An open letter to the Rev. Jesse Jackson
|
|
We, the members of the Mojo family,
|
feel that your actions and retoric as a self professed leader
|
of the black community are in fact detrimental to the very
|
people you claim to represent.
|
We also feel that as a result you do much to undermind the well-being
|
and harmony of the United States as a whole. You kind of work for
|
the advancement of the black community and you speak from a position
|
that the black population cannot advance itself socialy, politically
|
or economically because an immovable object, the white establishment,
|
forever blocks its path
|
Yet you preach further support such as welfare and affirmative action
|
that put members of the population in a position of dependancy and
|
reliance on the establishment
|
You bask in the glow of the media spot light, you passionately decree
|
that racism and prejudice are alive today as they were four hundred
|
years ago, but does this do anything to reverse it's effect?
|
No one with the intellegence will deny that a great atrocity was commited
|
against the black race at the hands of white settlers of this country,
|
but a wound cannot heal if it is continuously re-opened
|
That is to say, that it will heal but it will take much longer and the
|
scar it leaves will be grotesque and raise high on the skin
|
A true leader leads by example and the example you have shown is not one
|
of stregnth of character, self-reliance, commentment to excellence or
|
personal accountability
|
It's these traits that are necessary to advace oneself as an individual
|
It is only as strong curagous and moral individuals that any race can
|
live the quality of life that it chooses
|
We give our deepest respect to the true leaders:
|
Alan Keys, J.C. Watts, Tony Brown, and Dr. Walter Williams
|
Men who never deny their heritege but are proud to be first and
|
foremost a part of the human race
|
|
-----------------
|
An Open Letter
|
Stuck Mojo |