Today Take Charge Tuesday: Quotes to Live By

I hope your New Year was memorable. Now down to business!

This year. This year right here. (In my Katt Williams Voice.) Is the year of progression & change. I know you here people say the same thing year after year. I heard the message too , but it means nothing until you decide to take action.

We Celebrate New Years but we should be just as excited about everyday. What if you New Years Never comes for us. What if the next hour doesn’t come for us? We must embrace this minute. I challenge you to be the very best you can be this moment.

This Year BG Rise2Power Network Declares Today Take Charge Tuesday

Expect Quotes to Live By. We don’t want you to just read the quotes, we want you to own the quotes and apply them to your life. Sing them like you sing 106 and Parks top 10 count down.

Here is the Kick Off Quote

Get your mind right and everything else will fall into place.

Today make an honest effort to get your mind right.

Bg Rise2Power “Raising the Bar on Life.”

Nike, Oprah, MJ, MTV: What’s Your Brand Name?

Does your name ring positive bells when people hear it. How are you portrayed when your not present. How we establish ourselves online, during social events and on a daily basis plays a huge factor in how others view us.
You may not think jobs care about your personal life but, they do. Many employers are interested in how you act outside of work. That girl you cursed out last week in the super market didn’t mean much to you, but what if your bosses husband was in the next aisle. Yeah, think about it.

I’ve gotten many job offers via social media, because of my online presence. Deya Smith of BlackAmericaWeb.com has a great article on nurturing your personal brand. She’s mentions if you don’t care about what others think, you may be limiting yourself in ways your not aware – personally, professionally and financially.
Entrepreneur.com offers some helpful tips on successfully branding yourself. Always remember there is always someone watching and that person could be an employer, employee, investor, customer, reporter or business owner.
You are your brand!!
-Live Abundantly
BG Rise2Power Network
 

J-HuD the Angelic Voice of our TIME!

Jennifer Hudson a Chicago native is an inspiration to anyone who never thought dreams could become your reality. She rose to fame after her lose on American Idle. A lesser woman would have given up, threw in the towel and went back to the hood to become a has been or would have. Thank God she didn’t, because she wouldn’t be the poster child for determination.

J Hud whom began her singing career in Church and graduated from Dunbar Vocational Career Academy in Chicago, is a force to never be messed with. After the death of her mother, sister and nephew in 2008, she removed herself from the public eye. I never had a doubt the J Hud would be back. Oh, and she came back on fire.

Ms. Hudson is resilient and has a renewed outlook on life. As a new mommy she gets the opportunity to pass on all the love her mother gave to her. I can personally relate to Jennifer because of the lose of my mother. Instead of feeling sorry for myself, blaming God and giving up. Jennifer and I decided to take time to collect ourselves and go all in. God, Family and Progress are our priority list.

If you’re ever down and think you can’t go on. Remember that if Jennifer can do it so can you!

Watch J Huds Dynamic Performance

I encourage you to undertake something that is difficult…it will do you good, because unless you try to do something beyond what you have already mastered, you will never grow to be a man/woman of influence!

Married To The MOB Founder talks about her rise to power and how the NY Police helped her.

How Higher Education Is Making Us Broke | TheLoop21.com

Student loan debts have reached crisis levels, especially for Blacks.

By: Shanon D. Murray | TheLoop21 (Add to your loop)
Thu, 12/23/2010 – 5:30am
With student debt nearing $1 trillion and Americans owing more on student loans than on credit cards, you know it’s bad when the national media finally pays attention. And that’s exactly what happened this week when CNBC premiered a special called “Price of Admission: America’s College Debt Crisis.”

The report was compelling and well done except for one glaring omission: It didn’t feature any students or families who were African American or of any other non-white ethnicity. If CNBC goes as far as to say college debt is a national crisis – and indeed it is – then that fact should have been made obvious in its reporting about its effect on students and families from all ethnicities and backgrounds.

And the effects are deep and far-reaching. College seniors who graduated in 2009 carried an average of $24,000 in student loan debt. Meanwhile, unemployment for recent college graduates climbed from 5.8 percent in 2008 to 8.7 percent in 2009 – the highest annual rate on record for college graduates aged 20 to 24, according to the Project on Student Debt.

And when college students graduate into a recession, a likely result is student loan defaults.

I launched into the conversation about the college debt crisis last month in an article asking whether Historically Black Colleges and Universities were adding to Black America’s economic crisis. I focused on HBCUs to try to isolate the effect on African Americans and because data analysis revealed that graduates of those schools are more likely to default on student loans.

