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Grand Old Psychos-Truthout repost

I  used to love Republican politics. I have always admired the Republican primary process for the way its leaders and frontrunners, unlike the Democratic primary candidates, seem to draw energy, support and money by being less politically correct than the next guy. It's a damn-the-torpedoes attitude that has all but disappeared from our sanitized and boring political language. The more passionate and less socially acceptable a candidate becomes outside of their party, the stronger they become inside the base.It's an adherence to stroking the personalities of your faithful and not acknowledging the values of the outside that interests me so.

It's the American Way and probably why our politics skews rightward. The more passionate they are, though damaging to general election candidates, the more regarded they become within the right. Liberals are the opposite. The more politically correct, middle of the road, grounded and normal, the more support they garner. We want our candidates to be accepting, motherly figures who will console and hopefully (mostly in vain) bring the fickle moderates into the fold. I have envied the Republicans their brilliant and at the same time profoundly ignorant brand and execution. However, over the last several years, Republican political rhetoric has mutated into a kind of trickle-down insanity that has more and more translated itself in random acts of violence.

See more at: Grand Old Psychos, Steve King, Truthout

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The Don

© 5 February 2012, the Griot Poet

He was “The Don”…Cornelius, who actually got along with “the blacks” since he was one!

“Diamond in the back, sunroof top, digging the scene with a gangster lean…”

And we like Sly and the Family Stone “Thanked him for letting us be ourselves” again and again as we ran downstairs, to neighbors’ homes with rabbit ear antennas for the best reception (back when we had three dial channels, UHF and LOW DEF snow)…

James Brown was our “Pappa who didn’t take no mess” as we formed our own Soul Train lines, we “said it loud, we were black…and proud.” Like Niecy, “we just wanted to be free” like “black butterflies” high in the sky of our cultural contentment.

Barry White maestro was responsible for more babies delivered than any singer in history (said it himself), and Marvin could have us sexing, rocking and thinking in one performance set.

“The Don” was photographed with Martin Luther King, but did his thing as the antithesis of American Bandstand,  we danced and sweated, learning the latest steps from TSOP – the sounds of Philly, suitable situated in the city of brotherly love…we’d lost our Medgar, Malcolm and King.

So we needed music and movement that reaffirmed our black selves in a harsh world that defined us well in step-in-fetch tragi-comedic caricatures of the kings and queens he treated us as. The Harlem Renaissance was as distant a cultural memory as New York from North Carolina, or Chi Town from California.

Yet, we were one culture every Saturday, “One Nation under a Groove” coast-to-coast, one language, one tribe before Babel, before network cable business suits confounded our language with market-based bywords and epithets.

We were afros and bell bottoms, cornrows and dashikis, hot pants and tied off and/or tube tops: we strutted like we were stars on red carpets after Sidney Poitier and before Denzel (Washington), Holly (Berry) and Jamie (Foxx)…

The Don “was a bad mother…shut yo mouth!”

I’m just talking about Don Cornelius,

Who on his passing I can only wish him finally:

“Come on and get with us next week on this same station, and you can bet your last money, it’s all going to be a stone gas, honey.”

In (sadly) parting, I wish you, Don “love, peace…and SOUL!”

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Annan awoke on a cold, metal floor.  His head felt unusually heavy, as if stuffed with stones.  His vision was blurry, his mouth dry as sun parched cloth. He blinked the film from his eyes and tried to push himself to his feet.  Sharp, grinding pain accompanied his every motion, causing his breath to catch and his face to contort.  He paused on all fours then realized his right hand was gripping something.  Annan saw what it was…a gun. While he could not recall how it is he came into possession of such a weapon, he knew that the gun had already been discharged. Since there was no powder or shot anywhere within this strange confine he found himself in, the gun was useless to him. He shoved it aside and resumed rising to his feet.

Standing upright on wobbly legs, Annan balanced himself, struggling to regain his orientation along with his memory. When his head was sufficiently cleared, he examined his surroundings, such as they were. A small room, its dimensions slightly higher and wider than he was tall, with gray walls and arm-width bands striating the ceiling that diffused a pallid light.

Annan rubbed his hands along the four walls, feeling for grooves, notches, any break in the continuity of its smooth surface indicative of a door.  When his tactile investigation came up fruitless, Annan pounded a fist into a wall, belting out a cry of protest.

Suddenly, an opening developed in the wall behind him.  A cool breeze swept across his back from the ever widening aperture. He whirled about, his eyes agape as the wall retracted until it was no more. Annan reached down to grab the gun he had discarded. He decided it may be of use after all as a bludgeon. Whatever or whoever resided beyond this room could not possibly bear him good will.

He prodded himself into motion, putting one tentative foot in front of the other until he stepped out into a narrow passageway.  Annan gripped the gun barrel tightly, holding it as a club.  He looked both ways down the passage, seeing nothing but gray walls and emptiness for as far as his gaze travelled.  Then the wall across from him opened similar to the way his own wall did.

