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Politics : Just the Facts, Ma'am: A Compendium of Liberal Fiction

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To: Sarkie who wrote (9960)6/22/2004 9:10:48 PM
From: sandintoes  Read Replies (1) of 90947
 
Is this a theme developing?

Ken Hamblin, political commentator and writer, whom The New York Times described as an "intellectual brawler sometimes called the black Rush Limbaugh" brings you an outrageous, thoughtful, heartfelt radio show that should inspire every citizen to reinvest in the American Dream.
Calling himself "The Black Avenger," Ken Hamblin insists that America works for anyone who is willing to seize this country's opportunities, remain diligent, and commit to our traditional values of right and wrong. From Hamblin's perspective, all black Americans today share this opportunity. They are no longer victims, and white people should stop feeling guilty about the past.


Raised on welfare in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, Hamblin knows what it's like to grow up poor. He faced segregation first-hand, as an Army soldier stationed in the South in the days before the civil rights movement. Hamblin refused to settle for poverty, never making it an excuse for failure or assuming it was his lot in life as a black American. After joining the millions of other Americans who took down "colored" and "white only" signs in the 1960's, today he is demanding to take his place as a fully vested American.

Saying things that "a white person wouldn't get away with," Ken Hamblin criticizes:

Black trash--If there's white trash, then it follows that there can be black trash. The difference is that we've allowed this sick culture of gangsta rap, drugs, gangs, and welfare to be glorified by some as the only "authentic" black American culture.

Brood mares--What else can you call young black girls who are having babies, more than 90 percent illegitimate, with no means other than welfare to care for them?

Black thugs--They go on crime rampages, claiming to be leading a phony social justice crusade on behalf of their race, but the truth is that they have probably snuffed out more of their own race than any white racist group.

Poverty Pimps--These black urban politicians devote their entire political careers to delivering nothing but government welfare to their stagnant communities of isolated constituents.

Quota blacks--They'll always be second-class citizens because emotionally and numerically they fill outmoded affirmative-action minority slots in the workplace.

Egg-sucking dog liberals--By furthering the patronizing notion that blacks can't get ahead on their own, these white liberals are sucking the substance out of the promise America holds for its black citizens.

Hamblin concludes that together these groups have fostered the Myth of the Hobbled Black, which, simply put, says that black people still cannot make it in America. But Hamblin is standing up to debunk that myth loudly. He urges all Americans to return to the day when we were grateful for the good fortune of our accident of birth and when we joyously celebrated the successes and rewards brought about by pursuing the American Dream.

An avid motorcyclist, private pilot, photographer, filmmaker, skier, fly fisherman, scuba diver, entrepreneur, and media personality, Ken Hamblin is living proof that the American Dream is accessible to everyone. He worked as the first black photographer for The Detroit Free Press from 1969 to 1970. During the 1970's, he produced and hosted a variety of television programs for WTVS, Channel 56, in Detroit and ran an independent film production company. He began his first radio talk show in 1982 on Denver's KOA. Today he broadcasts a nationally syndicated weekday show from Denver, reaching 2 1/2 million people. He also writes a weekly column for The New York Times Syndicate and writes twice a week for The Denver Post. Hamblin lives with his wife, Sue, in Colorado.

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