Sunday, September 11, 2011

Honor Our Fallen of September 11th

Let us never forget our fallen and those who continually stand in harms way. They are the most brave. They have paid the ultimate price and made the ultimate sacrifice. We continue to pray for the families of our fallen brave. May their memory live on eternally.
D Jackson, Sr. Exec. Administrator
Livingtoday Consortium

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Irene is intense. But thank God she is bypassing us again. Let's pray for those who are in her path.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

What Entitlement. Oh, You Mean My Paycheck

What Entitlement. Oh, You Mean My Paycheck. Let's get it straight. It's called entitlement because we worked for it for 50 + years. We made deposits into social security for 50+ years. We have now earned a return on our faithful deposits. It's called social security retirement and Medicare insurance. We paid for it so don't touch it. It's ours! Oh, you don't care, because you made over 250k. Well, we the people didn't, but we did deposit part of our paycheck. It's ours. Leave it alone!!!
DJackson, SEA
LivingToday

Monday, June 6, 2011

It's Time To Get Real

Ok, so here is what's real. We the people need a voice. Finally, we have one. It's a national voice and a world voice. It's called "MSNBC." That's right, you heard me. They are progressive and have a plan that Leans Forward toward a 21st century style that listens to the people, all the people. That's their agenda. So bring it if you can because we are heading for 2012. Let's have a breakout moment. If you got it bring it let me hear it.
D Jackson, Sr. Exec. Admin.
LIVINGTODAY
livingtoday2011.org

Friday, May 27, 2011

The Wrong Look or Attitude Could Spell Doom If You Want That Job

In an ultra-competitive job market, every detail counts on a job interview.
The wrong look, the wrong attitude or both can sink an interview fast. A survey by CareerBuilder.com showed that 46 percent of 3,200 hiring managers reported job candidates were dressed inappropriately.
But with the right look, lots of research and the right attitude, image experts and career advisors say you can get yourself remembered for all the right reasons and, ultimately, hired.
“People say appearance shouldn’t matter, that it’s what’s on the inside that counts,” said Kelly Machbitz, a Clearwater, Fla., image consultant, “but it’s that first impression that counts.”
When deciding what to wear, think conservatively, said Frank Kelly, who was named Esquire Magazine’s “Best Dressed Real Man” in 2007. He works with clients at the Community Partnership for the Homeless in Miami, prepping them for job interviews and building their self-confidence.
Kelly said to try on what you plan to wear for a friend or family member before the interview and ask them what stands out.

What Not To Wear On a Job INterview. http://ledgerlink.monster.com/benefits/articles/66-what-not-to-wear-to-a-job-interview-.Retrieved from Internet 05/27/2011

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

When Doomsday Predications Fail

There has been a lot said about what happens to believers when doomsday predications fail. But, the media industry forgets to consider what happens to the masses of people whose lives are also affected by these progenitors of doom. History shows that there are people who project a sense of a special connection with God. Those who follow them do so as sheep being led to the slaughter.
So when these individuals get their prediction wrong the sheep are in denial and dismiss this huge debacle as though nothing as happened and happily return to fed on more of what they have been previously fed. Once again the masses have been emotionally scared and carry the baggage of these failures around with them. Let us not forget Jim Jones in Guyana and David Corash at Waco Texas. Only God knows the Day and the hour and He is not telling. So believers beware of who you listen to and who you follow.
The following is a list of 10 failed predictions:
       1.  The Prophet Hen of Leeds, 1806
       2.  The Millerites, April 23, 1843
       3.  Mormon Armageddon, 1891 or earlier
       4.  Halley's Comet, 1910
       5.  Pat Robertson, 1982
       6.  Heaven's Gate, 1997
       7.  Nostradamus, August 1999
       8.  Y2K, Jan. 1, 2000
       9.  May 5, 2000
       10.God's Church Ministry, Fall 2008




Thursday, May 19, 2011

The Model City

It's time to invite every citizen to the table to help mold and shape Jacksonville into a model American city. I am tired of us being a national crime city, a city with low national educational accomplishments, a city that smells, a city with a high unemployment rate, a city that does not embrace change, a city that does not embrace what could be. If you could see what I see what a difference it would make. My family roots pre-dates "Jacksonville", remember Cowford. My family has endured car bombings  beatings by rubber hoses, sprayed with fire hoses, called names I will not mention, because of our ethnicity. Our family has served in every war and in every way we have been asked. We are a proud military family as are many.
We are proud of who we are as a people. We love this, our city. It is time to move forward. This is the 21st century. We owe our children and grandchildren something better. We owe them a future that is bright, filled with hope and ladened with opportunity. We are an international city with residents from around the globe. What I am saying is we are all family. Let's show the rest of the country who we really are. Let's show the world. We can make a difference. Our country needs what we have to offer. We Are America.

