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Monthly Archives: September 2013


This quote by the “Greatest” was the sense of the country at the time yet we still are in overseas wars. If you change the word “Negroes” with “LGBT, immigrants (legal or illegal) or the poor, you have modern America.

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The Syrian issue (that is exactly what it is) has many in an uproar but the issue is simple. Syria has been emboldened by their knowledge that Russia has their back and the idea that the U.S. will not attack them. The latter is not true but the secondary part is the loss of civilian life and the arming of potential enemies of the U.S. who have joined the “pure” rebels. These opportunists are hoping for U.S. intervention by way of weapons. When and if the current regime is toppled they (not the people) would take over and we have a bigger problem. This has happened in Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan and other areas. The threats by Assad as far as attacks on the U.S. are not mindless even if improbable , the real threat is the one that Hezbollah will attack Israel and that would be a huge mistake for Hezbollah and Syria even if Mr. Assad does not realize it. The intervention by Russia is critical as their interests are at stake as well as the interests of the U.S. and their allies. The situation now is will Assad act to dismantle and give over the chemical weaponry all of them?  The U.S. does not want to get into another war even though many in the legislature and the citizenry  think we should ride in like cavalry, any action from us like that would result in extending military forces beyond the existing capabilities and once committed, we will be stuck for a long time in another foreign country with no assistance from anyone in the UN or elsewhere except for possibly Israel and some mid east allies.  Looking at all of the media covered columns, on air pundits and former government servants,  we have too many opinions (some fact based and some not) to get a true picture of what we should or could do if necessary. The best road for us is to hope our elected officials can evaluate all of the available information and arrive at a solution that will not involve us in another military action of any sort. There is no fault here except Mr. Assad’s and that should be addressed directly by the UN no matter what evidence beyond the massive deaths we know of. That is the only way to end this “issue”, it should not be incumbent on the U.S. to fight this battle alone.

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I recently tried making Chicken with dumplings. I found several recipes that were essentially the same with the differences being which chicken parts were used and how the dumplings were made. I used canned chicken breast and chicken bullion. Several recipes using raw chicken had the broth made from the cooking on the chicken. As far as the bullion I would suggest the canned broth so a minimal amount of plain water is used. (I used 4 packets of the dry). I used celery and carrots chopped coarse but you  can use peas and carrots along with the celery. Slice the celery thin (about 1/8 inch thick cross wise), cook this in the broth along with the veggies but only if the veggies are raw. Frozen  or canned veggies will get too well done, if you use canned or frozen add them in when celery is done. Since I used canned chicken , I added this in once the celery was done. For the dumplings I used a pie pastry recipe and rolled it out 1/4 inch thick. Depending on how much you are making you will need to adjust your quantities accordingly. I would recommend using 1/2 butter and 1/2 shortening for the pastry. Once the celery is done and the chicken added, insure there is sufficient water to just cover it all then cut the pastry into one or 2 inch squares and lay on top of the mixture and cover until done. This will not brown but will get white and pasty looking while fluffing up. I made this in a slow cooker, cooking on high for the first hour and low with all ingredients in for 2 hours. Very tasty.

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   George Zimmerman is clearly out of control and was at the time he murdered Trayvon martin, it is unfortunate that his real nature was not seen during his trial. This person is clearly not who was portrayed  as the victim during the trial. As many of us who believe in Karma – this is just the beginning of his lifetime punishment for that crime.                              
  
George Zimmerman’s Wife Files for Divorce
Sept. 5, 2013
            By  and MISEON LEE

Matt Gutman More from Matt »
Correspondent

She filed the paperwork just days after she said in an interview aired exclusively on ABC News that the ordeal of the trial had put a strain on their marriage.

The petition says the couple, married in 2007, “separated on Aug. 13, 2013 and are not presently cohabiting as husband and wife. The marriage between the parties is irretrievably broken.” They have no children.

