Soledad O'Brien's Black in America 2 on CNN
was much more dignified and goal oriented than the first one. I felt that her
goal in the second episode was to inform Black America on what it needed to do
to rise above any obstacle to succeed. The eight points in the documentary
were:
First, it showed that to be truly free is
to be diverse, educated, and informed. Many blacks due to the effects of
slavery stay in their locality under the umbrella of poverty and illiteracy
without challenging the mental walls that keeps them separated from their
ancestry and the ability to be a giver. Low-income kids went to Africa to
understand a different way of life and to make a pledge to be a giver. This is
the spiritual journey every Black American must make to bring out the spirit of
giving.
Second, it is clear that boys need their
fathers more than anything, and women must take the responsibility of choosing
who they reproduce with seriously. The girls who came back from Africa
increased their grades and abilities tremendously after 6 months, while the
fatherless boys made no progress whatsoever.
Third, Mr. Steve Perry of Capital Prep
School showed us that care and mentoring is supreme. You must practice what you
become. By putting kids to learn in college environs makes them want to be
there.
Fourth, the affluent Blacks gladly separate
themselves from the rest of the Black society. While many Blacks complain about
unemployment and discrimination at work, what are these rich Blacks doing about
it? Where are their companies that should be keeping many Blacks comfortably
employed away from racism? Thanks to John Rice of Management Leadership for
Tomorrow (MLT) for preparing our youths for the Fortune 500 Companies. Rice
said that it is not racism keeping Blacks down, but rather, the lack of affluent
Blacks showing them the opportunities.
Fifth, Black women tend to be proud of
their single motherhood status and have no shame about their out of wedlock
kids, but the program clearly shows us that this is what is damaging the Black
family. We now have a Black generation not knowing the advantages of two parent
homes, so they grow up not know how to be effective parents and spouses.
Sixth, Jobs must be available to all that
have done the time for their crime. They should be able to vote, work, and have
all their rights back. This cripples the Black community because many of the
men can not return to be good fathers with little or no pay. This is a
systematic trap to return to prison.
Seventh, good education, love for each
other, and mentorship usually results to people thinking about good health and
longevity in order to enjoy what they have.
Lastly, like Tyler Perry and Edofolks.com,
Black America is bound to rise mightily as long as we see failure, lack,
oppression, poverty, and struggle as a foundation for guaranteed success through
hard work and persistence. |