Editorial
David Jackson, SEA
LIVINGTODAY

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Change Has Come to The River City (Jacksonville)

Finally, change has come to the city of Jacksonville, Florida. Alvin Brown has been elected, the first African American Mayor (Democrat) in a historic republican city. Winning over his opponent, Mike Hogan, by 1648 votes sends a message to our local government that change is needed and change has come. Two years in a row I told the city commissioners that Jacksonville is poised for greatness if it would embrace positive social change. We must come into the 21st century as a leader in educational reform, technology, community development, labor and public safety. In order to effect this needed change we must come together as one community, with one purpose. "Jacksonville:The River City that's changing the face of America."

Editorial
David Jackson, SEA

Alvin Brown, the first African American Mayor of Jacksonville, Florida? I say yes!

In a race to close to call, Alvin Brown is poised to become the first African American Mayor of Jacksonville Florida. Absentee ballots are still being counted. He leads his republican opponent by 583 votes. Results are expected late tonight in this historic race. Remember, Jacksonville  has been a key republican city in a republican state. It is one of the two keys in the 2012 Presidential race.

Editorial
David Jackson, SEA

Sunday, May 15, 2011

   Pledge to take your kids or a  group of kids to a park 
on May 21,2011. It's kids park day.                         
   Let's help fight childhood obesity.                           
Kids To Parks                                                         
 http://www.buddybison.org/                                    


    Join First Lady Michelle Obama's                            
     campaign for children....LET'S MOVE                   
http://www.letsmove.gov/                                        

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Clebrate Mothers

The greatest gift from God is his son. God's next greatest gift is the gift of birth. Today we celebrate the  gift of life that comes from the womb of a special person. MOTHER!

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

The Face of Evil


He was evil personified. He used people and killed people, including women and children. The world needs to see the face of evil in its final form. America needs closure. The world needs closure. This is war. There is nothing pretty about war. Death is the reality of war. His death may not represent the end, but it does represent an end.

Monday, May 2, 2011

The Head of the Dragon

You will never hurt our people again. The head of the dragon has been removed. We are a people of peace. We seek to build relationships and community. Love is our cause.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

At The Pump

The solution for high gas prices are higher gas prices. Hmmm?

Saturday, March 5, 2011

The State Of Education In America
by David Jackson, LIVINGTODAY Educational Consortium

Broken, busted and bankrupt. That’s the current state of 21st Century Education in America. We have always occupied the first chair. Now, we sit far back in the room. We have lost our edge. The impact can be seen in educational rankings we currently hold world-wide. Why have we consistently fought change?
We are no longer the leader in science and math. That alone is bringing us to a critical point with respect to our national security. Without educational change we are placed in a position where we must depend on other nations to provide us with the creative scientific minds of the 21st century.
Educational change is imperative. It requires embracing a new social dynamic in educational leadership, curriculum development and educational technology that fuels the process of learning. It is then that our students will be able to forge a new path in learning. It is one which leads us to new discoveries and enables us to fully embrace new knowledge in this bold new era of technological advances.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

A REPORT ON THE HEART IN AMERICA

A REPORT ON THE HEART IN AMERICA
How to Wreck Your Heart
How to Wreck Your Heart
Certain behaviors can lead to serious heart
consequences. To help keep your heart
healthy, here's a list of 10 things not to do.Also See:
More Bad Things We Do to Our Hearts

Monday, February 28, 2011

Strength

A healthy community is a strong community. Likewise, a healthy nation is a strong nation. We are a strong people!

Sunday, January 30, 2011

To God Be The Glory

He has told us to humble ourselves not only to Him, but also to each other. To be gentle. To be patient. To love each other. Remembering that love bears all things. To God be the glory.
See the video and listen to the music. It is bone chilling. http://www.livingtoday2011.org/

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Mom Jailed For Sending Kids to Better School

Mom Jailed For Sending Kids to Better School

http://news.yahoo.com/video/us-15749625/mom-jailed-for-sending-kids-to-better-school-23973624

 

This is exactly the issue the President presented in His State Of The Union Adress of 2011.???????????????????????

Saturday, January 22, 2011

And The Light Was All Around

A Word For Our Journey: ASK

Ask, Seek and Knock
 It is so appropriate that the Bible gives us a reason to hope beyond what we see in the verse from Matthew 7: 7-8. It tells us to have a strong relationship with God. God hears us when we ask him. He's  there when we seek him. When we knock he will open the door for us. He invites us to come in and have a personal relationship with him. He is always with us to lead us, guide us and protect us. I know!

