21st Feb2012

LightSkinned President Harry Belafonte: “What’s Missing Is That Rage!”

by iSpit

http://www.celebritiesfans.com/pictures/harry_belafonte.jpg

It was both a walk down memory lane and a call to action when singer, actor, civil rights activist and international humanitarian Harry Belafonte spoke at St. Sabina Church.

Part of a Black History Month program that also brought Princeton Professor Cornel West to the South Side church on Sunday, Belafonte, espousing incendiary views on racism and capitalism for six decades, did not hold back during his presentation Friday night.

Criticism of President Barack Obama’s bailout of Wall Street banks, comparison of the Occupy America movement to the 1960s civil rights battle, and an urging of African Americans and the poor toward an uprising to alleviate racism and poverty were among topics covered by an 84-year-old luminary who has sat with many of the world’s heads of state.

“I find myself at this time of my life with a lot of questions I thought we had answered,” said Belafonte, who was born in Harlem, N.Y. in 1927, was the first African-American man ever to win an Emmy Award and was a key confidant to Martin Luther King Jr.

“The last time I saw Dr. King, he had come to our home in New York, which was not uncommon as we plotted strategies for campaigns we were waging, and he was in a surly mood,” Belafonte told some 1,000 who braved a snowstorm to hear him.

“King said, ‘We have fought long and hard for the goals we’ve achieved, but therein lies my deepest concern, that in this struggle for integration, which we are achieving, I do genuinely believe that we will be integrating into a burning house,’’ Belafonte said.

“I never understood how prophetic that was until subsequent history revealed itself.”

Deeply entrenched in the civil rights movement, Belafonte was a friend who would bail King out of jail, and who, with such notables as Julian Bond, John Lewis and Dick Gregory, founded the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).

So many of the gains of that movement have been lost, he charged, ticking off decimated and disinvested inner-city communities devoid of a middle class; continuing disparities yielding low funding of public education and high incarceration rates of minority youth; and high poverty and unemployment rates that still more greatly afflict minorities.

“But for all the battles that we’ve won, we have yet not won the war,” Belafonte said.

In 1960, he was named cultural adviser to the Peace Corps, and in 1987, a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador. He has earned worldwide recognition for his dedicated work on behalf of African children stricken by poverty and HIV/AIDS, as well as his outspoken advocacy for the poor and oppressed across the globe.

And when I’m accused of dishonorably criticizing our president, somebody has tried to turn this into a personal affair,” Belafonte said of his more recent criticisms of Obama’s economic policies. “I like Barack Obama. I think he’s a nice young man. There’s a lot about him that fills me with a sense of pride. His presence as president of the United States of America means that we did something right in the civil rights movement.

“But all of these truths do not exempt him from the moral responsibility that he has in his governance of this country. What Dr. King taught us was that without an angry people, without the poor rising up in indignation against their conditions, our leaders will never be pushed to do what they must do.”

A World War II U.S. Navy veteran, Belafonte found work as a local club singer to pay for acting classes in the late 1940s but instead found music his calling. His breakthrough 1956 album, “Calypso,” was the first LP ever in history to sell more than 1 million copies. A prolific actor as well as singer by the late 1950s, he won the Emmy for his 1959 TV special, “Tonight with Harry Belafonte.” He was the organizer of the multi-artist recording, “We Are the World,” which won the 1985 Grammy Award for record of the year and raised millions for emergency famine and health aid to Africa, and was awarded the National Medal of the Arts from President Bill Clinton in 1994.

“When I look at young people in the Occupy Wall Street movement, and hear, ‘Why don’t they go get a job?’ I think, where have I heard that before? When we gathered in the early days of our own rebellion, they said, ‘Why don’t you all go smoke a joint somewhere and get lost?’ ” Belafonte said. “What we’re facing now is an opportunity among young people trying desperately to find their way. The pundits say, ‘Where are their leaders?’ Their leaders are found in history. ‘What do they want?’ Take a look at what we wanted, and you’ll find it’s the same menu. What’s missing is that rage.”

19th Feb2012

Mahogany (Full Movie)

by iSpit

Tracy, an aspiring designer from the slums of Chicago puts herself through fashion school in the hopes of becoming one of the world’s top designers. Her ambition leads her to Rome spurring a choice between the man she loves or her newfound success.

