PACERS!
That’s it for today! Enjoy your day!! I’ll be back tomorrow after I recover.
Julie Bolejack, MBA
That’s it for today! Enjoy your day!! I’ll be back tomorrow after I recover.
Julie Bolejack, MBA
Black History Fact: In many Southern states, it was illegal for enslaved people to learn to read. Punishments included beatings, imprisonment, and death. Ignorance has always been enforced. Black history makes clear that education threatens oppression because it reveals alternatives. It teaches people to imagine themselves differently—and systems depend
Some mornings, the fatigue settles in before the coffee has time to work. Not the physical kind. The deeper weariness that comes from knowing that telling the truth, again and again, will cost something. That resisting what is wrong will never be efficient, tidy, or rewarded on a reasonable timeline.
Hello readers! Some truths take a long time to land, not because they are complicated, but because they are inconvenient. Black History Month invites us to sit with those truths without rushing to soften them. It asks us to remember that history is not a story we tell about the
Black History Fact: In 1619, enslaved Africans were brought to what would become the United States—before the country existed, before democracy, before the Constitution. Black history does not enter America as a footnote. It enters at the beginning. Before there was a United States, there was forced labor. Before