Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Ok let’s talk about this! Who is paying this false prophet to spew this nonsense? The Bible said their would be false prophets and Pastor Manning is clearly one of them. I am wondering if someone is paying, I will not even call him Pastor anymore because that is a respected name.
Is someone paying Ignoramus Manning or is he making money off these youtube videos. People like this man are disgusting because they claim to be of Christ and their idiotic behaviors turn so many people off to the word of God. What a Jerk?
As far as his hate for Barack Obama, Jerkoff Manning Get a LIFE!

Tags: atlah worldwide, bar, barack, barack obama, be, bible, christ, conservatives, crack, drug abuse, fox news, God, hate, homo, idiot, jE, jerkoff, k, king, larry sinclair, life, man, money, NY, O, obama, obama 08, pa, pastor manning, res, respect, sex, us, video, word
Posted in Uncategorized | 7 Comments »
Sunday, May 4th, 2008

I spoke about drug abuse in a former post titled “Our Forgotten Family”, and this video reminds me of that piece. I’m worried about Lil Wayne, his actions as of late have been spiraling downward and I am worried about where this lifestyle will lead him. He says “not to worry” about him, but how can one not when his interviews are filled with incoherent sentences as we watch him sip from his cup of death. An artist with this much reaching capability can not be ignored and left to die from his own vices. We have watched too many greats pass because as a community of listeners we just sat by idly watching someone’s demise. I think it’s time that his fans start to reach out to him and let the young man know that people care about him enough to not watch him throw his life away.
Tags: art, artist, Baby, be, cash money, che, community, death, dj vlad, drug abuse, family, jae millz, k, king, life, lifestyle, lil wayne, listen, london, london interview, man, minds, nwa, NY, O, pa, semtex tv, star, syrup, the carter III, unity, us, video, war, young, young man, young money
Posted in Drugs & Substance Abuse, Hip-Hop, Uncategorized | 32 Comments »
Thursday, April 10th, 2008

Law School Blues
I hate to scare you
But to tell you the truth
Come September
You’ll have the law school blues
Oh, trust me its true
A 1L in law school
Equals the law school blues
Reading for civ pro
Language you don’t know
Think like a lawyer they’ll tell you
Law school blues is definitely going to get you
Torts is bizarre
Cases galore
The things people do
Then have the nerve to sue for
You think you can write
I assure you that you cannot
Your legal writing professor
Will fill your paper with red marks
Crim law is cool
Just like the real world
Sex drugs and murder is all that occurs
But don’t lose faith
You’ll make it through
How do I know?
Cus I’ve got the law school blues too!
Cedric D. Shine
1L Penn State Dickinson School of Law
http://nativenotes.wordpress.com
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N8ABhatAfsA&hl=en]
Tags: 1L, 2L, 3L, ABA, alcoholics, american bar association, attorneys, Bar exam, be, black law students association, black lawyers association, blsa, blues, broke, cedric, dickinson school of law, district attoryney, drug abuse, drugs, faith, Final exams, hate, highest suicide rate, k, law, law school, law school tips, law student, law students, lawyer, lawyers, lawyers for lawyers, life, LSAT, murder, nativenotes, nyc, O, pa, paper, penn state, Philadelphia, reading, res, sex, State, STUDENT, trust, truth, us, word, world
Posted in Life and Times of a Law Student | 1 Comment »
Monday, March 24th, 2008
Brittany Spears, Amy Winehouse, and Lindsay Lohan are just a few of the names who grace our newspapers with drug riddled stories and pictures of them visibly high off of controlled substances. The media has been extremely reckless in their portrayal of these people who actually have serious problems that need to be addressed. A close friend of mine inspired me to write the piece “Our forgotten family” about reclaiming our people who are lost to drugs and substance abuse. I challenge the media to start tackling the issues of drug abuse in our society in a much more responsible manner. Whether it’s a celebrity or the local garbage man, the horrifying reality of drug abuse needs to be discussed responsibly. R.I.P. to the saxaphonist of Haggist Horns, Jason Rae, the husband of Corrine Bailey Rae; he recently died of an alleged drug overdose. This is not a white issue or a black issue, this is a people issue, let’s reclaim our forgotten family.

