Saturday, April 11, 2009

Nimrod, Christmas & Easter

Nimrod married his mother Ester when Moses (Musa) was sent to the devils 4,000 years ago). This meant the end of the Blackman's power to keep them in their boundaries of Europe. This brought them out of the caves putting them on the road to the conquest of Asia, (Black, Brown, Red and Yellow man).

Nimrod killed his father and began sleeping with his mother, Ester, known today as the holiday called Easter.

She had children by her son Nimrod, making Nimrod his own father and son, which was the beginning of the lie that God and son are one And the same. It's true that this made Nimrod, his own father but the father and the son could never be identical. This is also where the lie originated of the "Immaculate Conception" woman giving birth without the agency of man.

Nimrod and his mother were worshipped by the people, and knowing that if they found out that she was bearing her son's children they would not respect her, she lied telling the people that the spirit was visiting her, giving her babies.

The people, being paganish, believed those lies thus establishing a holiday called Easter commemorating her birthday. They used the sign of the rabbit, which is an over-sexed animal; and eggs representing the first stage of the "embryo" chicken, which is capable of laying eggs without a male, was also used. Read more...

Also read

Resurrection is a common occurrence

"And We Made The Son Of Mary And His Mother A Sign, And We Gave Them Refuge On A Lofty Ground Having Meadows And Springs"



The Origin Easter Part 1





Urban League offers solutions to problems

By Richard Muhammad

The National Urban League's watershed annual report, “The State of Black America 2009: Message to the President,” calls on the president and the society to deal with negative indicators and the continued problem of racial inequality in American life.

The March 25 report also offers answers in 12 essays that cover education, health, jobs, and home ownership. Read the solutions...


Related articles

Can Black men survive falling U.S. economy?

A recent study indicates that of the major ethnic groups impacted by unemployment during the current U.S. recession, Black men have experienced the greatest job losses since the crisis officially began in November 2007.



Electricity Grid in U.S. Penetrated By Spies

By SIOBHAN GORMAN

Cyberspies have penetrated the U.S. electrical grid and left behind software programs that could be used to disrupt the system, according to current and former national-security officials.

The spies came from China, Russia and other countries, these officials said, and were believed to be on a mission to navigate the U.S. electrical system and its controls. The intruders haven't sought to damage the power grid or other key infrastructure, but officials warned they could try during a crisis or war. Read more...




Look, there's a Russian sitting in your electrical socket! ( and a Chinese too)

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Five Keys to Help Black Start-ups Increase Access to Capital

While the struggling economy has definitely served as a catalyst for encouraging African Americans to consider starting their own businesses, current research from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation shows that black-owned businesses continue to face barriers to access to capital that may be based on race.

In an interview, Daryl Williams, director of minority entrepreneurship programs at the Kauffman Foundation told Black Voices: "It is time for black people to understand that the investment in their community is not just the function of banks," Mr. Williams said. "Maybe faith-based organizations, professional organizations and individual investors are going to have to step up and provide alternative types of funding for businesses." Read more...


Apartheid victims win right to sue companies in US

apartheid02In a major court ruling, victims of South Africa’s apartheid era have won the right to sue General Motors, IBM and other multi-national corporations for complicity in human rights abuses.

A federal judge in New York gave the green light Wednesday for class actions against the corporations under US law allowing rights claims from abroad to be addressed in a US court.

Read more…

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Fidel Castro asks US lawmakers how to improve ties

By WILL WEISSERT Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., front, reacts during a news conference in Havana,

A "very healthy, very energetic" Fidel Castro asked visiting Congressional Black Caucus members what Cuba could do to  help President Barack Obama improve bilateral relations during his first meeting with U.S. officials since falling ill in 2006.

Caucus leader Rep. Barbara Lee, a Democrat from California, said the ailing former Cuban president talked for nearly two hours with her and two other delegation members on Tuesday in a meeting seen as signaling Cuba's willingness to discuss better relations with the United States.  Read more...




Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Supreme Court Denies Appeal for Death Row Prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal

Mumia-web

The Supreme Court has denied an appeal from the journalist and former Black Panther Mumia Abu-Jamal. On Monday, the court rejected without comment Abu-Jamal’s bid to overturn his conviction for the 1981 killing of a white police officer following a controversial trial before a predominantly white jury. Abu-Jamal contends the case was marred with racial bias, including the deliberate exclusion of blacks from the jury. “It shows you that precedent means nothing, that the law is politics by other means,” Abu-Jamal said in response to the ruling. Read full article



Obama extends olive branch to Muslims

President Obama, visiting a Muslim nation Monday for the first time since his inauguration, declared that the United States will "never be at war with Islam" and urged Muslims to join in defeating extremists whose "violent ideologies" fuel terrorism. In a speech that echoed the public statements of his predecessor, Mr. Obama praised Islam as a religion that "has done so much ... Read more...


Monday, April 6, 2009

De Beers Halts Diamond Exploration Project in Congo

De Beers, the world’s largest diamond producer, halted exploration in Democratic Republic of Congo as the declining value in gems made the project unviable.

De Beers said in February it suspended mining at a Botswana venture responsible for a fifth of global diamond supply and would borrow $500 million from shareholders. Jewelry sales are plunging as the global economic slowdown forces even the wealthiest consumers to curb spending on luxury goods. Read more....




20% of U.S. preschoolers are obese

By Lindsey Tanner

A striking new study says almost 1 in 5 American 4-year-olds is obese, and the rate is alarmingly higher among American Indian children, with nearly a third of them obese.

Researchers were surprised to see differences by race at so early an age. Read more...

Related articles


Pfizer to Pay £50m After Deaths of Nigerian Children in Drug Trial Experiment

by Daniel Howden

http://www.thewe.cc/thewei/_/images_3/nigeria/brain_damaged_boy.jpeOut of court settlement in the case that inspired 'The Constant Gardener'

In real life it was to Nigeria, not Kenya, that Pfizer turned. In 1996, the company needed a human trial for what it hoped would be a pharmaceutical "blockbuster", a broad spectrum antibiotic that could be taken in tablet form. The US-based company sent a team of its doctors into the Nigerian slum city of Kano in the midst of an appaling meningitis epidemic to perform what it calls a "humanitarian mission". However the accusers claim it was an unlicensed medical trial on critically-ill children. Read more...

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Why the Poor are Poor

ghetto (4K)Biblically, there are three types of poor people in the world: the oppressed poor, the slothful poor, and the irresponsible poor. The oppressed poor are fatalities of the rich. Field hands, workers and laborers that feed the wheels of big industry. Scripture says, "But ye have despised the poor. Do not rich men oppress you, and draw you before the judgment seats?" - James 2:6. Read more...


The Statistics are in on American Racism

whitesonly2 (7K)Logic and common sense in addition to these stats can safely crunch the numbers and conclude that at or around 55% of, or close to three-forth of white America has negative feelings toward Blacks, subtly or outward. Not only can we conclude their feelings, but we can attached those feelings to direct action toward Blacks, including youth, women, Black men, and children and Black America collectively. In areas of economics, politics, health, education, judicially, and socially, we now know that there are biases toward Blacks based on false assumption, stereotypes, and media misinformation. Read more....




Fancy N.Y. Restaurants See Black Wait Staff as Bad for Business

Fancy restaurants in New York apparently see Black wait staff as bad for business.

A new study by economist Marc Bendick Jr., came up with the same old results: White job applicants are considerably “more likely to get follow-up interviews, be offered jobs and given information about jobs, and their work histories were less likely to be investigated in detail,” The New York Times reported Tuesday. Read more...




AMOS, ANDY & CNNa s D.L. HUGHLEY

On October 25th of this past year, just days before the most important election of our time, CNN débuted the D.L. Hughley "Breaks The News" segment which portrayed African-Americans as people you should certainly not entrust with the Presidency.

The show left hundreds of thousands of viewers hurt and outraged wondering why CNN or D.L. Hughley for that matter, with a staff of highly educated writers and producers would even allow offensive and degrading images into our living rooms. The question is simple
enough and so is the answer, money, money, money. Read more...