Good for Michael Vick and the Eagles: Claiming the right to Lift up a brother


After reading a very opinionated article by a sportswriter (and he joins many of Vick haters) who seems to be protesting the honoring of Michael Vick by his teammates when they selected him as the recipient of the prestigious 'Ed Block Courage Award', I became incensed.


Today, the Eagles announced that


an honor given to a player who shows courage in the face of adversity.

Vick's teammates voted for the award, thus demonstrating

how tone-deaf and out-of-touch NFL players are with reality...

Criss Chase, Yahoo Sports, 12/23/09

What is the Courage award about? Ed Block Courage Award Foundation Web site):



Each year, the Ed Block Courage Awards honors

those National Football League players who exemplify

commitments to the principles of sportsmanship and courage.

Recipients are selected by their teammates for team effort, as

well as individual performance.The Ed Block Courage Award

recipient symbolizes professionalism, great strength and dedication.

He is also a community role model.


Chase not only was opposed to Vick's designation, but went as far as to denigrate Vick's teammates mental and moral capacity referring to them as being out-of-touch (with reality) for having the temerity to honor such a bad Black man.


But, Ed Block who the award was named, probably would more than delighted to know that after centuries of a country that didn't deliver full equal rights to all of its citizens until recently to know that a man can turn his life around and become very apologetic at every turn, such as Michal Vick.


He's labelled a 'dog killer'. Yet no one speaks America's long history of racist man killers. Yet we have writers and bloggers like Chase foaming at the mouth wishing and hoping that one man, Michael Vick, should be banned from heaven and earth for eternity-how hypocritical. It goes without saying that those who abused and murdered our ancestors never was banned by man and never really suffered any ill-will even in a post-racial(?) era. Many became great people, even presidents, congresman, billionaires, celebrities, etc.


The real dirty little secret is that the sins of white men are being carried on this back of this one black man. The history of killing animals is consistent note in the resumes of great and not so great white men. We are talking about them contributing to the near extinction of rare animals in mother Africa, to proudly lining the pockets of taxidermists with everything from lions, deers. wolves and elephants. The dog didn't make their walls, but I can personally attest to how whole white neighbirhoods have rid themselves of unwanted domesticated animals by killing them (or abusing them) and dropping their carcases or cripples in the (Not the SPCA) poorest of neighborhoods in the urban cities (A practice that continues today).


Not until these murderers have the the courage to come forward, there's no need to continue persecuting the this prosecuted one and wanting him to appear that he is the originator of animal abuse. Bull!

I applaud Vick's teammates who have the courage to recognize to say enough is enough. Even their coach has enough human respect to ward off the lynchers who are shrouded in meekness.

Without historical scientific and critical analysis that will revealed the real causes and effects of past crimes and what racism has done to desecrate future individuals, families and societies, no one can intelligently nor conveniently point their finger at just one man. Who are the real original animal and human abusers, and, murderers?

And,if that analysis is free of prejudices and pre-concieved conclusions, we may find that in a supposedly post-racial society, racism raises it's ugly head again. The only way it can be stopped is that it is cut-off at the head.



"Coach Andy Reid had this to say about the situation on Wednesday,

per Jeff McLane of the Philadelphia Inquirer: "Everybody is going

to have their opinion on it I'm sure. Until you've been with him for

the hours that his teammates have been with him and seen him through

all these different things that he's had to go through, that time-tested part of it,

you can't appreciate it...".

During this season of Kwanzaa I say "IMANI" (Faith) To believe with all our heart in our people, our parents, our teachers, our leaders and the righteousness and victory of our struggle.

AMEN!



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