Tagged: break the cycle

“The worst disease under which the society of our nation suffers, is, in my opinion, the treatment of the Negro. Everyone who is not used from childhood to this injustice suffers from the mere observation. Everyone who freshly learns of this state of affairs at a maturer age, feels not only the injustice, but the scorn of the principle of the Fathers ho founded the United States that ‘all men are created equal.’ He feels that this state of affairs is unsound in a country which in many other things is justly proud of a high degree of development. He cannot understand how men can feel superior to fellow-men who differ in only one point from the rest: They descend from ancestors who, as a protection against the destructive action of the radiation of the tropical sun, gained a more strongly pigmented skin than those whose ancestors lived in countries farther from the equator. One can hardly believe that a reasonable man can cling so tenaciously to such a prejudice, and there is sure to come a time in which school-children in their history lessons will laugh about the fact that something like this did once exist.”

Source: Message to the National Urban League Convention, September 16, 1946.

is a judiciary that’s been HISTORICALLY OVERREPRESENTED by whites capable of impartially determining that another HISTORICALLY all-white/”Jewish” institution (e.g. William Morris Endeavor Entertainment) is intentionally excluding QUALIFIED AFRICAN AMERICANS from meaningful positions of employment and maintaining employment practices, policies and procedures that violate the Civil Rights Act of 1964, New York City Human Rights Laws and other statutes prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race, color and/or national origin?

It’s like the pot calling the kettle black (example below). Not only are these racist and highly corrupt institutions “too big to fail,” they are also “too big to admit the truth” as well. What’s the solution to this never ending problem?

potcallingkettleblackhollywoodjudiciarykkk

“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” — George Santayana

“If [racial] bias exists amongst those who have the power and control over the marketplace of ideas – from our news to film – the Court must consider what effect this has on the millions absorbing these subtly tainted messages and how that influences their views – consciously and unconsciously – on race.” — MIW, May 3, 2011.

My second public interest argument briefly discussed William Morris and Hollywood’s (e.g. talent agencies, film studios, television networks, and the media) “cabal-like practices” and its direct effect on shaping the thoughts, values, beliefs, behavior, etc. of millions of human beings throughout the world via powerful communicative mediums such as television and film. (¶62-69; Emergency Motion, 15-16.) In Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson, 343 U.S. 495 (1952), the Supreme Court expressed that film was a “significant medium for the communication of ideas.” According to “State of Media: TV Usage Trends Q2 2010” data released by Nielsen, there are an estimated 286 million persons in the U.S. viewing an average of 143 hours of television each month. (“Exhibit D”) As our nation’s education ranking continues to decline globally, television has become a large source for how Americans receive information. The research indicates that these mediums of “social conditioning” are a major source for unconscious racism and have the ability to distort our views on race as early as age four. If bias exists amongst those who have the power and control over the marketplace of ideas – from our news to film – the Court must consider what effect this has on the millions absorbing these subtly tainted messages and how that influences their views – consciously and unconsciously – on race. [pg. 9]