Writers:

Toni Amber (story), John Byrum (screenplay)

15th Feb2012

The Best Man (Full Video)

by iSpit

Harper’s autobiographical novel is almost out, his girlfriend Robin desires commitment, and he’s best man at the wedding of Lance, a pro athlete. He goes to New York early (Robin will come for the wedding) to hang out with Lance and other friends, including Jordan, his former almost-lover, now in media and privy to an advance copy of the book. The men discuss women, never facing their own double standard; Jordan wants to try again with Harper, at least for one night; and Harper fears that Lance will read his book and learn that the bride-to-be slept with him once to avenge Lance’s many affairs. Can Harper mature before Lance kills him, Jordan seduces him, and he loses Robin?

Director:

Malcolm D. Lee

Writer:

Malcolm D. Lee

Stars:

08th Feb2012

The Spook Who Sat By The Door (Full Video)

by iSpit

A black man plays Uncle Tom in order to gain access to CIA training, then uses that knowledge to plot a new American Revolution.

Director:

Ivan Dixon

Writers:

Sam Greenlee (screenplay), Melvin Clay (screenplay), and 1 more credit »

The Spook Who Sat by the Door Poster

08th Feb2012

Mumia Abu Jamal – Toy Soldiers

by iSpit

For MumiaAbu-Jamal, I am Ron Kovic author of Born on the Fourth of July.

According to recent news accounts, shattered and shredded body parts and remains of U.S. servicemen were found in a landfill.

 

Despite political spins, this sobering image is a telling, true-life metaphor for what those in power really think of soldiers, many of whom are but boys and girls freshly loosed from High School.

 

In recent years, politicians, especially when on TV or radio talk shows, are apt to say, when addressing a vet, “I thank you for your service.” In truth, this is robot-talk, kind of like when a parrot is trained to say, “Hello!”, and about as meaningful.

 

The American poet, e.e. cummings once said, “A politician is an arse upon which everyone has sat, except a man.”

 

John Africa said, “A politician will tell you he wasn’t born of a woman, if it’ll get you to vote for him.”

 

In these passing years, since 9/11, wars have been fought that have devastated countries, economies, and world peace. Untold thousands have died, many for nothing more, nor less, than American paranoia. Thousands of U.S. soldiers have died defending American lies.

 

And tens of thousands have returned, bodies, minds, souls shattered by political calculations driven by arrogance, greed and sheer stupidity. Thousands of marriages have ended in divorce because of forced years apart, and families have been broken asunder because some greasy politician wanted to play ‘War-President‘ (or Senator, or Representative.)

 

In a real sense, military body parts tossed into landfills as trash is more than metaphor.

 

It is truth.

 

(c) ’11 maj

Prison and government officials are trying to censor and silence Mumia Abu-Jamal. I stand as one of many Americans who believe that there is tremendous value in his voice being heard. I am others will fight to make sure that both his voice and his body are free.

31st Jan2012

Horizon: Sexual Chemistry (Full Video)

by iSpit

Sexual Chemistry – programme summary

The drug Viagra revolutionised the treatment of sexual dysfunction in men on its launch five years ago. An accidental discovery, the tablet that gave impotent men the chance once more to have natural erections became the fastest selling pill in history and has earned its manufacturer, Pfizer, over $6bn.

“Results were astonishing… an increase in overall satisfaction”

Ian Russell, Dumfries & Galloway NHS Trust

The search is now on for a similar drug that could help women. Research is revealing that female sexuality is more complex than expected. For women suffering from a loss of desire many scientists believe that drugs acting on the brain may be the way forward. A pioneering Scottish study may have identified just such a drug and begun testing it scientifically.

A man thing

An erection is achieved by filling the erectile tissue of the penis with blood. Blood vessels widen to allow blood in and then constrict to maintain the pressure. Male impotence was long thought to be a psychiatric effect, a result of stress, anxiety or depression. Medical advice was that there was not much to be done. Some patients refused to take this message on board.

Geddings Osbon used his profession (working in a tyre workshop in Georgia, USA) as inspiration for one solution. Suffering from impotence himself, he designed a vacuum pump to create an erection by engorging his penis with blood and containing it with a rubber band. Despite its problems of discomfort, his vacuum device achieved popularity and is still recommended by medics to some men with erectile dysfunction.