A man, dressed liked Annan, in little more than a dirty loin cloth, stood in a similarly featureless room.  Other holes formed along the passage on both sides. Heads peeked out, apprehensive eyes searched and wondered, a murmur of questioning voices broke the spell of silence. Screams of consternation erupted from those unable to cope with the mystery of their circumstances.

Annan wracked his brain, trying to remember something, anything, no matter how trivial that could explain his presence here…wherever he was. He noticed the man across from him was armed with a cutlass. The ones on either side of him clutched an iron bar and a thick piece of wood. As Annan looked down the passageway, some of the men he saw were armed in some manner, others empty handed.

 Oddly, Annan did not feel threatened by the armed men. He dared to venture down the passage, meeting the perplexed gazes of these men in passing.

                “What is this place?” One asked.

                “Where are we?” Asked another.

                “Has death claimed us? Are we with the ancestors?”

                “How did we get here?”

                Some tongues Annan understood, others he didn’t.  The persons he understood, spoke in a variety of dialects.  Nevertheless, whether he comprehended or not, everyone around him posed the same questions as he.

                 Questions to which he had no answers. Wherever the answers lay, he was determined to search for them. As he moved through the passage he encountered a number of women, naked, save for the same type of loin garments that covered the men. A few out of the small number of females were also armed with a motley assortment of armaments, from sticks to knives.

Then he stopped short when he saw a white man. Something in the back of Annan’s head whispered a warning. The white man, dressed in a soiled white shirt and dark leg coverings represented a threat.

Annan stared at the white man and the white man stared back at him with a glint of hostility shining from unwavering green eyes.  Annan was at a loss to explain his sudden, charged reaction at the sight of the pale skinned man.

He was sure the answer would come to him when his memory was restored…if it was restored. Annan moved cautiously past the white, keeping the gun at his side in a nonthreatening manner. His arm, however, was tensed to swing the weapon should the white so much as blink the wrong way.

There were other whites along the way, mixed in with larger numbers of blacks. The majority of the blacks were men. None wore more than loin garments. Some bore visible injuries from cuts to bruises. Most of the more fully clothed whites also possessed wounds. He saw scarred faces, and bloodied tunics. One white man favored a limp arm.

The array of injuries before him brought to Annan’s attention a thin slash from his left shoulder to the center of his chest. It wasn’t a deep wound. While it stung, its insistent throb in no way distracted him from his relentless stride toward the end of this passageway. He needed to find out where it led.

“Annan?”

Annan turned to see a black man stepping out of a room into the passage. He was tall like Annan but with a heavily muscled wrestler’s build.

That Annan responded to his own name was surely a good sign. He remembered his name. He also remembered that he was a soldier and a commander in the army of the expanding Asante Empire.  The rest had to follow sooner or later.

Annan stopped and stared at the man.

“I understand if you don’t remember,” the big man addressed with a disarming smile. “I couldn’t remember anything either when I first woke, but now everything is quickly returning. I am Kofu.”

Annan shook his head slowly. Neither the man’s face nor his name struck a pneumonic chord.  Annan quelled a bubbling impatience at his lack of recall. “Hopefully, I’ll remember, soon…Kofu. Perhaps you can help me. Where are we?”

Kofu fell alongside Annan. “I don’t know. One second, we were on the boat, then there was a light…the next thing I know we’re here…”

Annan stopped. “Wait, you say we were on a boat? Where?”

                Cries resonated through the passage before Kofu could reply. Both men looked around to see shining box-shaped objects flying  toward them. Annan counted over twenty of them. They were grayish smooth sided things, and they glided with an uncanny degree of swiftness and precision.

Kofu muttered an oath, his eyes widening in obvious terror. Annan stepped back, his gaze just as fearfully fixated on the flying objects. In seconds, a stampede of captives pushed past the two men.

                Annan grabbed Kofu’s arm. “Come, we had better flow with the crowd before we’re trampled underfoot!”

                Kofu pulled his gaze away from the metal demons and followed Annan’s lead.

                A captive with a length of chain swung it at a low flying box, missing by a hand span. A sliver of light projected from the box’s center, striking the chain. The makeshift weapon vanished in the captive’s hand.

A white captive aimed a musket at another box. A flash of needle thin light enveloped the firearm and it too disappeared to the man’s horror.

                The flying boxes soared above the scrambling captives, targeting any weapons they spotted and causing them to vanish.

                A streak of luminescence blinded Annan but for a second. When it subsided, he was empty-handed. He kept running because he had no choice. Everyone else was running. To where? No one knew. The single thought driving this mob was to escape from those boxes.

                Annan realized that while the flying boxes were chasing them, they made no attempt to capture or disable anyone.

                They’re herding us, Annan thought, struggling to keep pace with the crowd. Suddenly, the van of fleeing captives was at the end of the passageway. The wall opened up before them and the frantic, frightened crowd poured into an enormous room more than sizable enough to accommodate nearly 400 people. The captives spread out along the room’s four walls, attempting to put as much distance between themselves and the boxes as space would allow.

