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Name: Rob Standridge
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How can we fix this

On a recent drive thru Memphis, TN, on a sales mission I was reminded of the challenges and problems of many of our black communities. With graffiti everywhere and bars on every window the area was like a lot of areas in Memphis, and honestly if I lived there I would be ashamed.

As me and my two colleagues pulled up to a pharmacy in the area, I noticed a definite hesitation in my two partners in getting out of the car. “Maybe we should just go on to the next stop”, they said as they eyed the peeling paint and the ramshackle porch of this business. Maybe because of my father’s childhood stories of growing up in the Harlem of San Francisco, or my own experiences of growing up in one of the poorer areas of Oklahoma City, I did not think anything about entering this business. In retrospect maybe it was a safety issue and not a racial discomfort that made my colleagues hesitate; I would certainly have to agree with that thought.

I am sure we surprised the slouchy, almost napping staff as we entered this place of business. I would have to say if I walked into my business and saw my staff lounging in the waiting area I would probably be finding a new staff.

As we drive away thru the rest of this area, I can’t help but share my emotions and desires to find a solution to this problem with those in the car with me. I am certain they didn’t want to hear me get on my soap box but I had to get this off my chest.

Looking back at the great Americans in our history, black and white, that gave the ultimate sacrifice to remove the bonds of racial inequality, I am certain they are saddened and possibly maddened to see the current state of some black communities like the one we were currently passing thru. If Martin Luther King, Jr. were here today I would hope he would tell the members of this community that still insist on classifying themselves as victims, that they should wake up, quit lounging on the customers’ sofa, and get to work.

However, the problem goes deeper than just those living within these communities. This culture of victimization has been carefully created over the last several decades by those few in power to help them remain in power. What these communities really need are new leaders that will teach their followers that it is not a badge of honor to say where others before you came from, but rather it should be a badge of honor to say what you have accomplished, what successes you have made.  Of course, this will be difficult because those that control the minds of this victim culture have no desire to lose this following that follows their con job with robotic consistency, and they will do everything possible to keep their culture in the gutter in exchange for their time in power and in the spotlight.

Naturally they will continue to promise that the government will eventually come in and help just as soon as the white supremists get out of the way.  Well, I have news, there are no longer any white supremists; maybe a few black supremists here and there (you know who they are – here is a test: if you take their speech and replace every mention of whites or any other term referring to white Americans either derogatory or otherwise, with black Americans, would you find the speech offensive; if so, you are listening to or reading the words of a black Supremist. I would wager that most of these black Supremists do not believe what they say, but for the most part these are those power hungry culture killers that use this language to convince their followers of their victim status and somehow convince most if not all to stay in those gutters; HELP IS ON ITS WAY), so if you are waiting for the money bags to start falling I certainly wouldn’t hold my breath.

Now, to keep the con game alive and the culture down, these men and women of power will occasionally throw money at something.  The ironic thing is typically this money is grabbed up by enterprising black Americans that don’t necessarily buy into this con but certainly are willing to play the game to build a new park or community center or something.  Those in power’s most powerful weapons, however, are social programs (aka Welfare, or what I would term socialism). And the latest stimulus bill is an excellent example of this (I am not against a stimulus bill; I am just against this stimulus bill). By expanding the welfare state, increasing the illegitimacy rate thru “sex” education (I like to call this government sponsored sex promotion) and other brilliant socialism ploys, those in power will continue to increase their strangle hold on the black culture.

I am certainly not saying that racism does not exist. It certainly does, and I believe always has and always will. But racism never has been nor ever will be a one way street.  Each race would always, if given a choice between a superior or inferior position, choose the superior position for itself (Sorry, Abe, this is a poor paraphrase for what you spoke so eloquently). I don’t think I would even call this racism, but just those in a particular group wanting the best for themselves and others within that group.  Of course, this does not make any sort of racism right, and when it gets in the way of equality it should be stopped in its tracks. What Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr. wanted was racial equality, and they can claim success.

Just as our founding fathers could claim freedom from the tyranny of England after the revolutionary war, black Americans can now claim freedom from racial inequality. Certainly the road to racial equality was not easy and I know our founders would be greatly disappointed in the time it took for this to happen. But that is in the past. Those that gave the ultimate sacrifice would say the time is finally here, so get off your butts, clean up your communities and get to work. They would say to take back your communities from a state of victimization to a state of pride. Follow the wisdom of the few black leaders that are allowed to be heard thru the slurping sounds of the Kool-Aid drinkers, and begin to take responsibility for your own. Insist upon family values, insist that fathers be responsible for their children, place neighborhood patrols to remove the stain of crime that keep customers and businesses out of your neighborhoods, help each other rebuild your homes and businesses; in other words, get up from lounging on your customers’ couch, sweep the floors, wash the windows, paint the walls, put a smile on your face and get to work.
 
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Digital TV - Give me a Break

If I see one more dollar spent on the switch to digital television I think I wll pull my hair out. In tough (or even not tough) economic times I have not seen a more colossal waste of tax payer dollars. Do tax payers realize the cost of this ridiculous campaign. We know already! What happened to sending out a post card? Give me a break!
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Common Sense visited

Ever since a recent conversation about the courage of past leaders I have been pondering how we as citizens can apply courage in our everyday lives.