Our forgotten family
“What’s going on”, these are the words sang by the late great Marvin Gaye in the 1970’s. Here in 2008 this question still needs to be addressed and this time we need to move toward solving the many ills that face our communities. I had a conversation the other day with a close friend of mine and we were discussing substance abuse in our society. Drugs are raping and ravaging our communities of our brightest and most beautiful minds at a rate that leaves us dazed and confused and desperately searching for a resolution.
I thought about the negative images that are bestowed upon drug abusers, the disrespect that they face daily. Everyone has a vice, but these people are treated as if they are sub-human. Do we not all know someone who may be addicted to drugs or someone who may have had a problem with substance abuse in the past? What’s even more amazing is how we turn our backs on our own people in a time when they need us most. Is a crack head, or junkie not someone’s mother, father, sister, brother or maybe just a friend? Why do we leave our people at their weakest times and allow them to fall even deeper into their despair, helping them sink to even more desperate measures to obtain that “high”.
I started off this piece with adults in mind, I thought about all of the adults that I see in urban areas addicted to drugs looking for their next fix. But then I looked at some startling statistics and to my dismay I saw the increasing numbers of young teenagers who are smoking crack. No longer can we push drug abusers to the outskirts of the community and the abandoned houses in the neighborhood. Drugs are infecting the brilliant minds of tomorrow at record numbers and if we continue to ignore this problem we may be looking at the destruction of our communities as we know it.
Of course it is not our fault that people resort to drug abuse, however what we forget is it is often not their fault either. We all handle hardships and pain differently. Some feel the need to escape using alcohol; others resort to hard drugs, while some of us use promiscuity as a way to alleviate our stressful lives. None of these vices are correct but we have no right to neither judge nor condemn these people. In fact our judgment becomes a part of the problem rather than the solution.
Imagine it is your own mother who’s abusing drugs, or your little brother. Because these people are somebody’s brothers, sisters, mothers, fathers, aunts and so on and so on. The first step in helping to solve this situation is to embrace those with drug problems, perhaps volunteering your time at a local rehabilitation center. The effects of drug abuse are very dark; when people feel abandoned they only crawl deeper into a space where no one can see them. It is in this space that addicts become violent stopping at nothing to reach their high because that high is where they feel comfortable amongst others who feel just as lonely. We need to reclaim our brothers and sisters who have fallen by the waist side. If not for them and their benefit, then for the benefit of our children who see this lifestyle and attempt to emulate it. It happens more often than we would like to believe.
Our approach to drugs can no longer be to sweep this taboo under the rug because it is seeping into our living rooms like a poison and killing entire families in our communities. Besides volunteering and drug rehabilitation programs, the way that we address people who have substance addictions needs to change. Drug user or not these people are human beings who deserve to be treated respectfully and encouraged to get back on the right track. A simple hello, can I get you something to eat never hurt anyone, in fact it may save someone’s life. Lets take the lid off of this problem that is so drastically raping our communities and be proactive in speaking the message of drug prevention. Let us volunteer at programs, and if they do not exist create programs that help to teach job skills, programs that address the depression issues that may have started someone down the path to illegal drug use in the first place. Let’s reclaim Our Forgotten Family, let’s Make It Happen!

Tags: ABA, abc, amazing, amy winehouse, art, basehead, be, black, bossip, brittany spears, brother, brothers, Cain, change, child, children, cnn, cocaine, coke, community, controlled substances, corrine bailey rae, crack, death, depression, disrespect, drug abuse, drugs, England, family, father, full, grace, guns, haggis horns, hand, hbo, help, heroin, hip, house, hurt, husband, i l, internet, Jason Rae, judgment, junkie, k, killing, king, lies, life, lifestyle, lindsay lohan, little brother, live, man, marvin gaye, media, mediatakeout, men, minds, money, mother, mothers, msnbc, nativenotes, neighborhood, news, NY, O, overdose, pa, pain, paper, promiscuity, race, rap, Raw, reality, res, respect, saxaphonist, sin, sister, sisters, society, soul singer, speed, star, syrup, teen, theybf, UK, unity, us, war, white, word, words, young
Posted in Drugs & Substance Abuse | No Comments »