                The boxes hovered in a tight cluster just feet beyond the room’s entrance. They advanced no further, they’re only function at this point to keep anyone from leaving.

                “What do you think they’re going to do to us?” Kofu asked through labored breathing. 

                “Perhaps we should ask them,” Annan suggested, surprised at his ability to spout humor in the face of the inexplicable.

                Kofu glanced at him, managing a slight grin. “Be my guest.”

                A segment of one of the room’s walls faded away to be replaced by a black oval surface coated with many little pinpoints of light.

                The crowd grew quiet as they beheld the wall’s change.

                Something clicked inside Annan. He knew somehow that the black oval on the wall was not some sort of decoration.  “That’s the night sky,” he whispered to Kofu.

                Kofu squinted at the oval, his expression agreeing with Annan. “Why are we being shown the night sky?”

                A voice broke the tense silent. It was a robust, omniscient voice that invoked another layer of terror in the captives. Half the crowd dropped to their knees, thinking the gods or God was speaking. For many, that voice was an odd blessing, for it could explain why they were here.

Annan was yet to regain his memory, but he knew this little morsel about himself: he was indifferent to anything regarding spiritual matters. As much as the voice unnerved him, somehow he couldn’t bring himself to ascribe to it anything more than a mortal origin.

                “Look to the window,” ordered the voice. “You are no longer on your world. You are far, far from the place you called home. There is no going back. Your home is on this ship, which is called a Battle Fortress. I am the master of this Battle Fortress. Therefore I am your master. I represent the Conglomerate, whom you will serve as faithfully as I expect you to serve me.”

                “This is the devil’s work!” A huskily built white man, wearing a long black coat over a white shirt with slightly darker pants, stomped toward the middle of the floor. His dark beard was streaked with gray. His eyes flashed rabid defiance. His actions correlated as he boldly advanced on the hovering boxes.

                That the white man had clearly lost his wit was not the most astonishing thing to Annan. He could actually understand the prattle issuing from the man’s mouth. Another memory fragment surfaced to remind Annan of the yawning language gap that existed between him and the whites.

                “You understand him, too?” Annan put forth to Kofu.

                The big man nodded, at a loss. “I never knew their language before. Maybe those…” Kofu directed his eyes toward the flying boxes  “…things are using magic to make us understand.”

                The white man continued his forward progression, yelling so loudly and with such vociferous energy that spittle spewed from his lips with each invective. “You are all Satan’s dirty, filthy, vermin-riddled, demons! Monsters all! Return us to where you have stolen us or see God’s host descend upon your cursed heads!”

                Another white started forward as if to restrain the one with the outburst. But he was pulled back by two of his like complexioned companions.

                One of the flying boxes lowered until it hung just a few feet above the bearded man. A blue- white cord of light emitted from the box, striking the agitated man in his chest.

The man collapsed, his body wrapped in a soft blue aura of soothing beauty. Yet, its effect on the white man was hideous. His body twisted and bucked as if something were inside him, tearing to break free.  Howls of pain ripped from his throat, deafening at first, soon reduced to an exhausted whimper. The aura vanished. The white man, free of the light’s brief captivity, lay squirming on the floor in a fetal position.

“As servants of the Conglomerate,” the voice continued, seemingly unperturbed by the interruption.  “Your every word and action will convey the proper respect toward those who labored to lift you from the grime of your previous existence. Failure to respect us will be met with swift and decisive punishment.”

Every gaze settled on the white man’s slobbering, quivering form. All the captives took the voice’s warning as well as the object lesson to heart. For the blacks who fully regained their memories, and even some of the whites, the bearded man’s torture generated not a shred of sympathy. Most would have gladly done worse if given the opportunity.

Kofu snickered.

“He must be a terrible person,” Annan said, looking at his friend for a clue.

“You’ll know how terrible he is when your memory returns.”

“We must all tread carefully,” Annan warned. “Those flying demons will spill their wrath upon us as quickly as they will those we consider an enemy.”

                At that instant, three beings entered the room.  Roughly man-shaped, they wore metal armor that covered their bodies from head to toe. Two wore armor of the same gray coloring as the flying boxes. The third one’s armor was milky white.

The trio stepped into the center of the room. The white armored one gestured to the bearded man. The gray armored beings obediently lifted the limp man by his shoulders and feet and carried him toward a wall where they gently placed him on the floor. The captives in the vicinity drew back at the approach of the alien figures.

                “These are my associates,” the voice went on. “The one in white will supervise your training. The ones in gray will assist him. You will obey their every instruction or suffer the consequences. The drones will watch you closely. As long as you are compliant the drones will have no reason to punish you.”

                Annan studied the flying boxes the voice called drones.

                More gray armored beings marched into the room. At least twenty of them.

                “You are going to be separated into groups,” the voice announced.

                The armored beings plunged into the captives’ ranks, with shouts, gestures and a plenty of rough handling to get everyone moving.