Obviously our military men and women, our public servants such as fireman, policemen and others show courage and bravery constantly in the protection of those they serve. But for the rest of us how do we show courage. I think the way we can all show courage is thru the courage of our convictions, standing up for what we believe, declaring to those around us what is right, but most importantly what is wrong; in other words having the courage to express the common sense principals that we all have. I began to think about this and came to the realization that most of us today are not showing courage as we should. 

Regardless of your religion, politics or any other affiliation everyone has an underlying sense of right and wrong, a moral compass, what some might call a conscious, but what I think of as simple common sense. But for whatever reasons we give ourselves we more often than not refuse to stand up for these common sense principals. We say, “well, it’s just our culture”, or, “that’s the government for you”, both of which lead to the conclusion, “what could I possibly do?”. Take our culture for example, I got news for you, “we are our culture”. And I think it is time for everyone in America to stand up for what they know in their heart is right and wrong and begin trying to shape our culture according to our common sense principals instead of allowing a few who have abandoned what they still know is right and wrong for the purpose of power, greed, acceptance or whatever other motive they might have.

But I think more important than culture is this thinking by most Americans that the government is out of our hands. As if the government is some foreign entity. I have more news, “we are our government”. If we don’t agree with what our government is doing, if they have abandoned their common sense principals, then we MUST change it. Stand up. Get involved. Write letters. Visit your representative or senator or councilman. Don’t just sit back and say things like, “that’s a moral issue which is not the government’s issue”. This makes me think more people need to go back and research why and how our government was created. Read the writings of Thomas Paine, the most influential writer of the revolutionary and constitutional time periods. Government is a necessary evil, primarily because people are weak and, left to our own devices without government, would lead to unlawful and immoral chaos. If not the primary reason, a major reason government was created was to enforce morality.

I believe Americans need to start showing their courage of convictions or we may doom future generations to a country not as good as the one we are blessed with. We need to start looking to our common sense and examining everything in our life, our culture and our government and say to ourselves, “is that right?”. We need to quit being selfish to our personal indulgences and begin to realize that we are just here to prepare this country for the next generation. Some people are so selfish that they do not realize that the most important cause they have is protecting America for those that would follow, until they are on their death bed; and sadly sometimes some never realize it.

We have become such a selfish, self-absorbed country that we will do anything for our short term gratification even though we know it is not right. Where are those great Americans that regardless of the desire to fit in, regardless of their desire for power, regardless of their compassion and regardless of their wish to fulfill a selfish desire, they stood up for what they knew in their heart was wrong. We need citizens and leaders like that now more than ever. Certainly America has had many great citizens and leaders in our past, men and women who stood up for what they believed in.

What is even more saddening to me is that not only are we not showing courage of our convictions but for the sake of power and acceptance we are willing to besmirch those that are willing to stand up for common sense. In fact, I was reminded of one of, if not the greatest leader in our history, a few weeks ago when a colleague mentioned Abraham Lincoln. Unfortunately I was also reminded of how great people can be maligned for the sake of the pursuit of power or other reasons, when his primary remark of Lincoln was that Lincoln was surely a racist and removed slavery only for economic reasons (Okay, now I understand, a man that preached the immorality of slavery his entire political career, destroyed the economy of his country to gain a small economic advantage for the north half of his country. Hmmm… Not buying it.). Of course, I am not saying that this colleague knowingly did this, for I am certain he simply is repeating someone else’s misrepresentations of Mr. Lincoln’s views by taking something the President said completely out of context. Even though I might not agree with President Obama on many issues I could not have been more proud of my country on election night. But having studied much about our history including President Lincoln I was even more proud of how our forefathers brought us to this point. Lincoln is the perfect example of someone that stood up for what he believed in his heart was wrong, even though it was socially and politically unacceptable.  He realized that it was the United States’ people and leaders that shaped this great country not the country which shaped the people. By today’s standards he might be considered racist, although many comments by Frederick Douglass, probably the greatest African American of the civil war era, suggest otherwise, but by the standards of his time he was considered a radical abolitionist (I won’t mention the other things he was called by his political opponents). I don’t think anyone could argue that if Lincoln had lost to his opponent, slavery would have at least several more decades and probably longer as his opponent was in favor of several bills that would have protected slave owning states and broadened the legalization of slavery into the expanding areas of our country.

What I hear to today whether talking to someone during a business trip or visiting with a friend at church is the idea that we are powerless. All we can do is take care of our immediate family and that it is beyond our control to change our culture and our government. This can’t be further from the truth. It is almost like separatism or isolationism within our country, where those that listen to their moral compass are not willing to stand up for what they know is wrong or right. You can have compassion and still take a stance for what you know is wrong or right. I would ask each person to examine their conscious, look at the society around them and ask themselves, am I making a stand for what is right and wrong so that our children and others’ children inherit a country that is great, both morally and filled with the same opportunities that us and our forefathers have had. Or are we dooming those that follow with a world where the immoral is the norm and where the American Dream is lost for the sake of power for the few.

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