Washington, DC - Hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons will be the host of a campaign fundraiser Thursday for Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael S. Steele's run for U.S. Senate.
They put a warning on my last post. Sensitive content, they called it. But you and I both know the truth: I didn’t describe a sex act. I didn’t get graphic. All I did was pull back the curtain—mask and shadow, approval and desire. That’s what set off the alarm. Because once you see it, you can’t unsee it: Friendship isn’t attraction. Approval isn’t desire. Politeness isn’t polarity. That’s the secret they don’t want in your hands. So here’s the deal: If they’re warning you not to read this, you already know it’s the truth they’d rather stay buried.
1 - The Haitian Revolution was a significant event that took place in the French colony of Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti) from 1791 to 1804. It was the first and only successful slave revolt in modern times, with enslaved Africans and people of African descent rising up against their oppressors and establishing a free republic. The Haitian Revolution was a momentous event that had far-reaching consequences for the world, including the abolition of slavery and the civil rights movement in the United States. It also served as a model for other independence movements in Latin America, the Caribbean, and freedom fighters around the world. 2 - Toussaint L'Ouverture was a key figure in the Haitian Revolution, serving as a military leader and the de facto leader of the Haitian people. Born into slavery in Saint-Domingue, L'Ouverture was a skilled and experienced military strategist who rose to prominence during the revolution. He played a crucial role in the Haitian people'...
What if reading was just the start of thinking? For a while now, My Right Mind has been a bit of a wandering space. Ideas, half-built frameworks, things I was curious about but couldn’t quite stick the landing on. Maybe you’ve been there too—where you’re thinking through something, but it hasn’t clicked yet. This might be one of those clicks. Lately I’ve been digging into an old-but-powerful reading method by Eugene Schwartz—not a curriculum exactly, more like a framework for how the mind builds meaning through stories. It’s called the "Blank Sheet" method, and at first glance it looks simple: you hear a story, recall the main thought, outline it, retell it. But when you go deeper, it’s really about training the mind to think structurally—to hold, compress, and recreate meaning from the inside out. I’m starting to see it less as a reading strategy and more as a thinking system . A quiet, recursive method for shaping attention, memory, and thought. And it feels like the ...
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