                The bearded white man was prodded back to his feet by a Gray Armor. Other than wobbly balance, he appeared recovered enough from his ordeal to move under his own power.

                “Training for what?” Kofu wondered, looking back apprehensively at an approaching Gray Armor.

                “I was hoping you could tell me,” Annan quipped. “I’m the one with no memory.”

                White Armor remained in the center of the room watching as the humans were divided into groups and herded out of the space through another passageway.                

                 

 

Vechus removed his white helmet when he entered the Command/Control cube. Thank the Molder his head gear was capable of filtering out the stench of this batch of back world primitives. Of course, he knew it wasn’t for his olfactory comfort that the High Executive decreed that all Contractors wear head-to-toe armor. These primitives--humans--were skittish enough. Seeing Contractors unmasked would have driven the abject creatures to inconsolable fits of terror.

They would most certainly have died of fright if they were to lay eyes on the mass of glistening overlapping tissue that was the High Executive’s visage.

“I don’t know about this,” Vechus stated gruffly.

High Executive Pitott was sitting in his cubicle surrounded by an ever active console. “You are never satisfied, Vechus,” he critiqued, fixated on a monitor that displayed the humans being escorted into decontamination chambers by their armored minders.

“In this case, I’m even less satisfied,” Vechus replied. “These humans haven’t even reached a Phase One stage of industrialization. Even the light colored ones with their ocean plying vessels sorely lack the conceptual basis to comprehend the technology we’ll be introducing them to.”

The High Executive spun about in his swivel chair to face the Head Contractor. “Ah, but both light and dark colored humans understand projectile weapons. How much of a conceptual leap could possibly be required for them to comprehend a gun leagues more advanced, but that can still be aimed and fired like their crude powder shooters? Not much of a leap at all.”

“Operating war machines is considerably beyond their experience,” Vechus griped.

Pitott’s facial coils expanded and retracted in a display of enthusiasm. “A half sentient reptilian, given a small dosage of training could control those machines in its sleep. Surely, you don’t think these humans could accomplish less under your guidance. Besides, I’m not trying to build an elite strike force. All I need is fodder.”

“You’ll get your fodder, High Director. I can guarantee you that.” Vechus put his helmet back on and exited the cube.

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The Yad System comprised seven planets orbiting a yellow star.  The homeworld of the Toooi Clan was located in the Yad System.  Interestingly, the homeworld was none of the four rocky worlds nor was it any of the three gas giants.  Rather, the homeworld was actually a verdant moon that revolved around the largest of the gas giants.  It was not from its distant star that the homeword received its nurturing warmth and light.  Its illumination radiated from the massive iridescence of its parent gas giant.  Thermal vents beneath the surface bathed the moon in just enough heat to generate a clime that never ventured far outside of temperate bounds. 

            Two of the gas giants were surrounded by rings.  A ring of sorts circumvented the Toooi homeworld.  Orbiting dockyards, defense satellites, massive fighter craft/missile platforms and industrial plants.  Similar facilities existed on or above the other planets, making the Yad System the most fortified expanse in the Toooi domain.  An enemy armada would have been torn to pieces by a formidable variety of weapons long before it breached the system perimeter.

            Of course, the ships that appeared less than ten thousand miles out from the homeworld were not part of an armada.  They were Serpentine fighters and Broadstroke bombers.  Fifty of the craft arrived in-system by means of warp booster fields.  Council fighters and bombers possessed no intrinsic warp capabilities. A pod affixed to non-warp capable vessel generated a supraluminal bubble that surrounded the craft, propelling it to warp velocities.

            Each Serpentine and Broadstroke arrived over the homeworld encased in booster fields.  A broad chain of orbital constructs filled Fight Colonel Sabrina Kudjo’s display when her fighter materialized from warp.  She deactivated her booster field and her squadron fell into escort position around one of the Broadstrokes.

            Superior stealth shielded the attack force from enemy early warning systems.  Kudjo targeted a massive docking frame shaped like a spoked wheel.  Her hand gripped the fire control, unleashing a fusion-release missile.  The missile joined a dozen others to strike the section of the framework where the spokes joined.  A ream of light interspersed with disintegrating debris shot out like spewing vomit from the framework’s central assembly. Disk-shaped fusion-release bombs poured out of the Broadstroke’s bomb bay and zeroed in on their target like a flock of ravenous blood bats.  The disks scattered across the framework and affixed themselves to sections of its cold metal.  Multiple detonations where the disks were attached spread nearly full circle around the outer rim of the framework.  Pieces of the construct broke off to hurtle either into space or toward the planet’s surface.  The explosions channeled through the framework, converting its vast interior into a seething furnace.  The two hundred ships docked inside the framework were consumed in the rippling tumult.  Their reactors went critical and a wave of secondary blasts punched outward ravaging what was left of the framework’s dissolving hull, even as fusion-release bombs and missiles continued to rain down upon the doomed construct.  A convulsion of stupendous blasts proceeded to rip enormous chunks out of the framework.  The structure heaved violently, ending its death throes in the embrace of an emerging sun that shattered it to an infinite number of pieces.

