Friday, February 27, 2009

Don't let them rob you of your spirit


Gcode from LOD and Preezie of AGE at BET Awards after party an OverdaEdge Event

Right now, I've been hearing alot of people talk about how thankful you should be to have a job during this economic crisis. I agree, but I still challenge those who are not in a financial mis-fortune to push hard to reach financial independence. It is true that there are alot of things more important than money, but having money does make all those things even more enjoyable. God says, Faith is dead without works...so we still have to push. We stil have to grind. We have to work together, be creative with ideas for having abundance, and pray that our works pay off.

The Daily Preezie Baby!
http://Pdammond.com

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Basics in how to get your Money right


Basics in how to get your Money right

Here are some things you can do to gain Wealth.

Ability to read and understand financial statements: Get coaching

Being an experience Investor: Take getting your feet wet with Investing. We all learn through trial and error and the best time to learn is always now…not tomorrow. No matter what AGE you are.

Expert in understanding emotional driven markets/people: Comes with Reading and paying attention to history and the current events of that time.

Know the Law: Knowledge of Tax Advantages of a Corporation: Read and if you don’t understand get a free consultation from a Business Attorney. They are out there.

Money is not real…money is an agreement between two people that something is valuable.

One man’s trash is another man’s treasure
You’re liability can be perceived by another man as an asset.
One man’s debt can be another person’s opportunity to collect, so don’t put yourself in debt trying to run with the Jones.

In all things, we have to take control of our own lives, otherwise there are people out there itching to so call scratch our backs until we’re spineless. To all my readers, reach for overall prosperity and help others do the same.

The Daily Preezie Baby
http://Pdammond.com

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

What you lack in vision can be leveraged through experiences



What you lack in vision...can be leveraged through experiences.

At times, people feel that they have a lack of purpose in their lives and because of this feeling they feel left out or held back. Some of us wonder about..constantly praying for God to send us a message that will reveal our purpose.
Some people can hear from God, and some won't. At any rate, I believe for that we all can learn from one another and still have peace of mind regarding the way we live our lives.
"What you lack in vision/purpose can be leveraged in experience"
Don't think so much about a thing....It's better to just make and decision and stand on your belief/Faith.
Here's a Story I found on Don H. Barden..the first Black Casino Owner in America. Pay close attention to his time line and how quickly he made choices that governed his life.
It doesn't always take much money to reach big Goals. Visit the link below to become inspired by greatness...

If your in vegas, please visit this spot.http://www.majesticstar.com/

The Daily Preezie Baby
mIs$ ya ADB

Monday, February 16, 2009

If you're in need of a blessing just

rely on your seventh sense.
These are the times, where we really have to exercise our faith. Faith is believing without seeing or having a tangible reason to believe.
Human beings are known for having 6 senses. I believe we have seven and some how over time, we became to dependent on the first 6 sense forgetting the seventh.
I believe Faith is the seventh sense that has been lost. It takes time, energy, and skill to use faith, but faith is the most powerful sense of all. Humans have just became lazy...
We're living in a hustlers era...We can't afford to count on Social security to pay us like it did our grand parents or even our parents. Our future is totally dependant on how we manager our lives, and how we establish financial relationships with each other.
Through believing and having Faith, we will be able to hedge ourselves in this volatile economic market place.
Do remember! Faith is dead without works...so you still have to sew seeds to reap your blessings.
The Daily Preezie Baby!
http://Pdammond.com

Thursday, February 12, 2009

With Power comes great responsibility



I take the time to learn things that I don't know. I know that I can not learn it all..but that doesn't keep me from activitely growing in knowledge and experience. Today, I stumble across this after having a conversation with one of my associates. We we're speaking on how better off African American's would be if they all stuck together like other races.


