2019 MSU’s Slavery to Freedom Part 1
By Patricia Britt
2019 Michigan State University’s Slavery to Freedom Series part 1 is presented by Dr. William G. Anderson (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_G._Anderson) each year. In the midst of the school’s turmoil the presentation of national speakers continues to enlighten the Lansing community with the application of history that affects us each day. Whether speakers touch on the atrocities of slavery, neglected school children in cold classrooms without proper supplies. Humanity is relevant to spiritual warfare whether it’s a person of color, female, or any ethnic derivative who seeks to understand and record the struggle of good and evil in the computer psyche. Dr. Henry Louis Gates shows us each week on PBS that we are more similar than different.
Despite the painful shadow Larry Nassar, and his boss cast on bright eyed glorious athletic girls to leery women at MSU and by implication girls across the globe.
God bless all the rare magnetic girls who fly off balance beams, and land on their toes, to rise each day past, and present in the heartland of our nation.
We are our brother’s keepers through all of life’s storms no matter who, when, where, or what we watch when children are abused, society is bruised with another fissure to the delicate tissue of our souls.
It was a Morrill Act in 1862 that founded the agricultural college. It will take moral actions to counter the damage done to innocence over time. Through the other side of grief all these girls will rise to banish the thought of suicide today, or 20 years from now dependent on their resilience to block out evil’s conduct. KJV Romans 7
Can and will all evil ever be rooted out, probably not. Yet if institutions with steady pressure applied change perhaps some lives can be saved.
We as a people can only be free when our most vulnerable are free to exhibit the zest of liveliness in the quest for happiness that each of us is born to seek with the protection eyes on the prize of innocence.
We as a people can only be free when our most vulnerable are free to exhibit the zest of liveliness in the quest for happiness that each of us is born to seek with the protection eyes on the prize of innocence.
2019 Copyright Zimation Arts & Letters Ink
https://w2.vatican.va/content/vatican/en.html
Songs:
Khumbaya by Song Soweto Choir
Giving You the Best That I Got by Anita Baker
Fairy Tales by Anita Baker
My Love is Your Love by Whitney Houston
Quote
Men, their rights, and nothing more; women, their rights, and nothing less. By Susan B. Anthony
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