            Broadstrokes and Sepentines plowed a ruinous path through the orbital network.  The defensive ring encircling the homeworld was fast becoming a ring of fire as roiling balls of hot gas bloomed where constructs once existed. 

            A missile platform was among the last intact structures hovering in orbit.  The triangular vessel flashed like a choice cut of meat across the flight colonel’s target grid.  Her wingmates, Rockwall and Devo spread out along the flanks, widening the squadron’s formation.  The Serpentines fired their missiles.  At that second, defensive batteries lit up along the periphery of the platform.  Dense metal spikes flew at the fighters and bombers.  Kudjo triggered the turret chain gun on the nose of her craft, sending a cascade of micrilles that swept a half million spikes out of existence.  No more would be forthcoming.  The Serpentines’ fusion-release missiles had slagged most of the platform’s defense batteries.  The Broadstroke soared over the platform to deliver its coup de gras in the form of a hundred bombs.  A mile of platform died with the impact of each bomb until the entire structure shriveled like a strip of metal subjected to the heat of a wielding torch. 

            Kudjo’s alert display buzzed.  The Protips were responding.  Admirably faster than Kudjo anticipated, but still too late to forestall the destruction of their network.  Plus, the annihilation the Council attack force meted out above the homeworld was being duplicated with stunning success across the system.  Serpentines and Broadstrokes were attacking enemy bases and installations all over the Tad System.  So far, eighty eight percent of all system-range missile facilities located on or above planets had been wiped out, thus severely crippling the homeworld’s strategic reach.

            Of course, Kudjo did not have the breathing space to appreciate that percentage and its implications.  At this moment, the Protips had scrambled over twenty thousand Fangbolts.  Twice that number of surface-to-space missiles preceded the Fangbolts’ thrust into upper orbit. 

Devo fired a cluster of micrilles that ripped apart a small armed satellite, before turning his guns on a wave of SS missiles in his path.  Micrilles destroyed sixty plus missiles. But a shock wave issuing from the blast of the closet missile he knocked out tossed his fighter end over end.  Devo’s Serpentine collided with an enemy missile he could not target in time.  A single, brilliant explosion was born of the calamitous meeting of missile and fighter.

Kudjo would mourn her wingmate later.  Right now it was getting way too thick out there.  Much thicker than anything the defenses on Joak threw at them.  Two more Serpentines and a Broadstroke broke apart in an unremitting hail of missiles.

“Dammit, time to bug out!”  Kudjo exclaimed on the squadron net.  “Activate your booster fields.  We’ll reemerge on the edge of the system!”

“You don’t have to tell me twice,” Rockwall remarked with a smidgeon of urgency in his drawl.

Kudjo and the remainder of her squadron veered away from the planet’s gravity well.  Thousands of Fangbolts fell on their six, their tactical cannons spitting out swarms of brackets.

Transluscent booster fields shimmered to life around the Serpentines and Broadstrokes.  Fortunately, the fields offered added protection from the metal projectiles that impacted their near impenetrable energized epidermis.  One by one, the field-enclosed Council vessels vanished into a glaring void of hyperspace.

 