“[Brindley] dropped his pants before the audience… a very respectable erection”

Prof Alvaro Morales, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario

The next leap forward came in 1983 when British urologist, Giles Brindley, gave an eye-opening presentation to colleagues in the field, gathered at Las Vegas. He told them he had just injected himself with phenoxybenzamine and then showed them the results, by dropping his trousers and displaying his erect organ.

Brindley had proved that a drug could be used to treat erection problems. Modern science accepts that impotence can be the result of a number of medical conditions: high blood pressure, furred arteries and some types of diabetes. Injecting phenoxybenzamine is relatively easy but an instant erection hardly fits into most people’s natural sexual practice. A pill would still be ideal.

Blues for the boys

In 1985, the drug company Pfizer was working on treatments for the heart complaint, angina. Dr Ian Osterloh and Dr Gill Samuels were using sildenafil citrate to relax blood vessels, in the hope of easing the pain of narrowed cardiac arteries. They were about to become unwitting sexual pioneers. Their drug did significantly increase blood flow, but not in the heart. It did so in the penis.

“[Without] erotic stimulation, the drug would have done little”

Dr Ian Osterloh, Pfizer Limited

With its side effect recognised, studies began to assess the compound’s ability to treat impotence. Researchers in Bristol assembled a library of explicit films in order to provide a controlled method of arousing the subjects. They thought the blue tablets wouldn’t cause an erection on their own, but could help lust to run its natural course.

The investigation pieced together how the compound – Viagra – was beating male impotence. When sexually excited, cells in the penis produce a chemical messenger known as cyclic GMP. Its effect is to allow more blood to enter the erectile tissue, making it more rigid. The level of cyclic GMP is continuously kept in check by an enzyme. Viagra acts to inhibit the enzyme, preserving cyclic GMP and enabling the man to achieve an erection at a time that fits into having sex.

Viagra for women

With an understanding of the chemical mechanism that allows Viagra to intervene in the physical process of male erections, it was natural for scientists to wonder what effect the drug would have for women. Female sexual problems were a field that had received far less attention than males’. Like in men, it was supposed to be primarily a psychological complaint.

Research showed that arousal chemicals in men and women are the same and also that the physiological similarities between the penis and clitoris are greater than many realised. However, a number of studies have revealed that for the vast majority of women with sexual problems, Viagra is little help. (Women with pelvic blood flow problems and some spinal injuries can benefit.)

“To know if a woman is aroused, ask if she wants sex”

Dr Ellen Laan, University of Amsterdam

More intelligent sex

The reason it seems is that for women, being turned on sexually is more to do with the brain than the pelvis. Dr Ellen Laan turned to erotic videos to try to understand the female sexual response. She showed women two films. One concentrated on the man‘s pleasure; one on the woman’s. Her subjects experienced increased vaginal blood flow with both films, but only reported being turned on by the film that was more focussed on female pleasure. Laan deduced that – unlike men – for women the genitals are not the best indicator of arousal.

The most common complaint of women who seek help for sexual problems is not a physical one but a loss of desire. Using the contraceptive pill or anti-depressants can prompt it, as can childbirth, the menopause or falling out of love. Sometimes it seems there is no reason. Finding a cure is much harder than helping men to bolster their equipment.

Sex on the brain

A Scottish nurse could yet become the pioneer for a drug treatment for women. Ian Russell specialises in helping people with sexual problems. In 2001, he started giving a new drug product – apomorphine hydrochloride – to men with impotence.

Apomorphine (licensed for men as Uprima and Ixense) is a drug designed to work in the brain itself. It mimics the brain signalling chemical, dopamine, and has been shown to act in the hypothalamus, an area known to control physical arousal. In men, apomorphine amplifies the signal to have an erection. But Ian Russell‘s trial participants reported that taking the drug regularly did more than overcome impotence; it raised their levels of desire.

This unexpected discovery made Russell realise the drug could be useful for his female patients as well. He approached Prof Jeremy Heaton from Ontario, Canada, who had developed apomorphine. Jeremy gave him the encouragement he needed to set up a small pilot study. He gave women varying doses of apomorphine for 18 weeks. Questionnaires at six week intervals assessed any change in their sexual function.

