Allegory of the Balloon

Listen Siblings, I come in peace,

“How is that the North Star?” — Onitaset Kumat

The Ultimate Tool for Analysis is the above question, it distinguishes the mis-leaders from the leaders.  The African Blood Siblings Community Center is the North Star.  All else is mis-leadership.  This world-famous allegory provides what mis-leadership entails.  It follows after it’s famous counterpart the “Allegory of the Classroom” and leads the final point. All three were on the television show.  Apply yourself to be a leader of the race.  Write the ABS for more information.  Subscribe, share, love.

Allegory of the Balloon
By Onitaset Kumat

In telling you this, we address your statements.  You say that Black people should not support Black leadership.  Yet herein we see that every Black person is a Black leader.  But to go to the Black leaders of which you mean to speak, let us redefine them.  I once saw a grown man chasing after a black-colored balloon drifting in the wind.  The balloon swiveled left and right, up and down, circling to and from.  When we think of the physics of balloons, the balloon on its own never moves.  Rather, the air around it does; as in, the wind moves the balloon.  In this regard, we ask ourselves, whereas visibly it looked as if the man chased the balloon floating in the air–he actually followed the wind.  So to speak, if one wants to speak to what one follows, one should not look to the most visible element, rather the most forceful element: in this example the wind.  In the classroom example, it would be ‘history.’

From the dialogue “Why should Blacks support Black leadership?”

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