BLACK WALLSTREET
Please pass this on to the Iota Family. It's an important part of history that every Black person should know, if they don't know already.
Ron Wallace: co-author of Black Wallstreet: A Lost Dream Chronicles a little-known chapter of African-American History in Oklahoma as told to Ronald E. Childs. If anyone truly believes that the last April attack on the federal building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, was the most tragic bombing ever to take place on United States soil, as the media has been widely reporting, they're wrong-plain and simple. That's because an even deadlier bomb occurred in that same state nearly 75 years ago.
Many people in high places would like to forget that it ever happened. Searching under the heading of "riots," "Oklahoma" and "Tulsa" in current editions of the World Book Encyclopedia, there is conspicuously no mention whatsoever of the Tulsa race riot of 1921, and this omission is by no means a surprise, or a rare case. The fact is, one would also be hard-pressed to find documentation of the incident, let alone an accurate accounting of it, in any other "scholarly" reference or American history book.
That's precisely the point that noted author, publisher and orator Ron Wallace, a Tulsa native, sought to make nearly five years ago when he began researching this riot, one of the worst incidents of violence ever visited upon people of African descent. Ultimately joined on the project by colleague Jay Jay Wilson of Los Angeles, the duo found and compiled indisputable evidence of what they now describe as "A Black Holocaust in America."
The date was June 1, 1921, when "Black Wallstreet," the name fittingly given to one of the most affluent all-black communities in America, was bombed from the air and burned to the ground by mobs of envious whites. In a period spanning fewer than 12 hours, a once thriving 36-black business district in northern Tulsa lay smoldering-A model community destroyed, and a major Africa-American economic movement resoundingly defused.
The night's carnage left some 3,000 African Americans dead, and over 600 successful businesses lost. Among these were 21 churches, 21 restaurants, 30 grocery stores and two movie theaters, plus a hospital, a bank, a post office, libraries, schools, law offices, a half-dozen private airplanes and even a bus system. As could be expected, the impetus behind it all was the infamous Ku Klux Klan, working in consort with ranking city officials, and many other sympathizers. In their self-published book, Black Wallstreet: A lost Dream, and its companion video documentary, Black Wallstreet: A Black Holocaust in America!, the authors have chronicled for the very first time in the words of area historians and elderly survivors what really happened there on that fateful summer day in 1921 and why it happened. Wallace similarly explained to Black Elegance why this bloody event from the turn of the century seems to have had a recurring effect that is being felt in predominately Black neighborhoods even to this day. The best description of Black Wallstreet, or Little Africa as it was also known, would be to liken it to a mini-Beverly Hills. It was the golden door of the Black community during the early 1900s, and it proved that African Americans had successful infrastructure. That's what Black Wallstreet was about.
The dollar circulated 36 to 1000 times, sometimes taking a year for currency to leave the community. Now in 1995, a dollar leaves the Black community in 15 minutes. As far as resources, there were Ph.D's residing in Little Africa, Black attorneys and doctors. One doctor was Dr. Berry who also owned the bus system. His average income was $500 a day, a hefty pocket of change in 1910. During that era, physicians owned medical schools. There were also pawn shops everywhere, brothels, jewelry stores, 21 churches, 21 restaurants and two movie theaters. It was a time when the entire state of Oklahoma had only two airports, yet six blacks owned their own planes. It was a very fascinating community. The area encompassed over 600 businesses and 36 square blocks with a population of 15,000 African Americans. And when the lower-economic Europeans looked over and saw what the Black community created, many of them were jealous. When the average student went to school on Black Wallstreet, he wore a suit and tie because of the morals and respect they were taught at a young age.
The mainstay of the community was to educate every child. Nepotism was the one word they believed in. And that's what we need to get back to in 1995. The main thoroughfare was Greenwood Avenue, and it was intersected by Archer and Pine Streets. From the first letters in each of those names, you get G.A.P., and that's where the renowned R&B music group The GAP Band got its name. They're from Tulsa. Black Wallstreet was a prime example of the typical Black community in America that did business, but it was in an unusual location. You see, at the time, Oklahoma was set aside to be a Black and Indian state. There were over 28 Black townships there. One third of the people who traveled in the terrifying "Trail of Tears" along side the Indians between 1830 to 1842 were Black people. The citizens of this proposed Indian and Black state chose a Black governor, a treasurer from Kansas named McDade. But the Ku Klux Klan said that if he assumed office that they would kill him within 48 hours. A lot of Blacks owned farmland, and many of them had gone into the oil business. The community was so tight and wealthy because they traded dollars hand-to-hand, and because they were dependent upon one another as a result of the Jim Crow laws.
It was not unusual that if a resident's home accidentally burned down, it could be rebuilt within a few weeks by neighbors. This was the type of scenario that was going on day-to-day on Black Wallstreet. When Blacks intermarried into the Indian culture, some of them received their promised '40 acres and a Mule,' and with that came whatever oil was later found on the properties.
Just to show you how wealthy a lot of Black people were, there was a banker in a neighboring town who had a wife named California Taylor. Her father owned the largest cotton gin west of the Mississippi [River]. When California shopped, she would take a cruise to Paris every three months to have her clothes made. There was also a man named Mason in nearby Wagner County who had the largest potato farm west of the Mississippi. When he harvested, he would fill 100 boxcars a day. Another brother not far away had the same thing with a spinach farm. The typical family then was five children or more, though the typical farm family would have 10 kids or more who made up the nucleus of the labor.
On Black Wallstreet, a lot of global business was conducted. The community flourished from the early 1900s until June 1, 1921. That's when the largest massacre of non-military Americans in the history of this country took place, and it was lead by the Ku Klux Klan. Imagine walking out of your front door and seeing 1,500 homes being burned. It must have been amazing.
Survivors we interviewed think that the whole thing was planned because during the time that all of this was going on, white families with their children stood around on the borders of the community and watched the massacre, the looting and everything---much in the same manner they would watch a lynching.
In my lectures I ask people if they understand where the word "picnic" comes from. It was typical to have a picnic on a Friday evening in Oklahoma. The word was short for "pick a nigger" to lynch. They would lynch a Black male and cut off body parts as souvenirs. This went on every weekend in this country. That's where the term really came from. The riots weren't caused by anything Black or white. It was caused by jealousy. A lot of white folks had come back from World War I and they were poor. When they looked over into the Black communities and realized that Black men who fought in the war had come home heroes that helped trigger the destruction. It cost the Black community everything, and not a single dime of restitution---no insurance claims-has been awarded to the victims to this day.
Nonetheless, they rebuilt. We estimate that 1,500 to 3,000 people were killed, and we know that a lot of them were buried in mass graves all around the city. Some were thrown in the river. As a matter of fact, at 21st Street and Yale Avenue, where there now stands a Sears parking lot, that corner used to be a coal mine. They threw a lot of the bodies into the shafts. Black Americans don't know about this story because we don't apply the word holocaust to our struggle. Jewish people use the word holocaust all the time. White people use the word holocaust. It's politically correct to use it. But when we Black folks use the word, people think we're being cry babies or that we're trying to bring up old issues. No one comes to our support. In 1910, our forefathers and mothers owned 13 million acres of land at the height of racism in this country, so the Black Wallstreet book and videotape prove to the naysayers and revisionists that we had our act together. Our mandate now is to begin to teach our children about our own, ongoing Black holocaust. They have to know when they look at our communities today that we don't come from this.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Inspiration over all to make moves