Read: Shellie Zimmerman’s Divorce Filings

Shellie Zimmerman, 26, has asked for “equitable distribution” of their assets as well as their debts. She also seeks sole custody of their two dogs, a Rottweiler named Oso and a smaller dog named Leroy.

She filed for divorce Thursday in Seminole County, Fla.

According to the financial disclosure form, she said she is unemployed. She listed her monthly expenses as $755. The couple owes $3,700.20 on their 2011 taxes, according to the form.

Since they separated, George Zimmerman has given her $4,300 for living expenses and the “source of funds appears to be Zimmerman Legal Defense Fund,” according to the financial disclosure form.

Read: Shellie Zimmerman Financials Affidavit

Shawn Vincent, a spokesman for George Zimmerman’s legal team, said there would be no comment.

George Zimmerman’s brother, Robert, tweeted, “Pray 4 them.”

Shellie Zimmerman pleaded guilty last month to perjury for lying about the couple’s finances when the judge was setting bail for her husband. She appeared in court without her husband.

She said in the interview with freelance journalist Christi O’Connor that she felt “very much alone” without him in the courtroom to support her when she pleaded guilty.

During the interview, Shellie Zimmerman said she is “going to have to think about” whether she stayed married to George.

After George Zimmerman, 29, was charged with murder in Martin’s 2012 death, the couple was inundated with death threats, went into hiding and had to live with security guards.

“We have been pretty much like gypsies. … We’ve lived in a 20-foot trailer in the woods, scared every night that someone was going to find us and that we’d be out in the woods alone and that it would be horrific,” she said.

George Zimmerman Case: The Story in Photos

Shellie Zimmerman said that on the night that Martin, 17, was killed, she was not at their home because she and her husband had had an argument and she had left to stay with her father.

Despite the tension in their marriage, Shellie Zimmerman said she believes her husband’s story that he shot and killed Martin in self defense, and said the most hurtful thing she experienced was hearing that he was a “murderer or some sort of racist.”

Shellie Zimmerman must serve 100 hours of community service and one year probation for her perjury.

George Zimmerman was also in the news this week when he was pulled over for speeding Tuesday for a second time this summer.

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A TV ad representing  a National Insurance company has a mime talking and a baby commenting on it, I wonder what the baby would have to say about this article>

 

Getty Images

Freedom House Church did not seem all that free this weekend.

Makeda Pennycooke, the church’s executive pastor of operations, sent an email  to church volunteers asking that “only white people” greet worshippers at church  services. The email said that  leaders anticipated an increased number of visitors in the coming weeks, and  that since “first impressions matter,” the church wants “the best of the best on  the front doors.”

An outraged church member received the email and sent it to local news  station WBTV. The controversy is complicated because Pennycooke is a black  woman, while senior pastors Troy and Penny Maxwell are white. Nonetheless, the  church’s request was hard to misinterpret. ”We are continuing to work to  bring our racial demographic pendulum back to mid-line,” Pennycooke  wrote. ”We would rather have less greeters on the front door if it means  that the few that we have will represent us the best.”

Freedom House, a diverse church in north Charlotte, has already apologized  for the incident. “The email was sent by one of our longtime pastors in an  attempt to emphasize that our greeting team reflect the racial diversity of our  entire congregation,” a church spokesperson wrote in a statement to WBTV. “However, she admitted it was a mistake to over-emphasize any specific  group and sent an apology email within 24 hours of the original email going  out.”

Freedom House has four services every weekend. Five values drive its mission,  according to the church website: “We are  an equipping church (Ephesians 4:11-13); a relationally  healthy church (Matthew 18:19-20); an excellent church (Daniel  6:3); a leadership church; and a generous church (Proverbs  11:24-25).”

If anything, the incident serves as a reminder of another biblical passage,  Apostle Paul’s teaching that the Christian gospel breaks down all barriers  between humans. “There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or  free, there is no longer male and female,” he wrote in the New Testament book of  Galatians. “All of you are one in Christ Jesus.”