Eight out of the ten women reported an increase in sexual desire and in their overall sexual satisfaction. Russell was encouraged but well aware that one small uncontrolled study could yield unrepresentative results. He is now embarking on a larger, double blind study.

Meanwhile, research on rats has shown that dopamine’s role in the brain extends beyond the hypothalamus. It’s known to play a role in the limbic system, the part of the brain thought to control emotion. This could explain the connection with desire.

Drugs that aim to tackle female sexual problems are still years away from being licensed. However, as the differences – and similarities – between the sexes become clearer, the essence of male and female sexuality is opening up to scientific investigation.

27th Jan2012

The Mechanic (Full Video)

by iSpit

Follows an elite hit man as he teaches his trade to an apprentice who has a connection to one of his previous victims.

Director:

Simon West

Writers:

Richard Wenk (screenplay), Lewis John Carlino (screenplay), and 1 more credit »

25th Jan2012

Boondocks Creator Co-Wrote Red Tails

by iSpit

The man known for creating the nationally syndicated comic strip The Boondocks in the late 1990s also has his hands in a film being released this weekend. Aaron McGruder, the controversial man with wide-ranging opinions on a vast variety of subjects, co-wrote Red Tails.

The project, financed by filmmaker George Lucas, opened on Friday in theaters nationwide and chronicles the lives of Tuskegee Airmen, a group of black pilots placed in an experimental training program during World War II.

“About two years ago, I got a call from my agent asking if I wanted to meet with Lucas to talk about the script,” McGruder told the Daily Beast. “I was like, ‘Yes, I would!’ I’m a Stars Wars guy and also the son of a military pilot, so it was the best of both worlds for me to do a project like this.”

McGruder was said to be brought on by Lucas to add a fresher, more youthful take on the film.

“That was my biggest contribution to the project, making it more of an action-hero type film,” McGruder told the Daily Beast. “I used my comic strip experience to make the script have a faster pace. There have been other movies on the Tuskegee Airmen, so I wanted to make sure the audience had a different view of these men … this film has something for older people who know the story, and younger people who aren’t so familiar with the story and like action.”

We urge everyone to go and support this film that George Lucas felt was an important enough story to tell, whether Hollywood backed it or not.

22nd Jan2012

RIP: Coach Joe Paterno: 1926-2012

by iSpit

Sadly, the grim reports that dominated the college football news cycle beginning Saturday evening were a precursor to the inevitable but still numbing reality: a coaching legend has passed.

A family spokesperson confirmed to the Associated Press that Joseph Vincent Paterno has died at a State College hospital at the age of 85, just over two months after being diagnosed with a form of lung cancer.  A posting to Penn State’s official Facebook page read simply: “With great sadness we mourn the passing of Coach Joe Paterno…Few have done more.”

Paterno passed away at 9:25 a.m. ET Sunday, and the official cause of death was metastic small cell carcinoma of the lung.

The legendary former Penn State head coach was surrounded by family and friends, who had been summoned to the on-campus hospital when Paterno’s health took a turn for the worse recently.

“It is with great sadness that we announce that Joe Paterno passed away earlier today,” a statement from the family read. ”His loss leaves a void in our lives that will never be filled. He died as he lived. He fought hard until the end, stayed positive, thought only of others and constantly reminded everyone of how blessed his life had been. His ambitions were far reaching, but he never believed he had to leave this Happy Valley to achieve them. He was a man devoted to his family, his university, his players and his community.”

A statement attributed to university president Rodney Erickson and the Board of Trustees was released shortly after Paterno’s death.

“We grieve for the loss of Joe Paterno, a great man who made us a greater university. His dedication to ensuring his players were successful both on the field and in life is legendary and his commitment to education is unmatched in college football. His life, work and generosity will be remembered always.

“The University plans to honor him for his many contributions and to remember his remarkable life and legacy. We are all deeply saddened.”

Paterno was born Dec. 21, 1926, in Brooklyn, NY, and, after his playing days at Brown University were complete, was hired as an assistant at Penn State in 1950.  Shortly after the 1965 season had ended, Paterno was named head coach of the Nittany Lions; for the next 46 years, Paterno lorded over Happy Valley as the face of both a football program and a university.

