“A REAL TOUGH GUY” GEN. FRANK E. PETERSEN: Tony Brown sits down and talks one-on-one with the US Marines’ 1st Black general – General Frank E. Petersen. In a 2016 ceremony at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus announced that the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, DDG 121, will be named Frank E. Petersen Jr., in honor of the Marine Corps Lieutenant General who was the first African-American Marine Corps aviator and the first African-American Marine Corps general officer.
“SISTERS” TAKE CHARGE WITH HIGH RATINGS! IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT AS OF DEC. 30, 2022, TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL BLACK REALITY RATINGS
The audience size of the Tony Brown's Journal blog continues to GROW exponentially.
Since the latest ratings report of DECEMBER 30, 2022, the TonyBrownsJournal.com BLOG “WHEN THE SISTERS CAME MARCHING HOME” showcasing the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion added an additional 118,551 audience viewers, along with 1,038 new shares.
These new 1,038 shares reflect an average of 1,500 new viewers per additional website = 1,500 X 1,038 = an estimated 1,577,000 new website viewers of the TonyBrownsJournal.com website.
This report reflects the aforementioned citation of Tony Brown’s Journal as “one of the well-known public pages with a large following that has been verified as having an authentic identity.”
Tony Brown’s Journal, “the most complete and thoughtful record of African-American opinion,” with nearly 1,000 additional Tony Brown’s Journal film and video productions, is available to all subscribers.
EMPOWER THE PEOPLE, BUILDING ANABOLIC COMMUNITIES THAT ASSUME SOME RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE EDUCATION OF THEIR OFFSPRING
Our communities and nation once focused on core values in all areas of life to prepare the youth for service to others and a better future for themselves. Today, that same defining American trait is often used as an exaggerated sense of entitlement.
And that excess has now, unfortunately, become a common recurring theme in American life, along with the postponement of immediate gratification, is another disappearing national trait.
That’s why old-fashioned values and the character traits of stability may again prove to be the soundest advice for building future and sustained social progress and economic growth. That is also why the most viable family plan is to recommit ourselves to moral character and anabolic citizenship by resurrecting the core values and economic stability and the same culture of personal responsibility that helped Black people survive hundreds of years of slavery in America and racial bias and subsequently progress, before being systematically poisoned by promises of something-for-nothing partisan politics.
Communities are not strong or weak because they are Black or White (that’s a racist concept and a false social construction of logic without reasoning). Communities are strong with people who help one another because they are anabolic or, conversely, they are weak because they have too many catabolic members and/or family units to sustain growth.
If I had my way – and sufficient power – I would re-designate every individual or family as either anabolic or catabolic. Then, I would initiate a national empowerment-information campaign to increase the number of anabolic families (therefore reducing those who suffer from disparities). The main message of this liberating movement would be to (1) enable the growth of more families that have an investment asset to pass along to their children, (2) take control of your own healthcare insurance and (3) become part enablers in the education of their offspring – while teaching them to become the primary enablers of their own capacity and to accept responsibility for it.
FEATURED THIS WEEK ON TonyBrownsJournal.com
TBJ #302 – A REAL TOUGH GUY: Profile of the life of the US Marines’ 1st Black general – General Frank E. Petersen. In a 2016 ceremony at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus announced that the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, DDG 121, will be named Frank E. Petersen Jr., in honor of the Marine Corps Lieutenant General who was the first African-American Marine Corps aviator and the first African-American Marine Corps general officer.
HISTORICALLY, TONY BROWN IS also …
- Coordinator of the “Walk To Freedom with Martin Luther King, Jr.” in Detroit (1963), according to the July 29, 1963 edition of Business Week magazine, “the largest civil rights march in history.”
- WINNER of the prestigious Silver Circle Award from the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences
- Dean Emeritus and Professor, Scripps Howard School of Journalism and Communications, Hampton University
- First and Founding Dean and Professor, School of Communications, Howard University
- Founder, BLACK COLLEGE DAY, 1980
- 2015-2016 National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame Inductee
- Black Emmy Nominee – 1989 Special Recognition Award Winner
- Distinguished Visiting Professor, Honorary Degree – American University, Paris, France
- Distinguished Visiting Professor, Central Washington University, Ellensburg, WA
- Talker’s, Radio Trade Magazine: Selected as “One Of The 100 Most Important Radio Talk Show Hosts In America”
- “Tony Brown Chicago,” WLS-AM Radio (Chicago)
- “Tony Brown,” WLIB-AM Radio (New York) “Tony Brown at Daybreak,” WRC-TV (Washington, DC)
- “Tony Brown’s Journal”/“Black Journal” (TV series: 1968-2008): “The Most Complete and Thoughtful Record of African-American Opinion.”
