Saturday, February 6, 2010

The structure of unity and the 'Grammar of Freedom'

I am convinced that the desire to be part of a unified whole is natural. In the social sense, however, unity does not just happen. It has to be structured.

Now, we are living out the disunity of slavery. We have to regroup.

The center point for regrouping is the American Creed penned by Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence in 1776. President Abraham Lincoln glimpsed the essential nature of the creed on the Civil War battlefield at Gettysburg in 1863. President John F. Kennedy spoke to the absolute need for personal responsibility with the creed in his inaugural address in 1961. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. asked the nation to come present tense with the creed during his "I Have a Dream Speech" on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in 1963.

My bridge to this line of thought was/is Dr. Nkosi K. M. Ajanaku, ESQ., Chief Researcher/Founder of the Future America Basic Research Institute. He packaged the creed, Jefferson, Lincoln, Kennedy and King into usable history through something he calls the new science of Humaculture - the science of raising babies according to their natural human capacities.

Humaculture exposes the slave communication system that perpetuates slavery. In it's place Humaculture roots a new Grammar of Freedom that is marked, in part, by the absence of the black-white racial designations that lock us into dysfunctional thought patterns.

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