During his nearly five decades as head coach, Paterno accumulated 409 wins, the most in Div. I history; a record 37 appearances in bowl games; and two national championships.  As great of a coach as he was on the field, he was widely hailed as, at least until the events that have transpired since last November, an even greater man off of it, donating millions back to his beloved university and shaping the lives of untold numbers of players, coaches and other football support staff.

The legacy he had built in more than a half a century at the school, however, was threatened — or erased in the minds of some — by the Jerry Sandusky child-sex abuse scandal that’s rocked the football program specifically and the university in general.  Mere days after his former assistant was indicted on more than 50 charges relating to the sexual molestation of underage boys, Paterno was fired by the school’s board of trustees, which declared in a statement that their “unanimous judgment was that Coach Paterno could not be expected to continue to effectively perform his duties and that it was in the best interests of the University to make an immediate change in his status.”

Nine weeks after his final game Nov. 5 — eerily and vaguely similar time-wise to the passing of Bear Bryant after he had coached his last game at Alabama — Coach Paterno is gone.

Our condolences go out to his family, friends and every single person touched by a helluva coach and a great-but-fallible human being who will ultimately be defined by the totality of his life, both the good and the bad.

RIP Coach Paterno.

16th Jan2012

(Untitled) Free Writing By: Eric Blair

by Mr. Blair

I write about a lot of things and lately I have been writing heavy but today I actually don’t want to write about one particular topic. I just want to free write and reflect on a few things in my life, if you don’t mind. One of my earliest memories as a human being/child was my grandmother coming home from work late every night. My grandmother (Mary-Ann Blair) was a cleaning lady also known as maintenance. She really worked hard every night; you know how I know because my sister and I would wait up for her each night to come home. She was exhaust, barely capable to take her shoes and coat off once she hit her bedroom. My sister and I used to help her to take her shoes off as she lied across her bed.  I asked my grandmother one day, “Why do you work all the time? Stay home with us.” She replied, “So y’all can have food and clothes to wear.” Then I asked, “You work to become rich?” Mind you; I was only five or six of age asking this fatigued lady all the questions in the world. She replied, “I don’t want to be rich, I just want to be comfortable.”

“I just want to be comfortable.”

That replied have always stuck with me my entire life. I shared this story with you all because I ponder on what was my fuel to get me to this point of my life? I never actually had a life plan for my life; I just followed the wind. I do know this, the first moment I was introduced to the art of storytelling was when I was five or six years old, the nineteen ninety version of Batman the movie. I was mesmerized by the action and the tension of not knowing what was coming next. From that day on I’ve always wanted to feel that feeling if it’s in reading or watching movies. At the age of seven I was also introduced to comic book by my grandmother, she brought him two issues of Spider-man 2099 and Batman from her job. Some guy was going to throw away those comics instead my grandmother asked for them because she knew I would love them and I did! What’s one man’s trash is another boy’s gold.  From that day on my awesome grandmother brought me home comic books whenever she could. I do admit, I can’t read every single word but tried with my little heart to read. I read the same comic books over and over until I understood the concept of a story.

My grandmother directed me to the road to my current life.

I have been plotting stories since I was eight years old. I never had the chance to write my ideas down because I had siblings and they would of destroyed everything; so I begun to memorize my stories. The older I become I plotted more and more stories in my head for two reason, I was ashamed to share my ideas with friends because I lived in North Philadelphia, and two, a Black kid reading and wanting to write comic book wasn’t cool. Until I become an adult I kept my true love of not just comic book but the art of storytelling to myself. Hey, that only made me stronger because I am capable of writing whole stories, essays, or scripts in my head before the letters could hit the screen. I was an author of my first comic book by the age of twenty-one. As I write this I am plotting one script and two short stories in my head. I’ve originally want to get everything out of my head and into the people’s minds because ideas and stories has been in my mind for too long. I don’t know when I am going to die or expire so I overly write to leave a legacy forErinand to make my grandmother proud of me. The irony in what I love to do is I will mimic or share life through my writing at times. To be perfectly honest, I was never afraid of death but I have always been afraid of life because it’s just so f*cking complex at times.

My grandmother might have been a cleaning woman once upon a time, so I will stride, try, and die to become something marvelous just for her.

Text stops here.

12th Jan2012

Dwyane Wade: Basketball Star Turned Beacon of Fatherhood

by iSpit

In many ways, basketball superstar Dwyane Wade leads a double life. By day, the Miami Heat guard is an NBA legend, but by night, Wade is a single father to his two young sons and his nephew. Moms dropping their kids off at school didn’t know what to make of him at first.