Peace and Blessing!

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Christmas. Where did it go?

Christmas. Where did it go? No more smiling faces. no more people helping people. No more everybody speaking to each other. Now, the silence. It's a new year and we have to wait 11 more months before people are happh again, smiling again, laughing again.
Are we really that shallow? Are we really growing that far apart? Who is my neighbor? When will we take the time to know one another........

Monday, January 10, 2011

The New Digital Divide of 2011

PASS IT ON!!

For minorities, new 'digital divide' seen

AP – In this Dec. 22, 2010 photo, Ritmo Records owner Miguel Amador meets with customer Ramon Corona in one …
By JESSE WASHINGTON, AP National Writer Jesse Washington, Ap National Writer – Sun Jan 9, 12:34 am ET
When the personal computer revolution began decades ago, Latinos and blacks were much less likely to use one of the marvelous new machines. Then, when the Internet began to change life as we know it, these groups had less access to the Web and slower online connections placing them on the wrong side of the "digital divide."

Today, as mobile technology puts computers in our pockets, Latinos and blacks are more likely than the general population to access the Web by cellular phones, and they use their phones more often to do more things.

But now some see a new "digital divide" emerging with Latinos and blacks being challenged by more, not less, access to technology. It's tough to fill out a job application on a cell phone, for example. Researchers have noticed signs of segregation online that perpetuate divisions in the physical world. And blacks and Latinos may be using their increased Web access more for entertainment than empowerment.

Fifty-one percent of Hispanics and 46 percent of blacks use their phones to access the Internet, compared with 33 percent of whites, according to a July 2010 Pew poll. Forty-seven percent of Latinos and 41 percent of blacks use their phones for e-mail, compared with 30 percent of whites. The figures for using social media like Facebook via phone were 36 percent for Latinos, 33 percent for blacks and 19 percent for whites.

A greater percentage of whites than blacks and Latinos still have broadband access at home, but laptop ownership is now about even for all these groups, after black laptop ownership jumped from 34 percent in 2009 to 51 percent in 2010, according to Pew.

Increased access and usage should be good things, right?

"I don't know if it's the right time to celebrate. There are challenges still there," says Craig Watkins, an associate professor at the University of Texas at Austin and author of "The Young and the Digital." He adds: "We are much more engaged, but now the questions turn to the quality of that engagement, what are people doing with that access."

For Tyrell Coley, engagement mostly means entertainment. In December, the 21-year-old New York City supermarket clerk launched a Twitter conversation about "(hash)femalesneedto." The number sign was a "hashtag" that allowed others to label their tweets and join the discussion.

Within a few hours, (hash)femalesneedto was the top trending topic on Twitter meaning more of the site's 17 million users were talking about it than anything else. Most comments came from black users and focused on relationships, advising women to do things like "learn sex is not love" and "learn how to love themselves."

"There's always something happening on Twitter, some drama, people talking about something," says Coley. "Twitter is a great social network to kill time. When you're bored, get on Twitter. Next thing you know you'll be out of work or whatever. Twitter makes my day go by. That's why I'm on almost every day."

Coley is black, and so are most of his 3,756 Twitter followers. So are about 25 percent of all Twitter users, roughly double the percentage of blacks in the U.S. population, according to a February 2010 survey by Edison Research and Arbitron.

Many of Twitter's trending topics have been fueled by black tweets. Coley has been responsible for several (hash)youcantbeuglyand and (hash)dumbthingspeoplesay also sprang from his iPhone. He has a desktop computer at home, which he used to apply for his supermarket job. But he uses his phone for 80 percent of his online activity, which is usually watching hip-hop and comedy videos or looking for sneakers on eBay.

This trend is alarming to Anjuan Simmons, a black engineer and technology consultant who blogs, tweets and uses Facebook "more than my wife would like." He hopes that blacks and Latinos will use their increased Web access to create content, not just consume it.

"What are we doing with this access? Are we simply sending e-mail, downloading adult content, sending texts for late-night hookups?" Simmons says. "Or are we discussing ideas, talking to people who we would not normally be able to talk to?"

Simmons has made professional connections and found job opportunities through social media. But when he first started using Twitter, the first thing he looked for was other black faces to connect with.

"The African-American community has a built-in social layer," Simmons says. "We tend to see other African-Americans as family. Even if we haven't met someone, we often refer to other black people as `brothers' or `sisters.'

