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Book Excerpt Of The Week: “Success Never Smelled So Sweet” By: Lisa Price

“Here’s what my experience has taught me: When you take responsibility for your choices and always strive to do the right thing, little miracles take place in your life. They happen every day, so keep your eyes and heart open to them. Over time, they build on each other and create momentum in your world. […]

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Riddle Me This: The Suggestible Mind Edition

“Imagine that I’m a professor, and I’ve asked you to come and see me in my office. You walk down a long corridor, come through the doorway, and sit down at a table. In front of you is a sheet of paper with a list of five-word sets. I want you to make a grammatical […]

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The Fly Or Die Commerce Report: Rule 72

“There is a law called Rule 72 (72 divided by interest equals the number of years to double investment) which most people have never been taught. It’s also unfortunate that in America you can receive an elementary, high school and college education and never be taught Rule 72. If you earn 1% on your money, […]

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Definitions Better Than Webster’s: Income vs. Wealth

“Income requires that you continue to work either for someone or yourself.” -From, “Black Economics: Solutions for Economic and Community Empowerment” By: Jawanza Kunjufu Tweet

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Book Excerpt Of The Week: “Black Economics: Solutions for Economic and Community Empowerment” By: Jawanza Kunjufu

“In Africa, land was always recognized as belonging to the community. Each individual within our society had a right to use the land because otherwise he could not earn his living. One cannot have the right to life without also having the right to some means of maintaining life. The Africans right to land was […]

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Quote Of The Day

The people’s power ‘is like the light of the sun, native, original, inherent, and unlimited by human authority,’ while ‘power in the rulers or governors of the people is like the reflected light of the moon, and is borrowed, delegated and limited by the grant of the people.’” -From, “At the Hands of Persons Unknown” […]

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NY Is The Original Trendsetter When It Comes To “Urban Renewal”

“In 1949, the federal government enacted a new approach to the housing problems in cities: urban renewal. The approach was now both in philosophy- for the first time in America, government was given the right to seize an individual’s private property not for its own use but for reassignment to another individual for his use […]

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Black History Fact Of The Day

“Graduating from Fisk University in Nashville in 1888, he took a second bachelor’s degree at Harvard in 1890 and an MA in history there in 1892, then went to Europe for two years’ study at Friedrich-Wilhelm University in Ohio and the next year became the first black to be awarded as Ph.D. at Harvard. In […]

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Book Excerpt Of The Week, “Muhammad Ali: Through The Eyes Of The World” By: Various Contributors

“During the Cold War, the U.S. establishment very much wanted to project itself as a liberal and tolerant, and multi-racial society because they were in a competition with the Soviet Union for influence over the emergent nations in Africa and Asia. The problem was that the U.S. wasn’t actually like that. The world that emerged […]

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How Powerful Are Our Words?

Scientist, Dr. Masaru Emoto, did an experiment on the power of words and intentions. He used water as his test subject. This was pertinent because the human body is mostly composed of water. Dr. Masaru spoke loving words to one glass of water, and hateful words to another. He found that the water that received […]

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