Through it all, I continue share with the world. I have receive peace of heart, wisdom, and the desire to never give up on my dreams. These past few months, I have been so inspired by the power within us all...that I too have to move on my faith. How could I advise others if I don't take the advice myself. "Practice what you preach is the old saying." I say this to mean one thing to my readers...I may not post everyday, but I do promise to never stop completely...unless some tragedy occurs. At any rate, more or less...I've been moving on my dreams and I encourage you all to do the same. Find what really makes you light up...and do that for a living. Your days will seem short and long...but in the end you will have the peace that many aspire to have when that time comes.

The Daily Preezie Baby!




Preezie's Single release in 3 weeks title "You Can Handle It"

Monday, February 9, 2009

Traveling down the road as a single.



This past weekend, I was reminded on how to make a thing work. It made me think back a little when someone had told me that Love was not enough. I have came to realize that statement is totally wrong. Love is all it takes to make anything work. You just have to mind your own business.


How to mind you own business:


1. How you treat me is none of my business.


2. How I treat you is my business.


3. Minding my own business is treating a person or thing with unconditional love.


If I focus on loving the things that I am working on or are involved in then how that thing treats me should not be my focus.


Focusing on how others treat you is the same as operating out of love. Nothing good can grow from it. Those old school church moms had it right. No matter how wrong a pastor could be, or how wrong someone treated them, they always held it together and gave it to God. In love, they succeeded in conquering and achieving their goals. The end results was always a victory for Love (God).


So to conclude, If this is not how you operate...you need to mind you own business.


The Daily Preezie Baby


Friday, February 6, 2009

God made men to love Winding Roads


Men are attracted to curves more than we are consciously aware.

It is not a mistake that God made the most beautiful women very curvaceous.
With measurements like 38” 28” 38”, there is no mystery that the enveloping of curves on a woman’s body is captivating to say the least.

We are drawn in to winding roads, continuous lines, and blossoming arrangements of the curves of a woman’s spine. Curves are the essences of my love and admiration for the female outer exterior. I love her spirit. I love her curves.
That same type of love that is misunderstood for curves should be the same type of attraction we have inside of us to prosper and under no condition stop loving one another.

The Daily Preezie Baby!


The Daily Preezie is coming...

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

If you like luxury things get this


Wisdom leads to prosperity

There is one thing that I have and still comment to do. I pray to God to give me Wisdom to understand the things I don't understand and the know how to find out what I don't know. Wisdom is a luxury and depending on how you like to ride the vehicle of life will dictate what you value most of all.
To get Wisdom you have to ask with a humble heart. You have to humble yourself to know that you need wisdom...wisdom does not always come with time and experience however it does come through these channels. I believe in what God says...If you ask you shall receive, so I ask for Wisdom and humility. I'm a very confident person...so I had to really self-check myself on somethings.
I feel and do better now...

The Daily Preezie Baby!
http://Pdammond.com

"We've been blessed with Life to prove to God that we are truly deserving of Heaven on Earth" Life is blessing...so let's ride in style.

So you want to know what I think?

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