"The root of that probably goes back to slavery, how we had to have tight connections because the slave masters could easily break up families," he says. "We needed that sense of family really to protect ourselves during slavery and Jim Crow. That still is woven into, oddly, the fabric of black America to this day. And I think we see this social construct online."

Facebook and Internet access are what most of Miguel Amador's customers want when they enter his two stores in Latino neighborhoods in Camden, N.J. Five years ago, the majority of his revenue came from music CDs. Now his mobile device sales are up 50 percent from a year ago. His top seller is the MyTouch 4G phone, which costs $499.

Amador immigrated from the Dominican Republic 20 years ago. He uses a laptop at home and a desktop in his store to run his business and update his two Facebook accounts. One account is for personal use he estimates that 75 percent of the people he knows are on Facebook and one is aimed at his customers.

He recognizes that mobile phones are more limited than computers: "Phones are more for entertainment right now. I don't want to use the word uneducated, but I don't think (customers) are 100 percent educated on what the Internet can do in your life. They just see you can have fun on it."

"For the Latino community," he says, "people without Internet are missing about 65 percent of the opportunities in life."

Yet mobile Internet access may not be the great equalizer. Aaron Smith, a Pew senior research specialist, says there are obvious limitations on what you can do on a mobile device updating a resume being the classic example.

"Research has shown that people with an actual connection at home, the ability to go online on a computer at home, are more engaged in a lot of different things that people who rely on access from work, a friend's house, or a phone," Smith says.

For those Latinos with mobile access, their connections are often related to geography. "Most Latinos here want to communicate with each other, they have family in other places that they want to be connected to," Amador says. "And they want to be involved in the American community. They see everyone on TV talking about Facebook and Twitter, and they want what other Americans have."

Yet despite these forces pushing ethnic groups together online, Simmons has seen his social network expand. Only about half of his 2,834 Facebook friends are black, down from about 80 percent when he signed up in 2006.

The early days of the Internet were filled with visions of a Utopian space where race would disappear, famously captured by a 1993 New Yorker cartoon with one pooch sitting at a computer saying to another, "On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog."

But the reality has turned out much differently, says Peter Chow-White, an assistant communications professor at Simon Fraser University and co-author of the forthcoming anthology "Race After the Internet." He says there is "absolutely" still a racial divide online, in terms of broadband access and the ability of blacks and Latinos to make their voices widely heard.

"As long as you have structural inequalities in society, you cannot expect to have anything less than that on the Internet," he says. "The Internet is not a separate space from the world, it's intricately connected to everyday life and social institutions."

That's what danah boyd found as she documented a form of "white flight" among teenagers from MySpace to Facebook in 2006-07.

A social media researcher for Microsoft and a fellow at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet and Society, boyd interviewed teens in 17 states and spent more than 2,000 hours observing online practices.

She found that black youth were more likely to be on MySpace, while whites were leaving what some called MySpace's "ghetto" environment for Facebook. Although few white teens explicitly said they were leaving MySpace to get away from blacks or Latinos, boyd said their comments were often closely tied to race and class.

"The higher castes of high school moved to Facebook," one 17-year-old told her. "It was more cultured, and less cheesy. The lower class usually were content to stick to MySpace."

These movements "reflected a reproduction of social categories that exist in schools throughout the United States. Because race, ethnicity and socio-economic status shape social categories, the choice between MySpace and Facebook became racialized," boyd wrote in an article to be published in "Race After the Internet."

Today, Facebook has eclipsed MySpace in popularity, and Facebook says that blacks are about 11 percent of all U.S. Facebook users. But no ethnic group has increased its Facebook usage more than Hispanics, which went from about 3 percent to 9 percent of U.S. users since 2006, according to the site's own analysis.

Amador believes this trend, along with more Internet access in general, is speeding up the process of assimilation for Latinos by connecting them to their friends and families back home.

"When you're far away from something, you have a strong feeling for it, and you want it more," he says. "But now that we can get closer to those things, it makes us much more comfortable here."

Smith, the Pew researcher, says more research is needed to understand the implications of blacks and Latinos moving so quickly to mobile Web access, because this technology is changing the patterns of Internet use as profoundly as the shift from dial-up to broadband did over the past decade.

"Mobile is a totally different experience," he says. "It's a huge change when the gateway to information in the digital world is always with you."

___

Jesse Washington covers race and ethnicity for The Associated Press. He is reachable at http://www.twitter.com/jessewashington or jwashington(at)ap.org.


What's your opinion? This is DJ Let me know.


Peace and Blessings!
David Jackson
Sr. Exec. Admin, LivingToday Ministries