Tag Archives: black history

MICHAEL JACKSON: THE TRUE END OF AN ERA

courtesy soultracks.com

courtesy soultracks.com

I am in utter disbelief at the death of Michael Jackson. In retrospect, he has unselfishly contributed to music, dance and pop culture like no other artist in the world. Having started his career at age 10 to making a comeback this July at age 50 is a commendable effort to his legacy, in a genre of artists who are sampling his music and performance. It is unfortunate that a man of such talents needed to live in exiled seclusion for years in defending his eccentric behaviors and troubled past.

courtesy anneandsteve.org

courtesy anneandsteve.org

THE BLACKEST (& PROUDEST) HISTORY MONTH EVER

Vertie Hodge photo Houston Chronicle - Myra Beltran

Vertie Hodge photo Houston Chronicle Myra Beltran

Well today marks the start of February, Black History Month, a month of historical remembrances that we have ever known to date. Barack Obama and family have set a new precedent in the lives of many Americans. All over the internet one can find pictorials of what this momentous occasion has meant to many Americans, more importantly the elder African-American community. It has been over 40 years since a national identity has been acknowledged through the efforts of the Civil Rights Era. The “I Have A Dream” speech by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., has now come full circle in its meaning and understanding. However, the struggle is not yet over. As our youth choose not to remember the drudgery of American Slavery, it is of every importance that our accomplishments to American colonization be revered.

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