Category Archives: MRCi

How Many Did You Have?: The Case of the Missing Black Male Teacher

Please join our intellectual community for a historically grounded discussion over “The Case of the Missing Black Male Teacher.”

The MRCi (Manhood, Race, and Culture Interactive) discussion begins promptly at 7:30 Eastern Standard Time & 6:30 Central Standard Time. Please click this link to join the discussion.

We will discuss the following issues.

  • Why are there so few Black Male educators? 
  • Why do we need Black Male educators?
  • What can we do to improve the presence of Black Male educators?
  • Does the presence of Black Male teachers possess the power to significantly improve the academic and life performance of young Black Males?
  • Does the use of a standardized curriculum remove influence and power from Black educators?

So, once again, please join our intellectual community that is filled with teachers, collegians, professors, community activists, and scholars by clicking this link for an intriguing discussion regarding a pertinent issue facing Black America. The discussion begins promptly at 7:30 Eastern Standard Time & 6:30 Central Standard Time.

We are looking forward to hearing your perspective.

What does it mean to be a Black Man in America Today? — A MRCi event

Please join us tonight for an insightful panel discussion with a cross-section of Black America discussing “What does it mean to be a Black man in America Today?”

Tonight’s program promises to be a particularly riveting discussion as it is our initial panel discussion. Please feel free to join us.

Please click on any of the links to join us tonight. The discussion will begin at 7:30 (EST) / 6:30 (CST)

Mental Health in the Black Community: Strategies for Being Black and Sane While Craziness Swirls Around You

Please join MRCi (Manhood, Race, and Culture interactive) tonight (October 15, 2020) at 7:30 (EST) — 6:30 pm (CST) for an important program on Mental Health in Black America.

Mental Health practitioner Sister Misty Chanel Pruitt will present via Zoom on Mental Health in the Black Community: Strategies for being Black and Sane While Craziness Swirls Around You. Please join us to learn strategies to keep you sane in the midst of everyday craziness.

The program begins tonight at 7:30 (EST) — 6:30 pm (CST). Please click here to join us.

What the GET YOUR BOOTY TO THE POLL initiative tells us about apolitical black males

  • Please join us tonight (10/8/2020) @ 7:30 EST — 6:30 CST as we discuss this topic. Click here to gain entry.

Although it may be difficult to believe, I have moments where black males of all ages challenge my sanity. Trust me when I say that the words of trusted friend William A. Foster IV’s comment that

The black intellectual is the loneliest person on the planet

resonates within my soul. In this era of “wokeness,” my encounters with black men who prefer to pontificate about irrelevant revisionist history topics instead of developing liberation are increasing.

Experience has taught me that some Black males have doused themselves in outlandish conspiracy theories and revisionist history interpretations informed by nothing more than ridiculous half-baked YouTube and Facebook videos. I have learned that such people prefer unproductive conversations that hide their cowardice behind crazy talk and unrealistic goals. I am convinced that if Frederick Douglass were alive, he would address these loud-mouth phrasemongers with the following admonishment.

It is not light that we need, but fire; it is not the gentle shower, but thunder. We need the storm, the whirlwind, and the earthquake.

I am confident that not even Frederick Douglass could move such people beyond endless discussions of irrelevant historical facts that hold no potential to liberate blacks.

Such people foolishly believe that their careless talk paints them as a formidable opponent to mighty whites. The alluded to idiocy is an obvious sign of their unwillingness to abandon their rabble-rousing in favor of meaningful politics. I have tired of planting black liberation seeds in barren soil.

It appears as if I am not the only one frustrated with black males’ disengagement with the political arena. As the 2020 election season approaches, the usual groundswell of getting out the Vote is occurring. Predictably, few of these endeavors target black male voters.

My how things have changed

The latest group to address this issue of getting black males to the Poll are exotic dancers. Yes, you read that correctly, a rising tide of exotic dancers are imploring apolitical black men to get their booty to the Poll.

The women behind Get Your Booty to the Poll may be able to reach black men who have ignored standard voter registration drive initiatives. This latest effort to get out the black male vote is innovative, intriguing, and problematic.

Although the Get Your Booty to the Poll effort is notable, it raises troubling questions regarding why some black males are so afraid to confront other groups on the political battlefield? The prophetic words of Fred Hampton, Chairman of the Chicago-branch of the Black Panther Party, should haunt many black males. According to Hampton,

War is nothing but politics with bloodshed, and politics is nothing but war without bloodshed.

I reserve the coward label for extreme circumstances.

How strange would it be if the missing ingredient in getting black males to the Poll is booty cheeks? Most of us could never fathom that instead of political education classes and voter registration drives, our efforts would have been much more productive had we used sultry black women to swing on poles with the words “Vote! Vote!” on their left and right cheeks?

The above leads me to ask the following question.

Have black males fallen into a bottomless abyss of foolishness and political ineptitude?

It is incredibly disappointing that our best hope to grasp the attention of apolitical black males is by writing the word Vote on the booty cheeks of scantily clad strippers. Lord knows that I wish that we weren’t in the midst of such an important political season; however, this moment mandates unprecedented voter turnout for apparent reasons. It appears that the nation’s future direction may be determined by how many black males are coaxed into a voting booth by booty cheeks.

I guess that in the end, a vote is a vote after all.

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

© Manhood, Race, and Culture, 2020.

 

Beyond the Gun: A Discussion of the Black Panther Party’s Political Education Programs

Please join MRCi — Manhood, Race, and Culture interactive for a discussion of the Political Education Programs of the Black Panther Party.

Please join us tonight — September 10th (Thursday) at 7:30 EST & 6:30 CST for an interactive presentation titled “Beyond the Gun: A Discussion Over the Black Panther Party’s Political Education Programs.

Click here to enter.

Click here to enter.