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I couldn't resist putting out a small advance excerpt of the next upcoming installment in the McKenzie Files series. Here's a short preview of Obliteration. McKenzie Files-3. Coming this summer.Colin felt that usual nervous feeling stinging in the middle of his stomach while he was riding in the front seat of the new car that the C.I.D had given he, Diane, and Kelly. Finally we get a vehicle of our own. No more having to depend on shuttles, taxis, or the subway to get around, he told himself. The only drawback to this was having Diane as a driver. An impulsive, bad tempered individual who had just received her driver’s license two weeks ago. Even with the tight safety belt strapped across his torso Colin was still feeling less secure as he watched Diane jerk the steering wheel to the left and right in order to weave in and out of the four lanes of traffic on the streets of Navarone to reach their destination. Colin imagined that Kelly was feeling the same way while he was riding in the back seat. Over the sound of the car’s wailing siren Colin heard Kelly cry out several times as they approached the rear end of another vehicle, then swerved out of the way to avoid a collision.I should have gotten my license before Diane, Colin scolded himself. He looked over at her. Dressed in her black T-shirt and jeans she had a broad smile on her face. The white sneaker on her right foot shifted from the brake to the accelerator pedal. The air flow from the open window blew through her long black hair. There was a large laser pistol holstered at her right hip.“Do you mind slowing down?” Colin asked. “We want to at least get there alive.”“Slow down?” Diane said with a laugh. “We have to get there before these jackasses kill the hostages. You heard the report.”“I know,” Colin replied. His memory went back twenty minutes ago. He was sleeping in his quarters back at the military base when he was awakened by a phone call from C.I.D Captain Melony Carter. She informed him that a group of Vendetta terrorists had taken several civilians hostage in an office building and were threatening to kill them and then detonate a nuclear bomb that was hidden somewhere in Navarone unless the government agreed to release a number of Vendetta operatives from the penal moon Taraxis, in the Tacoma system. Captain Carter also reported that one of the terrorists was observed using paranormal abilities. Reploid abilities. And that was a detail that would come to the attention of Colin, Diane, and Kelly. The team known as Silencers.Captain Carter told Colin that the terrorists were giving a one hour deadline for their demands to be met. After the deadline they would kill the hostages and then set off the bomb. She also told him that Diane and Kelly would pick him up within the next ten minutes. That gave Colin very little time to throw on his blue jeans, a black shirt, and a pair of white sneakers, and then rush out to the bases’ main gate where a black car with Diane and Kelly was waiting.“If we’re going into a dangerous situation then I think I’d rather get killed by the bad guys than by a member of my own team,” Kelly said. He thrust out his hand between Diane and Colin to point at the windshield. “Car, car, car!” he shouted.“I see it,” Diane shouted back.Colin held his breath as he watched their car make a rapid approach to the rear end of a black car up ahead. Diane jerked the steering wheel to the right and the car swerved into the right lane to avoid it. Colin was hoping that during the excitement Diane would not forget her strength and accidentally rip the steering wheel away from the column.Colin exhaled. But not out of a sense of relief. “Diane. Do you see that truck up ahead?”“I’m on it,” was her reply.Diane steered the car to the left to avoid crashing into the rear end of a blue pick up truck. She mashed her foot down on the accelerator pedal and the car sped up ahead of the truck. Then moved in front of it. The car then came to an intersection. With it’s tires screeching the car made a sharp right turn and headed down the road towards a large crowd of people. The car came to a screeching halt just six feet away from the crowd. Several people dashed to the left and right out of fear of being hit. The momentum jerking Colin’s body forward.“We’re here,” Diane announced.“We’re alive,” Colin jabbed. He was amazed that they had survived beingpassengers in a vehicle with Diane behind the wheel. His heart was still pounding when he looked over at her. Butt was not from a romantic feeling. And they want to train her to be a pilot? he thought.Diane reached for a small touchpad at the right side of the steering wheel and pressed a key. The blaring siren was now silenced.“Ok. Let’s do this,” said Diane. She got out of the car.Colin and Kelly exited the car. Colin took a second glance at Kelly. His blue cut off denim shorts, green tank top shirt, and wearing black sneakers without socks made Kelly look like he was more prepared for a day at the beach, rather than entering a hostage situation.They moved through the crowd of onlookers and came upon a police roadblock. A five foot high, blue barrier of glowing energy that stretched across the road between two black, five foot high metal poles. On the other side of the barrier were three white police cars with their red bar lights flashing. Three black uniformed police officers were standing near the cars.As Colin, Diane, and Kelly approached the barrier an officer on the other side walked over and held up his hand. “Sorry. The road is blocked off. Police emergency,” he told them in a stern tone.In unison, Colin, Diane, and Kelly reached into their pockets and brought out the black billfolds that held their badges.“We’re with the C.I.D. Silencers,” Colin explained. “Lieutenant Copeland is expecting us.”“Silencers?” the officer inquired. He reached into his pocket and brought out a small black remote. He pressed a key on the remote and the barrier faded away to allow Colin, Diane, and Kelly to pass.They proceeded until they came upon two large, black armored vans that had stopped in the middle of the street. The vans displayed the prominent white letters, S.W.A.T on their sides. In front of the vans were three police cars. Just a few feet away from them was a row of six other police cars. Both vans and the cars had their red lights flashing. There were several uniformed and plain clothed officers crouched down behind the vehicles with their laser guns drawn and aimed at a building several feet away at the right. The S.W.A.T officers were crouched down among them. They also had their laser rifles aimed at the building. Several feet in front of this police barricade was a chaotic scene with dead bodies and demolished vehicles scattered about. The bodies appeared to be that of men and women. And there were also dead police officers among them. The bodies were all dismembered and laying in pools of blood.