly every generation of black boys hereafter to the streets, negative media, gangs, drugs, poor education, unemployment, father absence, crime, violence and death?

Let’s look at the facts. Most young black men in Grand Rapids and the United States don’t graduate from high school. Only 35% of black male students graduated from high school in Chicago and only 26% in New York City, according to a report by The Schott Foundation for Public Education. Only a few black boys who finish high school actually attend college, and of those few black boys who enter college, nationally, only 22% of them finish college.

Young black male students have the worst grades, the lowest test scores, and the highest dropout rates of all students in the country. When these young black men don’t succeed in school, they are much more likely to succeed in the nation’s criminal justice and penitentiary system. And it was discovered recently that even when a young black man graduates from a U.S. college, there is a good chance that he is from Africa, the Caribbean or Europe, and not the United States.

Black men in prison in America have become as American as apple pie. There are more black men in prisons and jails in the United States (about 1.1 million) than there are black men incarcerated in the rest of the world combined. This criminalization process now starts in elementary schools with black male children as young as six and seven years old being arrested in staggering numbers according to a 20w05 report, Education on Lockdown by the Advancement Project.

We Bear Most Of The Blame

Those of us who came up in the sixties, seventies and eighties wanted our children to have all of the things we never dreamed we could have, so, we spoiled and pampered them, to death. Vacations, cars, money, football and basketball practice, $125 sneakers, designer clothes, cell phones, video games, and on and on.

We Forgot To Teach Our Children The Value Of Hard Work

Caddying 5 hours in the hot sun to make eighty cents to eat lunch the next day; setting bowling pins until midnight to have lunch money the next day; selling papers until midnight to make a dollar and a quarter or working a paper route in cold and snow is what many Black boys did during their teen years. Instead of our children having to study after school, they play video games or watch TV for the next eight hours. That is, those who aren’t out selling drugs. In 2006, my 21 year old nephew in Los Angeles asked me why should he flip burgers 40 hours a week when he can deliver one little bag and make four times that much in 20 minutes? Three months later, he got his head blown off in a drive-by shooting. What a waste, We give our children everything, without their having to earn it. How many of our children do not have cell phones?

Who pays for those cell phones?

How many are driven to school and get picked up from school everyday? Taken to football practice, given money for Mickey D’s? Get bailed out of jail frequently? Go to the mall to buy those expensive designer clothes and shoes? What happened to work/reward?

What we have today is babies raising babies. Seldom is there a father figure in the house.

Where is the tough love? How can you expect children to want to excel, when there is no motivation? So, what we have is a generation of lazy, unmotivated, often-immoral children and young adults.

We created this mess. Now we must undo it.

We Can Turn This Thing Around

Our youth need role models.

They need to see successful Black men and women, entrepreneurs, scientists, sales people, real politicians and spiritual messages that offer more than how to get to the “sweet bye and bye.” They need to learn how to live in the “sweet now and now!”

Many think the only way out is to sell drugs, be a rapper or be an NBA point guard or a great NFL wide receiver. Learning a trade, owning a business or becoming a responsible, productive member of society seldom crosses their mind. Couple this with the passivity, neglect and disengagement of the black community concerning the future of our black boys, and we have a dead society. We do little, while the future lives of black boys are being destroyed in record numbers. The schools that black boys attend prepare them with skills that will make them obsolete before – and if – they graduate. In a strange and perverse way, the black community, itself, has started to wage a kind of war against young black men and has become part of this destructive process.

We wonder why our young black women leave Grand Rapids as soon as they graduate from college. Whom are they going to marry? What do they have to pick from? Who is going to build and maintain the economies of black communities?

Who is going to anchor strong families in the black community? Who will young black boys emulate as they grow into men?

Where is the outrage of the black community at the destruction of its black boys? Where are the plans and the supportive actions to change this? Is this the beginning of the end of the black people in Grand Rapids?

The list of those who have failed young black men includes our government, our foundations, our schools, our media, our black churches, our black leaders, and even our parents.

Ironically, experts say that the solutions to the problems of young black men are simple and relatively inexpensive, but they may not be easy, practical or popular. It is not that we lack solutions as much as it is that we lack the will to implement these solutions to save black boys. It seems that government is willing to pay billions of dollars to lock up young black men, rather than the millions it would take to prepare them to become viable contributors and valued members of our society.

