Good morning and Happy Monday to everyone who won’t forget that trump removed MLK Jr. Day and Juneteenth from National Park free-entry days, then added his own birthday.
The disrespect is deliberate.
They both had been shunned by their respective organizations for speaking the truth and were on their way to uniting. Imagine what they would’ve accomplished together…..and that’s exactly why they (and we all know who they are) didn’t allow that to happen
#MLKDay2026
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PRAY ...… Like Nehemiah
BUILD ..... Like Noah
LEAD ....... Like Moses
FAITH …… Like Abraham
OBEY ....…. Like Daniel
FIGHT ....... Like David
SERVE ....… Like Martha
BELIEVE ..... Like Mary
EDUCATE … Like Paul
LOVE ..……….. Like JESUS
Can I get an “AMEN” ???
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Mainstream media want play this King: Dr. Martin Luther King always understood the assignment and he allowed God to lead him every way even in fear.
Dr. King delivered his final Sunday sermon, titled "Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution," on March 31, 1968. He spoke from the Canterbury Pulpit at the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., just four days before his assassination.
The sermon used the story of Rip Van Winkle—who slept through the American Revolution—as a metaphor for the risk of failing to recognize and participate in the social changes of the 1960s. King outlined three major "revolutions" requiring attention:
•Technological Revolution: He noted that scientific genius had turned the world into a "neighborhood" and challenged Americans to make it a "brotherhood".
•Revolution in Weaponry: He warned that human survival depended on ending war, particularly the Vietnam War, which he critiqued for diverting resources from social needs.
•Human Rights Revolution: He urged the nation to eradicate racism and poverty, calling for the government to address the "invisible" 40 million Americans living in poverty.
#GodsWork #MLK #Sermon #Sunday
#MartinLutherKingJr
If you cannot fly, then run. If you cannot run, then walk.
If you cannot walk, then crawl, but whatever you do, you have to keep moving forward.
If I cannot do great things, I can do small things in a great way.
—Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther King Jr. understood better than almost anyone that racial justice and economic justice are inextricably intertwined. Watch his powerful call to end poverty from his final Sunday Sermon.
@LoniLove Your show was amazing. You kept us laughing the entire set. And thank you for recognizing the @NotReaching pouch on The Real. We could use your support again. Thank you
Mitch McConnell just said the quiet part out loud on Greenland:
We already have everything we need.
Greenland already cooperates.
Our Arctic access already exists.
What Trump is proposing isn’t strategy, it’s burning allied trust for nothing.
“Incinerating the hard-won trust of loyal allies” is not strength. It’s self-sabotage.
🚨 | Lewis Hamilton: “You can’t compare me to another 40-year-old, past or present, F1driver. Because they are nothing like me.”
“I’m hungry, driven, don’t have a wife and kids. I’m focused on one thing, and that’s winning.”
🚨 | Lewis Hamilton: “Don’t ever compare me to anybody else. I’m the first and only Black driver that’s ever been in this sport.”
“I’m built different.”
Reginald Francis Lewis was the first black American to build a billion-dollar company. He was born on December 7, 1942 in Baltimore, Maryland. The creation of TLC Beatrice International Holdings, Inc by Lewis was an amazing feat of hard work, remarkable ingenuity and true genius from a man who grew up in a middle class Baltimore neighborhood. Lewis died on January 19, 1993 in New York City at age 50 due to brain cancer.
Reginald would have become the first black billionaire if he would not have succumbed to brain cancer at the age of 50 in 1993. At the time of his death, he was the richest African-American in U.S. history. Lewis started out as a attorney and became the first black man to head his own law firm on Wall Street. In 1987, he mastered a $1 billion dollar purchase of TLC Beatrice, a giant food distributor with 64 companies in 34 countries. Lewis would go on to run a business empire spanning four continents.
In his spare time, he mentored African-American students and entrepreneurs. Lewis donated $1 million dollars to Howard University and $3 million to Harvard Law School where a building is named in his honor. He holds the distinction of the being the only African-American with a building named in his honor on a Ivy League campus.
In the early 90's, Lewis tried unsuccessfully to buy the Baltimore Orioles. After his death, his brother and his widow Loida ran TLC Beatrice, they would eventually sale the company for billions. At the time of his death, Reginald Lewis was worth $500 million dollars.