“Maybe it would be a good idea to keep our heads down,” Kelly suggested.A wise idea, in Colin’s mind. He crouched down, along with Diane and Kelly and approached two officers who were kneeling behind a police car.“We’re Silencers, with the C.I.D, said Colin. Displaying his badge. “Lieutenant Copeland is expecting us,”The officer pointed to the left. “He’s over there. I’ll call him over.”The officer pressed a key on a small remote attached to his belt, then spoke into a microphone attached to the earbuds that he was wearing. A few seconds later Colin looked to his left and saw the familiar sight of police lieutenant Copeland. A man in his thirties, with a head of bushy black hair. Wearing a black suit and shoes, with a grey shirt and black necktie. He remained in a crouched position as he approached. He was carrying a laser gun in his hand.“Silencers from the C.I.D. I haven’t seen you three since the Mertz case,” said Copeland. There was a wide eyed expression of surprise on his face. “The C.I.D sent you to handle this situation?”“We’re best qualified for the situation,” replied Colin. “What’s going on?”“A group of seven male suspects walked into the lobby of the Universal Industries building and killed the three security guards that were stationed at the receptions station. They then proceeded to go up to the building’s twenty fifth floor where they took a number of hostages. Four officers responded to the alarm that the security guards set off. But they never made it out of there alive. We’ve evacuated the building to avoid any further civilian casualties. So far the terrorists have the entire twenty fifth floor under their control.”“I see that S.W.A.T is here,” said Colin, as he pointed to the black vans. “Did they try to storm the building and re-take the floor somehow?”“They tried. But their first attempt was a disaster. One of the terrorists has some kind of energy weapon that we’ve never seen before. It’s effect is pretty damn gruesome. I’m sure that you’ve seen the aftermath up ahead.”Colin raised his head to take another look at the wreckage and bodies. “What kind of weapon could have caused all this damage?” He examined the wrecked cars. Sections of some vehicles were left intact, while other sections appeared to be crumpled like tin foil. “These cars look like they were crushed somehow.”“More like imploded,” Copeland corrected. “It’s a hell of a way to die. We lost six officers. As far as we can tell they’re using some sort of implosion beam weapon. Metal, flesh, body armor, personal protection shields. They’re all useless against it. And we have several witnesses that have stated that they didn’t actually see the terrorist using a weapon. But he was actually using his bare hands. Maybe in all the excitement they didn’t get a chance to take a better look. You guys think you can go up against something like that?”Colin was starting to wonder he same thing himself. “This falls within our area of expertise. Have the terrorists made any kind of demands?”“They’re given us one hour to release several Vendetta agents from the prison moon, Taraxis. If we don’t meet their demands then they’ll kill all the hostages and then detonate a nuclear device that they have hidden someplace in the city. We’re up against a rock and a hard place here. If you have any solutions then I’m all ears.”Colin could offer Copeland little in the way of a solution. “This doesn’t make sense. It seems to me that they’re in just as tight a spot as you are. Don’t they realize that their chances of pulling this off are slim?”“It’s possible that they do. But it’s my theory that they probably care very little about getting the prisoners set free. This is more about striking fear. The slim chance of getting their people back would probably be a bonus.”“How much time do we have before their deadline ?” Colin asked.Copeland glanced at his wristwatch. “Twenty six minutes.”“That doesn’t give us much time,” Replied Colin. “Have you tried to negotiate with them?”“We’ve tried. But so far we’ve gotten nowhere. Our hostage negotiator was speaking to their leader. A smart ass by the name, Brubaker. He’s not bending on his demands.”“Then we’ll just have to make him bend until he breaks,” Colin told Copeland. He looked back at Diane and Kelly. He was feeling that all too familiar knot in the pit of his stomach beginning to tighten. It always came with the knowledge that the three of them might be walking straight to their deaths. “Ready?”Kelly looked back at Colin. “Ready as I’ll ever be.”Diane drew her laser pistol from it’s holster. “Lead the way.”Copeland looked over at Kelly, then back to Colin. “Wait a second. You two are going in there unarmed?”“I wouldn’t exactly say that,” Colin told him.Colin took in a deep breath, preparing himself for anything, and was the first to rise. Diane and Kelly rose up and followed him as he walked past the police barricade of cars and towards the building. They walked past the wrecked cars and the gruesome sight of the dismembered bodies of civilians and police laying on the ground to reach the building’s wide glass doors. The doors automatically opened to admit the three. Colin remained tense as he expected an attack to come at any second. In the building’s wide lobby with it’s grey, stone floor tile they passed by the twisted bodies of four police officers. Their blood splattered over the floor. They approached the black, circular form of the receptions station. Colin peered down over the station to find the bodies of three security guards. They were so twisted and bloodied that he could not tell if they were male or female.“This isn’t good,” Colin said in a quiet voice.At the left and right sides of the receptions station were two sets of black elevator doors that stood out against the grey stone tiled walls. At the left and right past both sets of elevators were short corridors with doors at the end. In the middle of both doors were signs displaying the words, stairs, in large glowing red letters.“Are we going to ride up or walk?” Kelly asked.“I’m not walking up twenty five floors,” said Colin. “Then again, if we take the elevator then they’ll probably be waiting for us.”Diane raised her laser gun. “Then lets not keep them waiting too long. We don’t want anybody up there to get pissed at us.”Colin took in another deep breath. Then they approached the elevators.
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Diaspora, 3 February 2012