- U. S. Army 272 field artillery (s-1 Intelligence) battalion and cadre (1953-1955). Neu-Ülm, GERMANY. Honorable discharge.
BLACK HISTORY
- Great Events In African-American History
- Tony Brown Donates $100,000 to Hampton University Scholarship Fund and sows the seeds of success for future journalists www.TonyBrownsJournal.com/blog/Tony-Brown-Donates-100k
- Tony Brown with Hampton University Journalism Students Make History At The New York Times Harvard, Columbia, Syracuse Place Second In Competition www.TonyBrownsJournal.com/blog/Tony-Brown-With-HU-Makes-history
HAS THE BLACK LEADERSHIP BETRAYED ITS OWN COMMUNITY?
WE STOOD WITH MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.
“I was there 50 years ago, in 1963, one of the last two Directors left standing, where 500,000 marchers once stood.” --Tony Brown
“LARGEST CIVIL RIGHTS MARCH IN HISTORY”
The following week, in its July 29, 1963 edition, Business Week magazine called the Detroit event the “largest civil rights march in history.” Subsequently, an official police source, in an affidavit, confirmed an attendance of “no fewer than 250,000 and as many as 500,000 people.” Black people came mostly from throughout the nearby Midwest region.
More official confirmation has been forthcoming since then. Nearly 40 years later, in 2003, The Wall Street Journal would report on page one that the famed King Dream Speech may have had its roots -- not at the March on Washington (which drew 250,000), on August 28, 1963, but elsewhere, perhaps 66 days before in Detroit, Michigan where the attendance may have reached, according to an official police affidavit, 500,000 people.
Although I had no official role in the Washington March, I did witness it as a Detroit correspondent for the national Pittsburgh Courier newspaper chain of African-American local publications throughout the United States, an affiliate of the Black Press, from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial within a few feet of Dr. King and I was included in Life magazine’s limited photo coverage of this historic event.
All of this in only 66 days! My head was spinning with excitement and wonderment. It seemed that my Detroit decision to choose activism as a way of life had become my destiny.
2013 – 50th Anniversary “Walk to Freedom March” – Detroit, MI
Tony Brown (center) Grand Marshal of the 2nd and final Detroit March on June 22, 2013, drew 200,000, with his grandson Remy Harris (left) and Jesse Jackson (right).
TONY BROWN OFFERS EDUCATORS, STUDENTS, HOMESCHOOLERS AND PARENTS ACCESS TO A NEW VISUAL STREAMING LEARNING TOOL FOR BLACK HISTORY AND CULTURE
Tony Brown’s Journal, “the most complete and thoughtful record of African-American opinion,” is in the process of offering one of the most cutting-edge educational tools for streaming to educators, homeschoolers, students and parents. The entire digitally re-mastered TonyBrownsJournal.com collection of nearly 1,000 historical, health and public affairs video and film content that was produced by award-winning journalist Tony Brown on national television for over 40 years (1968-2008) is now being offered in this rare cutting-edge educationally purposeful opportunity for as little as $9.99 per year.
Free streamed copy of “THE WHITE GIRL" movie with each annual subscription is a streamed copy of “The White Girl,” a full-length anti-drug feature movie directed by Tony Brown that was released via commercial syndication in movie theaters in 1995 with a PG-13 rating. The opening inaugural debut of “The White Girl” at the Liberty Theatre in Hamilton, Bermuda (Bahamas) broke the house box-office gross record, according to Hollywood Reporter, a trade magazine.
BLACK COLLEGE DAY BILL- White House cabinet members and advocates of equal education look on as President Reagan signs Executive Order 12320, just one year after the first historic Black College Day rally in Washington, DC, that increased the amount of federal funds to these institutions by $9.6 million. From left to right are: Education Secretary Terrell Bell, Tony Brown, Founder and Chief Coordinator of Black College Day, Thelma Duggan, Coordinator of Minority Affairs at the Department of Transportation; and Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole.
LEADERS OF THE BLACK COLLEGE DAY MARCH IN 1980; THE ULTIMATE UNITY RALLY. Supporters of Black colleges from around the country demonstrated to save Black colleges from new federal and state desegregation plans that threatened their historic role. This 1983 Black College Day massive march and rally in Savannah, Georgia, protested the merger plans of two Black colleges in Georgia.