This Black Man Created Many Famous Black Shows And They Tried To Erase Him.

Norman Lear is credited as the creator of many Black T.V. shows and characters....
but in reality credit belongs to a very talented and creative Black man that was exploited
and eventually left bankrupt while greedy, racist network executives raked in big money
with the help of a corrupt, complicit legal system.

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We don't have many options...

It seems like we have the option to vote red and hope for change, vote blue and continue to shoot ourselves in the foot, or don't vote and pray things don't get worse.

The midterms are about a week away. I was not intending on voting but at this point, I feel like I have to and as much as I don't want to do it, I am voting red.

I can't deal with my food costs going up, gas going up, everything that has been happening the last 2 years killed my 5 year plan. I intended on getting a house and I am in a worse position now than I was in 2019. Because of inflation my raise at work was even canceled out. My rent went up. I just can't deal with it anymore. Now they are saying we are almost out of diesel which means gas prices are going to shoot up even high and the cost of production will likely double. Everything is going to get more expensive unless something is done.

I am sick of hearing about abortions and climate change. We need something done to help us now and help our families now. We need prices coming down. We need the mortgage rates to drop. We need it to be easier to open a business. The fight for abortion and climate change has done NOTHING for black people. Not a damn thing. Why we keep voting for people who support this shit?

People Return To Offices, Productivity Plunges


Commentary

One of the most interesting things about the pandemic, at least from an employment perspective, is that productivity didn’t suffer as a result of remote work.

In many cases, employees became even more productive while working from home, either because they were happier or because they were making an extra effort to impress far-away bosses.

Now comes word from the Bureau of Labor Statistics that productivity plunged during the first half of 2022, down by the sharpest rate since the 1940s.

Economists are trying to come up with explanations for the decline, and to understand what this means for post-pandemic changes to the workplace, including hybrid schedules that allow more time out of the office.

My hunch is that many workers are letting their employers know that things are different now.

First, there’s the trend of “quiet quitting,” by which some employees throttle back on their work tempo to express a recalibration of their work-life balance. That is, they’re reprioritizing the importance of work in their lives.

More important, I suspect, productivity is falling because many people simply came away from the pandemic feeling that their employer wasn’t there for them in a meaningful fashion as Mr. Corona pushed us all around.

And now that many businesses are once again requiring a physical presence in the office, some employees are consciously or subconsciously expressing their dissatisfaction by taking their foot off the gas pedal, as it were.

People who previously went above and beyond at work are now giving little more than the expected output.

People who previously gave only the expected output are now just going through the motions.

Managers will say this is a problem with their workforce. I see it more as a management issue.

If managers can’t motivate their staffs with positive, satisfying workplaces, they’ll see productivity fall by the wayside.

Some managers are even responding to the changes by imposing productivity-tracking software on employees — programs that monitor how long you’re at your desk and how busy you are at the keyboard.

I may not know how precisely to create a positive, satisfying workplace. But I know that spying on employees isn’t a great start.

So, yeah, productivity is down as wary workers are returning to offices.

It’s not rocket science.

I Tested Positive for COVID

Yesterday morning I had a meeting at 8AM…right after it was done I felt extremely sick and weak. I immediately head to the bed…I had chest pain, shortness of breath, my head was hot but my body was shivering cold. I was so weak and in so much pain, it sucked. Sleeping was hard because my temperature was so elevated. I popped two benadryls while listening to Taharka Bey and had a dream about discovering some moorish secrets. It was strange AF. I took a test this morning and it came back positive so I’ma lay low the next week.

I feel better today but I’m still bed ridden and weak. COVID is no joke.

Firefighters Lied After Leaving Black Children To Die In House Fire

Two Flint, Michigan firefighters gave an "all clear" during a house fire that left two Black children, Zyaire Mitchell and Lamar Mitchell, dead. Sgt. Daniel Sniegocki and Michael Zlotek were the firefighters that completed false reports. Dr. Rashad Richey and Trae Crowder discuss on Indisputable
always remember during the civil rights era and before, who hosed our ancestors ...?
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A Suspected White Supremacist Journalist Compares The NOI to Nazis.

The Hill News Show 'Rising' Co-Host Robby Suave Jr. Compares Nation Of Islam To Nazi Protesters
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And this is why you don't trust white Libertarians either.



Robert Emil "Robby" Soave, Jr.[2](/swɑːveɪ/, SWAH-vay)[3] is an American journalist who is a senior editor for Reason. He is the author of two books: Panic Attack: Young Radicals in the Age of Trump (2019) and Tech Panic: Why We Shouldn't Fear Facebook and the Future (2021).

Robby Soave
FYfeL3b.jpg

Soave at an event in Washington, D.C. in 2015
Born1988/1989 (age 33–34)[1]
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
OccupationJournalist
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Michigan
Literary movementLibertarianism[citation needed]
Notable awardsSouthern California Journalism Award (2015)
Soave was born in Detroit, Michigan and graduated from the University of Michigan. In 2015, he won a Southern California Journalism Award from the Los Angeles Press Club for his writing about the Rolling Stone story "A Rape on Campus".[4][5] He was named in Forbes' "30 under 30" list in 2016.[5] In 2019, he gained media attention for his writings defending the Covington Catholic High School students involved in the Lincoln Memorial confrontation.[6][7][8] He lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife, where he serves on the D.C. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.[9]

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If you could go back in time and live free of issues, where would you go?

Is there a time in the past, maybe a decade you'd like to go back to and live your life? Let's say the hate and abuse during that time is no longer present, and you can live your best life, free of racism and hate. What decade would you choose? It can be any time in the past, or hell, even the future if you want.

I have a lot of nostalgia for the 80s and 90s, so I'm kinda tempted to go back to around then and revisit it. I kinda want to go back and experience gaming for the first time, to have that sense of wonder playing something so new and fresh. I don't get that feeling with video games these days.

How far back would you want to go? Maybe before the internet? Maybe before even TV?

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