Colonel Guion S. Bluford, Jr., USAF Astronaut (Ret)

 

It's up to US to share stories about ourselves other than as athletes and entertainers. I have no problems paying money to watch them, but the scientists, engineers and speculative fiction writers are what "makes the world go around," and our kids need to see themselves in these needed roles.

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Diaspora, 2 February 2012

James R. Andrade, PhD is fascinated by people. He doesn't just watch them, he methodically studies them to understand why they do what they do and, especially, why they eat what they eat. As senior director of research for Kraft Foods North America, Dr. Andrade helps develop the next generation of food products that nurture us, satisfy us, and even entertain us.

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DOSSOUYE II IS IN THE HOUSE!

I am proud to announce that "Dossouye: The Dancers of Mulukau" is now available at http://www.lulu.com. The novel is the sequel to "Dossouye." It's another superlative effort by Sword & Soul Media publisher  Brother Uraeus. And the cover art by Mshindo Kuumba is breathtaking. I'd say that even if this were not my novel. Dossouye is back, and she's as tough as ever. She and her war-bull, Gbo, are in a new environment, facing dangers different from the ones she has already overcome. The odds are steep ... but never count out a woman and her war-bull. I hope you enjoy this new installment of Dossouye's adventures.

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To My Old Master

From Letters of Note - Letters Salvaged from History


In August of 1865, a Colonel P.H. Anderson of Big Spring, Tennessee, wrote to his former slave, Jourdan Anderson, and requested that he come back to work on his farm. Jourdan — who, since being emancipated, had moved to Ohio, found paid work, and was now supporting his family — responded spectacularly by way of the letter seen below (a letter which, according tonewspapers at the time, he dictated).

Rather than quote the numerous highlights in this letter, I'll simply leave you to enjoy it. Do make sure you read to the end.

(Source: The Freedmen's Book; Image: A group of escaped slaves in Virginia in 1862, courtesy of the Library of Congress.)

Dayton, Ohio, 

August 7, 1865

To My Old Master, Colonel P.H. Anderson, Big Spring, Tennessee

Sir: I got your letter, and was glad to find that you had not forgotten Jourdon, and that you wanted me to come back and live with you again, promising to do better for me than anybody else can. I have often felt uneasy about you. I thought the Yankees would have hung you long before this, for harboring Rebs they found at your house. I suppose they never heard about your going to Colonel Martin's to kill the Union soldier that was left by his company in their stable. Although you shot at me twice before I left you, I did not want to hear of your being hurt, and am glad you are still living. It would do me good to go back to the dear old home again, and see Miss Mary and Miss Martha and Allen, Esther, Green, and Lee. Give my love to them all, and tell them I hope we will meet in the better world, if not in this. I would have gone back to see you all when I was working in the Nashville Hospital, but one of the neighbors told me that Henry intended to shoot me if he ever got a chance.

I want to know particularly what the good chance is you propose to give me. I am doing tolerably well here. I get twenty-five dollars a month, with victuals and clothing; have a comfortable home for Mandy,—the folks call her Mrs. Anderson,—and the children—Milly, Jane, and Grundy—go to school and are learning well. The teacher says Grundy has a head for a preacher. They go to Sunday school, and Mandy and me attend church regularly. We are kindly treated. Sometimes we overhear others saying, "Them colored people were slaves" down in Tennessee. The children feel hurt when they hear such remarks; but I tell them it was no disgrace in Tennessee to belong to Colonel Anderson. Many darkeys would have been proud, as I used to be, to call you master. Now if you will write and say what wages you will give me, I will be better able to decide whether it would be to my advantage to move back again.

As to my freedom, which you say I can have, there is nothing to be gained on that score, as I got my free papers in 1864 from the Provost-Marshal-General of the Department of Nashville. Mandy says she would be afraid to go back without some proof that you were disposed to treat us justly and kindly; and we have concluded to test your sincerity by asking you to send us our wages for the time we served you. This will make us forget and forgive old scores, and rely on your justice and friendship in the future. I served you faithfully for thirty-two years, and Mandy twenty years. At twenty-five dollars a month for me, and two dollars a week for Mandy, our earnings would amount to eleven thousand six hundred and eighty dollars. Add to this the interest for the time our wages have been kept back, and deduct what you paid for our clothing, and three doctor's visits to me, and pulling a tooth for Mandy, and the balance will show what we are in justice entitled to. Please send the money by Adams's Express, in care of V. Winters, Esq., Dayton, Ohio. If you fail to pay us for faithful labors in the past, we can have little faith in your promises in the future. We trust the good Maker has opened your eyes to the wrongs which you and your fathers have done to me and my fathers, in making us toil for you for generations without recompense. Here I draw my wages every Saturday night; but in Tennessee there was never any pay-day for the negroes any more than for the horses and cows. Surely there will be a day of reckoning for those who defraud the laborer of his hire.

In answering this letter, please state if there would be any safety for my Milly and Jane, who are now grown up, and both good-looking girls. You know how it was with poor Matilda and Catherine. I would rather stay here and starve—and die, if it come to that—than have my girls brought to shame by the violence and wickedness of their young masters. You will also please state if there has been any schools opened for the colored children in your neighborhood. The great desire of my life now is to give my children an education, and have them form virtuous habits.

Say howdy to George Carter, and thank him for taking the pistol from you when you were shooting at me.

From your old servant,

Jourdon Anderson.
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