UPDATE at 2:15pm: Here is the full statement and apology  from Freedom House regarding the incident.

One of our longtime pastors, in keeping with our church’s desire to be  inclusive and intentionally reach out to all races, noticed our front door  greeting team was no longer reflecting the racial diversity of our entire  congregation, and she wanted potential visitors to see people like themselves  upon entering our church. However, she made an error in judgment in requesting  all white greeters at the front door, going overboard in placing emphasis on any  one race over another in trying to highlight diversity within the greeting team.  She admits this was a grave lapse in judgment and is sincerely sorry for her  actions. She immediately apologized and has asked our forgiveness. She and  senior pastors have made themselves available to meet with any church members  who want to discuss this situation with them, and have communicated their true  heart in this matter — to be a church welcoming and inclusive to  all.  Freedom House believes in a diverse relationship within its  membership, reflecting the larger community in which the church resides, doing  life together as a church representative of everyone — culturally, ethnically,  economically, and generationally.

Read more: http://swampland.time.com/2013/09/03/north-carolina-church-wanted-only-white-people-as-greeters/#ixzz2ds4nuvpM

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Study: Slave’s stay inspired ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’

  • FILE - This May 17, 2005, file photo, shows the Harriet Beecher Stowe House in Brunswick, Maine. A professor of American literature at Clemson University in Clemson, S.C., Susanna Ashton, says her research shows Stowe harbored a fugitive slave from South Carolina here just before she started writing her novel "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Ashton suggests that the painful story of slavery told by John Andrew Jackson prompted Stowe to begin writing the famous novel. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

    View PhotoAssociated Press/Robert F. Bukaty, File – FILE – This May 17, 2005, file photo, shows the Harriet Beecher Stowe House in Brunswick, Maine. A professor of American literature at Clemson University in Clemson, …more  S.C., Susanna Ashton, says her research shows Stowe harbored a fugitive slave from South Carolina here just before she started writing her novel “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” Ashton suggests that the painful story of slavery told by John Andrew Jackson prompted Stowe to begin writing the famous novel. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

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CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — A Clemson University professor is convinced that Harriet Beecher Stowe might not have written “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” if it not for a fugitive South Carolina slave she harbored for a night before starting the history-making novel.

The book, which fueled the abolitionist cause and helped put the nation on the path toward the Civil War, was published in 1852 after being serialized the previous year. It became a bestselling book of the 19th century, second only to the Bible.

Stowe mentions harboring the slave in her Maine home in a late 1850 letter to her sister. She writes that “he was a genuine article from the ‘Ole Carling State.'” While it is well-known to historians that Stowe harbored a slave, neither her letter nor her later writings mention his name.

Susanna Ashton, a professor of American literature at Clemson, says her research has convinced her the slave Stowe harbored was John Andrew Jackson. He was born a slave on a Sumter County, S.C., plantation and escaped in 1847, fleeing to Charleston and then stowing away between bales of cotton on a ship heading north.

Ashton’s conclusions appear in this summer’s edition of “Common-Place,” the journal of the Massachusetts-based American Antiquarian Society.

After fleeing, Jackson settled in Salem, Mass. But when the Fugitive Slave Act was passed in 1850 by Congress — meaning even slaves who had escaped from the South could be returned to their owners — Jackson headed north through Maine to Canada.

Jackson later learned to read and write, went to Europe and his book “The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina” was published in in England in 1862. After the Civil War, Jackson made a living as a writer and lecturer.

In his book, Jackson recalls the encounter with Stowe, mentioning her by name.

“She took me in and fed me, and gave me some clothes and five dollars. She also inspected my back, which is covered with scars which I shall carry with me to the grave. She listened with great interest to my story,” he wrote.

In Stowe’s letter to her sister, the original of which is in the Beineke Library at Yale University, Stowe notes the effect that night had on her family.