 

“I was like one of the only dads,” Wade said. “Everybody was looking at me, it was kind of weird. They called me ‘Mr. Mom’ for a while.”

 

It’s an apt nickname for a man who is on a mission to bring back a bedrock U.S. value: family. Wade is reaching out to fathers and sons through community groups and his non-profit organization, Wade’s World Foundation, to combat the jaw-dropping statistic that 72 percent of African-American kids are being raised by a single parent, mostly women. Even President Obama has asked Wade to come on as a kind of ambassador-at-large for fatherhood.

 

He is also determined to let his kids know that despite a bruising three-year custody battle, they have two loving parents, a lesson he draws from his own fractured childhood.

 

“It is not about the money I have or don’t have,” Wade said. “It is about the time I am willing to sit down across the table from my kids and if they don’t get something right, helping them get it right.”

 

10th Jan2012

Dolemite (Full Movie)

by iSpit

Dolemite is a pimp who was set up by Willie Greene and the cops, who have planted drugs, stolen furs, and guns in his trunk and got him sentenced to 20 years in jail. One day, Queen B and a warden planned to get him out of Jail and get Willie Green and Mitchell busted for what they did to him. However, Dolemite is no stupid man and has a lot of warriors backing him, such as his call girls, who are Karate Experts–and lots more….

10th Jan2012

Wisconsin Police Arrest Beezow Doo-Doo Zopittybop-Bop-Bop

by iSpit

Here’s a tale that Dr. Seuss never wrote: the man formerly known as Jeffrey Drew Wilschke has been arrested again by Madison, Wisconsin police, who’d received phone calls from concerned residents. It seems the former Mr. Wilschke had been prowling around a local park, not far from the state capitol, when he was detained

But it wasn’t Mr. Wilschke who was taken into custody. Enter: Beezow Doo-Doo Zopittybop-Bop-Bop!

As the Capital Times reports, Mr. Zopittybop-Bop-Bop, who changed his legal name last October, apparently kept his old habits. He was allegedly carrying a knife, marijuana and drug paraphernalia when officers detained him last week. He’s now being held on a probation violation, linked to an arrest in 2011.

As the Times reports, Mr. Zopittybop-Bop-Bop (then known as Mr. Wilschke) was taken into custody in April for grinding marijuana in another Madison park. Police who searched his backpack discovered knives and a loaded handgun.

Although there’s no telling where Beezow Doo-Doo (formerly known as Jeffrey) came up with his new name, if he wants another one he has only to open any Seuss book to find Sally Spingel-Sungel-Sporn, Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate, a North (or South) Going Zax or maybe Ham-ikka-Schnim-ikka-Schnam-ikka-Schnopp.

But there’s only one Sam-I-Am

10th Jan2012

Mumia Abu Jamal – Toy Soldiers (Read by Ron Kovic)

by iSpit

For Mumia Abu-Jamal, I am Ron Kovic author of Born on the Fourth of July.

According to recent news accounts, shattered and shredded body parts and remains of U.S. servicemen were found in a landfill.

 

Despite political spins, this sobering image is a telling, true-life metaphor for what those in power really think of soldiers, many of whom are but boys and girls freshly loosed from High School.

 

In recent years, politicians, especially when on TV or radio talk shows, are apt to say, when addressing a vet, “I thank you for your service.” In truth, this is robot-talk, kind of like when a parrot is trained to say, “Hello!”, and about as meaningful.

 

The American poet, e.e. cummings once said, “A politician is an arse upon which everyone has sat, except a man.”

 

John Africa said, “A politician will tell you he wasn’t born of a woman, if it’ll get you to vote for him.”

 

In these passing years, since 9/11, wars have been fought that have devastated countries, economies, and world peace. Untold thousands have died, many for nothing more, nor less, than American paranoia. Thousands of U.S. soldiers have died defending American lies.

 

And tens of thousands have returned, bodies, minds, souls shattered by political calculations driven by arrogance, greed and sheer stupidity. Thousands of marriages have ended in divorce because of forced years apart, and families have been broken asunder because some greasy politician wanted to play ‘War-President’ (or Senator, or Representative.)

