tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7064777598104498166.post1904127474640716477..comments2024-03-29T02:31:01.798-07:00Comments on Thinking Humanity: A Black Woman Confronted Neo-Nazis And The KKK. Watch What Happened Next!Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7064777598104498166.post-77927194317468701632018-04-18T04:28:11.446-07:002018-04-18T04:28:11.446-07:00Female Escorts :When she was questioned about her ...<br /><br />Female Escorts :When she was questioned about her motive on why she entered the competition, she replied that she loves challenges. She loves experiences. And quoting Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, she said: "We aren't personalities having a non secular experience. We have a tendency to are spiritual beings having a person's experience." Then she added,"And i am here on Earth for the experience!"<br />Female Escorts,High Class Call Girls,Escorts Girls,Escorts ,Escorts near me<br /><a dir="ltr" href="https://www.escortscart.com/" rel="nofollow">Female Escorts</a><br /><br />escortscarthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06268176880131404745noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7064777598104498166.post-46470599900816105882016-01-08T03:04:41.403-08:002016-01-08T03:04:41.403-08:00Very brave action! You have my respect!Very brave action! You have my respect!Veronika Tomanováhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17283507280026132606noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7064777598104498166.post-38410952683899795792015-08-15T04:25:43.384-07:002015-08-15T04:25:43.384-07:00These are the actions that change the world, and c...These are the actions that change the world, and change hearts. The anger and outrage promoted by a handful, black and white, is not changing the world. In the 1960s, it was not the Black Panthers and riots in the streets that changed our laws; it was the work of people like Martin Luther King, who stood staunchly by his beliefs, but by holding up a model of hope, of love and showed white people something they could love and admire, and the world responded.<br /><br />We have made great progress, but there are a handful of narrowminded people that still want to live in the racists past. There are still legacies from the outright discrimination that gave black people a poorer education, propagated through generations, as today's kids grow up without the support of well-educated parents who make them do homework and study. <br /><br />These are the problems we need to fix, but we will not fix them from a state of outrage, but of realistically seeing just what is truly there, seeing what can be fixed and seeing what changes in social policy are needed to continue the progress we have made.<br /><br />Even recently, we have seen symbols of racial hatred removed from state buildings. This was not done in response to the outrage and riots over Ferguson, which only made things worse. But the outpouring of love to see decent people killed in Charleston and the loving response of family members that forgave, and prayed, not for a white man that took black lives, but prayed to God to reconnect with a man who had lost contact with God. <br /><br />That accomplished in days that decades of anger and outrage failed to accomplish. <br /><br />Good for all who can respond as this woman did; good for all who can see this and understand the ways forward. She makes me proud to be a human being, and proud in what the United States really IS trying to accomplish.Ed Hare, W1RFI@arrl.orghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02485227665059017168noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7064777598104498166.post-83224589311655176242015-08-15T04:25:36.976-07:002015-08-15T04:25:36.976-07:00These are the actions that change the world, and c...These are the actions that change the world, and change hearts. The anger and outrage promoted by a handful, black and white, is not changing the world. In the 1960s, it was not the Black Panthers and riots in the streets that changed our laws; it was the work of people like Martin Luther King, who stood staunchly by his beliefs, but by holding up a model of hope, of love and showed white people something they could love and admire, and the world responded.<br /><br />We have made great progress, but there are a handful of narrowminded people that still want to live in the racists past. There are still legacies from the outright discrimination that gave black people a poorer education, propagated through generations, as today's kids grow up without the support of well-educated parents who make them do homework and study. <br /><br />These are the problems we need to fix, but we will not fix them from a state of outrage, but of realistically seeing just what is truly there, seeing what can be fixed and seeing what changes in social policy are needed to continue the progress we have made.<br /><br />Even recently, we have seen symbols of racial hatred removed from state buildings. This was not done in response to the outrage and riots over Ferguson, which only made things worse. But the outpouring of love to see decent people killed in Charleston and the loving response of family members that forgave, and prayed, not for a white man that took black lives, but prayed to God to reconnect with a man who had lost contact with God. <br /><br />That accomplished in days that decades of anger and outrage failed to accomplish. <br /><br />Good for all who can respond as this woman did; good for all who can see this and understand the ways forward. She makes me proud to be a human being, and proud in what the United States really IS trying to accomplish.Ed Hare, W1RFI@arrl.orghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02485227665059017168noreply@blogger.com