“There hasn’t been anybody in our house (who) got waited on so abundantly and willingly for ever so long. These negroes possess some mysterious power of pleasing children for they hung around him and seemed never tired of hearing him talk and sing,” she wrote.

In a recent interview, Ashton said: “Was it Jackson who was hidden by Stowe as a fugitive in Brunswick Maine? I’m 99.9 percent sure. That seems absolutely true. I think he was an inspiration for the novel. I think his pain touched her and helped her to act.”

Ashton said after “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” was published, a lot of blacks and former slaves wanted to meet Stowe and sought her endorsement.

“She was one of the biggest celebrities in the United States and had huge political and cultural clout,” Ashton said. “It was only when I looked at the dates more closely I said wait a minute, Jackson met her before she wrote ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin.’ That’s how the remarkable nature of this encounter began to unfold for me.”

Stowe would later say she had a vision in a church in Brunswick — the pew is marked — where she imagined the ending of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” and went home to write.

Ashton suggests Stowe never mentioned Jackson in her later writing because she would have had to admit she violated the Fugitive Slave Act.

Katherine Kane, executive director of the Harriett Beecher Stowe Center in Hartford, Conn., pointed out that critics have said Stowe, as a northerner, was writing about a section of the country where she had little firsthand experience.

Although born in Connecticut, Stowe spent 20 years in Cincinnati, just across the river from Kentucky, a slave state.

“I don’t think we want to devalue the time in Cincinnati,” Kane said, adding that Stowe was an abolitionist who would have seen owners hiring out their slaves for work. She also had servants in her household who were former slaves and collected stories of others writing about slavery, Kane said.

So, did Jackson prompt Stowe to write the book?

“Quite frankly that might be,” Kane said, although she noted that it seemed Stowe was moving toward the book for some time.

“When you look at her accumulated letters from that time, you see it starting to build,” she said. “But it gives me goose bumps that Dr. Ashton has been able to identify this unnamed person who was in the household at the time.”

She added: “From the Stowe Center’s point of view, we are trying to use all this history because it’s important to us all today. Here we are still talking about “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” and its impact, and the more we know about the individuals who inspired the story, the better it is.”

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Politics as usual, this excerpt from Jonathan P. Hicks points out where we are relative to the political system.

The GOP’s Failure to Honor Martin Luther King Jr.

  • By: Jonathan P. Hicks
GOP House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) attends a recent news conference. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
The conspicuous failure of Republicans to pay homage to Martin Luther King Jr. this week reveals precisely where African Americans rank in the party’s pecking order and highlights the nation’s widening racial chasm, Jonathan P. Hicks writes at BET.

There was one group curiously absent from the memorializing: Republicans.

Not one GOP figure attended the event at the Lincoln Memorial. There was no sign of House Speaker John Boehner or Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. Absent, too, was House Majority Leader Eric Cantor. There was not a Bush in sight, not even the politically ambitious Jeb. Not even the lone Black member of the Senate, Tim Scott of South Carolina, took the time to join the group on the mall to honor the Dr. King’s legacy.

It’s fascinating that the party that, in the aftermath of the 2012 president election, admitted the importance of reaching out to African-American and other non-white voters would essentially declare the King event off-limits.

After all, Dr. King was not the least bid steeped in the politics of his time: He sought to appeal to the moral conscience of Republicans as well as Democrats, having as much faith — and distrust — in each party. His widow maintained close relationships with the various presidents, irrespective of party. And it was, after all, Republican icon Ronald Reagan, who signed into law the official U.S. holiday known as Martin Luther King Jr. Day …

But more importantly, the absence of Republicans reveals precisely where African-American citizens rank in the GOP pecking order. It reveals in stark clarity that they long less for ways to attract Black voters than they pine for an era where Black voters were irrelevant politically.

Read Jonathan P. Hicks’ entire piece at BET.

The Root aims to foster and advance conversations about issues relevant to the black Diaspora by presenting a variety of opinions from all perspectives, whether or not those opinions are shared by our editorial staff.

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