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"THE CHAINS THAT BIND" is a book that resulted from anger and frustration! After almost fifty years of struggle we still hear that "we have a long way to go" and "we're not there yet" from black leaders. Nobody has asked how much farther do we have to go or "when will we be there?" Dr. Martin Luther King said "we will get to the promised-land." However, without a plan and strategy you can have no direction and it is highly unlikely that you will reach the destination. Black leaders have had no specific plank, goals, or objectives that have anything to do with getting to the "promised land."…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"THE CHAINS THAT BIND" is a book that resulted from anger and frustration! After almost fifty years of struggle we still hear that "we have a long way to go" and "we're not there yet" from black leaders. Nobody has asked how much farther do we have to go or "when will we be there?" Dr. Martin Luther King said "we will get to the promised-land." However, without a plan and strategy you can have no direction and it is highly unlikely that you will reach the destination. Black leaders have had no specific plank, goals, or objectives that have anything to do with getting to the "promised land." They are content to remain in the struggle. In fact the struggle itself has become their passion rather than the reaching the destination (what that destination is I'm not really sure of anymore)! Controversial as it may be, this book reveals how black leaders have conspired to keep black America in bondage! While they blame the "Republicans" and the "white man" in general for almost every problem faced by the black man, they are the (self-appointed) black leaders and if you want to know why you are where you are, look at who you are following! This book reveals the culprits that put the locks on the psychological chains that binds black America.
Autorenporträt
Walter Franklin Head was born in Spalding County, Georgia on October 17, 1950. He was the seventh of ten children born to Robert and Alma Head. He was born and grew up in a modest four-bedroom house on a small farm during the last years of open segregation. He attended segregation public schools. That experience plus years in an integrated United States Air Force, and integrated colleges helped to shape his unique perspective on the black struggle.