Please consider these simple goals that can lead to solutions for fixing the problems of young black men:

Short Term

1. Teach our youth to read at grade level by the third grade and to embrace education.

2. Provide positive role model s for our youth.

3. Create a stable home environment for black boys that includes contact with their fathers.

4. Ensure that our youth have a strong spiritual base.

5. Teach black boys to respect all girls and women.

Long Term

1. Invest as much money in educating black boys as in locking up black men.

2. Help connec t blac k boys to a positive vision of themselves in the future.

3. Build a positive peer cul ture for our youth.

4. Teach black boys self-discipline, culture and history.

5. Teach our youth and the communities in which they live to embrace education and life-long learning.

COME ON GRAND RAPIDS, LET’S GET TO WORK Come join the fight. Our website is www.overthehillgang.net. You may call us at 616- 446-2133 Email: overthehillgang@comcast.net

The Over The Hill Gang is dedicated to bringing all elements of the black community together to mentor and help our young people find their way.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Pages Missing


I’m the type of individual that prefers to write over reading any day.

When I do read on my spare time, I make sure the book that I am reading is really good.

One time I purchased a used book, “Down These Mean Streets.” It was really intriguing, but there was one problem; there were missing pages.

The pages in the book that were missing forced me to skip ahead and by pass parts of the book that could have been crucial to the story.

This week I met a high school student that reminded me of the book that I once purchased with the missing pages.

However, there was a difference between her and the book; her missing pages seemed to be more valuable than those out of the book that I previously owned.

Her missing pages had the potential to alter her life for the better or the worse.

Her missing pages were purposely ripped out by others who didn’t care to see her excel.

I just want to say that I didn’t write this article to bash the educational system.

I wrote this article to raise questions about what is problematic in the educational system.

I want to be the first to say that I know many of excellent teachers and I commend them for their service to the youth.

However, there is something wrong when there are young adults entering the world and they lack the capability to write a complete sentence.

There is something terribly wrong when students are just passed along through grades without knowing the academic material they should know.

It’s time for some people to realize that by not requiring students to have certain knowledge before moving on we are ripping pages out of their books.

I know students who have missing pages who can’t communicate with those who speak proper English because all they know is Ebonics.

I know students who are limited to what mentors they have to look up to because the only one they have learned about is Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

I know students who are seeking someone to inspire them; but without their pages, they can’t find inspiration.

We live in a creative generation, but creativity is something that we aren’t willing to accept when it comes to learning.

I believe that it is now time to return all of the missing pages.

If a student has an interest in film, find ways to incorporate film studies into his or her learning.

If a student loves music, give him or her something to look forward to by showing them the millions of universities that offer music as a major.

Don’t tell students that film and music are useless in life because this is not true; many of people have done great things in these arts.

Stop ripping pages out of student’s books.

Give the pages back.

Bring back the support; stop crushing dreams because of your personal opinion.

If you feel that students aren’t being challenged enough in school, then go the extra mile to make more worksheets for homework.

This is not only for teachers this is also for parents at home.

Teachers can’t give pages back; and then as soon as students return home, they get ripped back out.

My high school friend that I met this week graduates this year, so her time for getting her pages back is very short.

I wonder how many other students are in her position.

People let’s return the missing pages.

One for the week: Yet Pharaoh’s heart became hard and he would not listen to them, just as the LORD had said. Exodus 7:13 We can’t be like Pharaoh, we can’t have hard hearts. We must listen to each other, especially upcoming generations of the future.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Tears With No Kleenex


When people cry no matter what the reason may be I believe that they should have Kleenex available at their expense.

No one should have to endure tears and a runny nose with no way to wipe them away.

No one should be forced to have to wear the aftermath of tears and mucus on their sleeve due to the absence of Kleenex.

However, just because no one should doesn’t mean that experiencing tear’s with no Kleenex hasn’t been the choice of millions.

Many people cry and complain about societal structure and constraints politicians place on the way we live, but these many people don’t vote.

These are people who are choosing to wipe their tears and mucus on their sleeves.

So many of us dispute law’s that we disagree with but don’t care to vote for people who have power to control these law’s.

Some of us want to experience change but we don’t care to vote for it.

Some of us want our voices to be heard, but choose to be silent the day that ballads are out.

Some of us want to give solutions for problematic issue’s but don’t care to pay any attention to issues during the time of voting.

There are too many dirty sleeves; it’s time to pull out the Kleenex.

Young people, we are the main ones who want to bring up injustice and the idea of inequality; so we need to be the main ones heading to the poles to vote.

We stress and voice our opinions about rights we feel we should have, but then when it’s time to vote for these rights we are nowhere to be found.

It’s time to put them shirts with the dirty sleeves in the wash and bring out the Kleenex.

My parents always told me growing up that if I wanted something I would have to work for it, well this applies to voting as well.

If we all want to voice our opinions within society we have to vote in order to have that right.

One for the week: Deuteronomy 4:12 Then the LORD spoke to you out of the fire. You heard the sound of words but saw no form; there was only a voice.