Monday 7 July 2008

Nothing Is Permanent

I'm ready for a change. I have renamed BoringBlackChick and taken it DEEP underground... I need to do this in order to retain the uninhibited and intensely personal nature of my blog; to continue to feel free in every sense of how I choose to express myself.

Thanks for understanding, thanks for your support!

Peace
Love
Blessings

Shelly x

14 comments:

Lenoxave said...

Outstanding! I've done the same thing. Best of luck to you.

e said...

aw i'll miss you. good luck homegirl.

e.

Saddie said...

ditto. I'll miss reading your blog.

hav det godt!og held og lykke
(have it good! and good luck )

Jose Vilson said...

I respect that BBC. Holla at me whenever you're around.

DJ Black Adam said...

I pray you well! Please do still stop by over at my blog space!

Lisa said...

Aww man! Come around so we can hear from you sometime!

tyrone said...

Shelly,

You will definitely be missed. I don't believe in luck, so i'll say good fortune. I know we'll see you again soon, friend.

Take Care

bklyn6 said...

What first attracted me to your blog was it's name! I didn't come around enough, but I admired your insights nonetheless. Best of luck to you TBFKABBC. (The blogger formerly know as Boring Black Chick.)

:-)

Francia M said...

just as I was getting to love your blog. But I totally understand. All the best.

Liz Dwyer said...

Sigh. I miss your blog. Wish you'd come back!

Mes Deux Cents said...

I miss you. :(

Liz Dwyer said...

Just thinking today about how much I miss your blog. Hope you are well.

navas said...

Here are the keyords in the essay:

13th Amendment, 14th Amendment, 2012 Election, B.E.T., Barack Hussein Obama, Booker T. Washington, Bryant Park, Cipriani's, Colin Powell, Criminal Industrial Complex, Deb Slott, Do The Right Thing, Heidi Klum, Hip-Hop, Mark Penn, Melting Pot, Pink Elephant, Racism, Reconstruction, Robert Johnson, Seal, Segregation, Shelby Steele, Sidney Poiter, Sonia Sotomayor, Spike Lee, Tavis Smiley, Terrence Yang, The Dance Flick, To Kill a Mocking Bird, Virginia Davies, W.E.B. Dubois, Zero Mostel, Politics






Prologue to Obama 2012







We approach the future walking backwards, our gaze forever fixated on the past. Predicting the future is not a passive exercise; we invent it every day with our actions.

I began the sketches for what would ultimately become Obama 2012 in March 2007, a month after Barack Obama declared his candidacy. I had spent much of the previous 18 months living abroad as an entrepreneur and statesman of sorts, and I was slightly out of touch with the pulse of life on the street in the United States. I learnt about Sen. Barack Obama’s Springfield, IL speech formally declaring his candidacy for president of the United States through one of the international cable news channels and thought how great it would be to have a fresh start after years of mediocrity in Washington and a plummeting reputation around the world.

By September, after what seemed like raising a six-month-old child, my sketches had turned into Why the Democrats Will Win in 2008 the Road to an Obama White House. It was my answer to the burning question everyone had back in March: Can he really win? Actually, not everyone thought it was a question. For many people, including Mark Penn, director of the Clinton campaign, the answer was an easy “no way.” This strategic blunder made it that much easier for the Clinton campaign to be defeated. Then there were Black pundits like Shelby Steele, a fellow at the Hoover Institution, who came out with a 2007 book entitled A Bound Man, Why Obama Can't Win.

Being Black did seem to be an automatic disqualification, but then why did someone need to write an entire book arguing what should have been patently obvious? Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Colin Powell came to my mind and I remembered that he could have run for president in 1992 as a war hero. But Colin Powell was Ronald Reagan’s protégé and got a special pass on the race question. Black conservatives like Justice Thomas, Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell were careful to disassociate themselves from liberal thinkers and activists like Jesse Jackson, who lost, as expected, the 1984 and 1988 Democratic primaries. Ultimately, Colin Powell, in spite of all his honors, declined to run for president. His wife Alma feared for his safety. Common sense said that a candidate like Obama, for numerous insurmountable reasons, didn't stand a chance of winning the Democratic primary, let alone a general election in which 10% of the electorate is African American and Republicans controlled the White House for 20 of the preceding 28 years. But I decided that Obama's chances merited a closer examination. In it, I would bring to bear my gambling skills.

Unknown said...

I totally understand!