 

In a real sense, military body parts tossed into landfills as trash is more than metaphor.

It is truth.

 

(c) ’11 maj

Prison and government officials are trying to censor and silence Mumia Abu-Jamal. I stand as one of many Americans who believe that there is tremendous value in his voice being heard. I am others will fight to make sure that both his voice and his body are free.

 

Ron Kovic. For Mumia Abu-Jamal.

06th Jan2012

The Plight Of The Concords By Spit (#PlightOfTheConcords)

by iSpit

Many of you in recent months have begun to proclaim yourselves as what you believe to be a “Sneakerhead” largely due to the fact that you… occasionally wear sneakers. This myth couldn’t be further from the truth. How can you be a sneakerhead if you know absolutely nothing about the sneakers you claim to be obsessed with? Is it because you slept outside for some sneakers? …Nah. Let’s do the knowledge…

On May 7th, 1995 when Michael Jordan stepped onto the court in the beginning of Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals between the Chicago Bulls & the Orlando Magic in a pair of sneakers the world (& Nike execs) had never seen before (& wouldn’t see again for a year), he had no idea what he had started. The subsequent ban of the sneakers due to what NBA executives called a “dress code violation” only heightened the excitement for a commercial release.

The sneaker in question? The Nike Air Jordan #11 – Concord’s, whose release in November 1995 release coincided with the still active hype over MJ‘s comeback. At the time they were simply known as the “patent leather” Jordan‘s & along with the Bulls going 72 – 10, they sold out nationwide almost instantly.

Fast Forward:

**October 25th, 2000 – The first re- release

**January 28th, 2006 – Another re-release, another sellout (in both meanings of the phrase)

**January 17, 2011 – Confirmation that ONCE AGAIN, a version of the Concords would be re-re-released, is leaked on a Nike line sheet.

**December 23rd, 2011- N*ggas once again camped out, lined up, missed meals, didn’t pay bills/daycare/child support/buy gas etc. just for the Nike Air Jordan #11 Concords

…… Wow…..

Regardless of the historical significance the release carries, if I thought it was stupid for people to sleep outside for #OccupyPhilly & #OccupyWallstreet, you can only imagine how I feel about a bunch of pseudo Jordan enthusiasts & “collectors” sleeping outside for some sneakers I had in the 3rd grade which have been released on two other separate occasions. Correct me if I’m wrong, but I thought the purpose of collecting sneakers was to have rare & limited editions which haven’t been commercially released or have been but in other countries. What I don’t think it’s about is shooting, looting, leaving your children in the car to make a purchase, & fighting over $200 6-year-old Air Jordan’s.  In Atlanta, at least four people were arrested in a mob scene at a suburban mall, according to the Associated Press. Twenty police cars responded and the crowd broke down a door to enter the mall before it opened. Police had to smash the windows of a car to get two toddlers out after a woman had left them there to go buy the shoes. She was taken into custody when she returned, according to the AP. Florida police used pepper spray on unruly shoe seekers and fights were reported in Kentucky; glass was shattered at stores in North Carolina. Frantic shoppers even tried to break down a door at one of the Indiana malls. Over the last decade, more than 45 deaths or violent incidents have been reported in relation to the release of a Jordan shoe.

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I’ve already established the fact that #N*ggasAreTooFree so there is really no need to beat a dead horse, but I do have a few concerns. Michael Jordan, as owner of the Charlotte Bobcats was an integral part of the prolonged NBA lockout. Nearly 87% of the profit from these sneakers goes into his pocket. So the man who was one of the owners who kept your precious basketball away is now your priority when just a few short weeks ago you were in distress trying to understand football to fill your sport watching needs.

Lastly, the current unemployment rate is 8.6% (15.5% for African Americans) which means most of you n*ggas are camping out because you don’t have jobs or a place to live & can’t afford the sneakers anyway. “Ballin’ on unemployment”. If you can afford it then please, by all means, spend $200 on a 6-year-old pair of sneakers if that’s how you choose to spend your money. I don’t judge people, I leave that up to  Jesus M Christ and honestly I have been guilty of being a vanity slave too. It’s like the Post Christmas Stress Syndrome; Once that temporary high is gone you’ll be left with nothing but a new excuse…You’ll be just another victim of the #PlightOfTheConcords. Until next release

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