Colin Kaepernick comments on election hoax 2016: "what is this country really standing for?"
Colin Kaepernick spoke of the 'oppression of Black people that is done systematically' and the illusion of this election. That took courage. Dr. Frances Cress Welsing explained that most Black people fear confronting white supremacy/racism. Many Blacks are dominated by this fear. Taking your head out of the sand to face the mirror is a risk in a racist society. In all areas of people activity, elite whites quickly filter out Blacks not controlled by the crowd and handsomely reward those most effectively programmed for their own destruction. (It is easy for advocates & certain public persons to do and say things their audience expects them to do and say - there is no risk involved). Can you openly confront racism/white supremacy in your current position, job or business? Don't look before you leap. [Mind is the problem.]
According to the Funktionary:
Elections - The advanced auction of stolen goods. 2) rituals where periodically citizen-subjects are called upon to "participate" in the staged hoax ratification of one group of state managers or another, which provides the comforting illusion of "democracy" where none exists. 3) Dumbocracy in action; stage prop to enable the puppeteer and his puppeticians to pull the strings of you and me. 4) show and shell games. 5) the orchestration and preservation of the illusion of choice and open competition. [MORE]
According to Bhagwan
Courage - Means going into the unknown in spite of all the fears. Courage does not mean fearlessness. Fearlessness happens if you go on being courageous and more courageous. That is the ultimate experience of courage -- fearlessness; that is the fragrance when the courage has become absolute. But in the beginning there is not much difference between the coward and the courageous person. The only difference is, the coward listens to his fears and follows them, and the courageous person puts them aside and goes ahead. The courageous person goes into the unknown in spite of all the fears. He knows the fears, the fears are there.
When you go into the uncharted sea, like Columbus did, there is fear, immense fear, because one never knows what is going to happen and you are leaving the shore of safety. You were perfectly okay, in a way; only one thing was missing -- adventure. Going into the unknown gives you a thrill. The heart starts pulsating again; again you are alive, fully alive. Every fiber of your being is alive because you have accepted the challenge of the unknown.
To accept the challenge of the unknown in spite of all fears, is courage. The fears are there, but if you go on accepting the challenge again and again, slowly slowly those fears disappear. The experience of the joy that the unknown brings, the great ecstasy that starts happening with the unknown, makes you strong enough, gives you a certain integrity, makes your intelligence sharp. For the first time you start feeling that life is not just a boredom but an adventure. Then slowly slowly fears disappear; then you are always seeking and searching for some adventure.
But basically courage is risking the known for the unknown, the familiar for the unfamiliar, the comfortable for the uncomfortable arduous pilgrimage to some unknown destination. One never knows whether one will be able to make it or not. It is gambling, but only the gamblers know what life is.
An African delegation to Moscow was being treated to all aspects of Russian culture. One of the secret service agents was telling an African how to play Russian roulette with a six-shooter handgun with only one bullet in the chamber.
"You put it to your head," he said, "and pull the trigger." The African was not impressed. "African roulette is much more fearsome!" he said.
"Impossible!" exclaimed the Russian, "Please explain."
"There are six naked women," said the African, "and each one will give you a blowjob -- you just choose any one." "That needs no courage," sneered the Russian.
"Aha!" exclaimed the African. "But one of them is a cannibal!"