The national student loan default rate is seven percent, which is the highest it has been since 1997, according to the U.S. Department of Education. But, as CNBC reported, there are concerns that that is a gross underestimation because the current rate only takes into account loans that are defaulted on in the first two years after they are come due.

Why does the federal government insist on using the two-year default rate? Primarily because that is the figure that determines schools’ eligibility for federal student aid, according to CNBC.

Under current federal rules, all schools with default rates of 25 percent or greater for three consecutive years face loss of eligibility in the federal student aid programs. Schools with a default rate greater than 40 percent in the latest year may lose eligibility to participate in the federal loan programs.

Using a longer period to determine a school’s student loan default rate would undoubtedly increase the rate for most schools. In fact, some estimate that 1 in 3 students will default on their student debt during the life of the loans.

Much like the mortgage and foreclosure crisis, the student loan debt crisis is clearly another economic bubble that will further devastate families and households once it bursts.

But what continues to feed it is the disconnect between the goal of graduating college and the skyrocketing costs of education.

Even President Obama during his press conference on Wednesday about the lame duck congressional session reiterated that “education is the single most important determinant for our children’s success and our country’s success in the 21st century… We have to make sure young people can afford to go to college.”

Obama also said it is a national priority to make sure colleges and universities “aren’t restricted to just people who can afford it but are open to anybody with talent and a willingness to work.”

Yet students are caught in a vicious cycle of ever-increasing educational costs and fees that leads to taking out more student loans to attend schools that continue to raise its costs and fees. And at the end of the day, colleges and universities keep the thousands of dollars students borrow while students keep the debt.

It’s a business model that puts all of the risk on students.

Historically, education has always been the surest way to climb the economic ladder. Not only is it a necessity for African Americans, but Obama has made graduating college a national mandate to increase U.S. competitiveness around the world. But if college is a key to success, can we afford it? Can we afford not to?

Shanon D. Murray, an MBA and former financial writer and editor, is a personal finance blogger for TheLoop21.com. Email Shanon at shanon@theloop21.com. Follow her on Twitter @ShanonDMurray.

How Higher Education Is Making Us Broke | TheLoop21.com

Ay Shawty Can I Holla at You! Street Harassment a Problem for Young Girls

Provided by: Helping Our Teen Girls Organization (HOT Girls)

http://www.helpingourteengirls.org/programs/street_harassment_campaign.htm

What is Street Harassment?

In general, street harassment refers to a range of harassing behaviors that occur on the street or in other public places including catcalling, sexually explicit comments, unwanted touching, and other unwanted attention and behavior. Street harassment is as an under-recognized problem with potentially harmful psychological and physical consequences for black young women and girls in Atlanta (and around the world).

Hey shorty, Can I get a piece of that ass?Right: What Girls Hear on the Street

Why is Street Harassment Important?

We believe street harassment is an important issue to address because it is part of the larger problem of violence against women and girls in Atlanta and around the world. Even though many women and girls are harassed on a regular basis, many people do not recognize that street harassment is a problem. Some people don’t realize that their behavior is considered disrespectful, annoying, or in some cases– threatening. And some girls are disrespected so much that they think that street harassment is just a part of daily life.

What Are We Doing to Stop Street Harassment?

Girls working on a posterTo address the issue, the Teen Advisory Board began by collecting stories about girls’ experiences with street harassment and developing educational materials to raise awareness about the impact of street harassment and violence against women and girls.
The Teen Advisory Board organized a summitfor teen girls ages 13-19 in July 2005 to raise awareness about these issues, as well as images of black women and girls in the media and hip hop culture. At the 2008 summit, we invited teen boys to our summit to help us find creative ways to challenge gender-based violence.
We are continuing to develop health education materials including web content for teen girls and an educational web site for young men and boys. The purpose of the materials is to educate harassers, targets, and allies about street harassment and combat denigrating stereotypes about black women and girls that contribute to harassment and disrespectful treatment on the street and other settings (i.e., schools, shopping malls, etc.). These materials will be distributed on the Internet and at public places where youth congregate. 

Our anti-street harassment initiative was featured in an article.

Click here to listen to our anti-street harassment song, “Let Me Tell You How To Talk To Me,” recorded at the Harland Boys & Girls Club (produced and mixed by CW). Click here to read the lyrics. 

Girls in the recording studio
Above: Girls Leadership Council members in the studio recording “Let Me Tell You How to Talk to Me”

Street Harassment Resources

Young Women’s Action Team
Street Harassment Project 
Anti-Street Harassment UK