This episode: when tons of people have seen tons of people do tons of stuff to let tons of people know tons of truth about how our world is run and what's really happening, how come tons of people still ask "What can you do?" like they haven't seen tons of examples tons of times? Is that a question that adults in danger should just rhetorically ask? With kids around? What's up with the great big global recession recovery re-collapse takedown thingy anyway? Have the bad guys done this before?
CKLNs Rude Awakening Morning Show is currently hosted by Black Krishna (BK) from Monday to Thursday from 6 - 7 am, as well as CKLNs Word of Mouth Mondays 7 - 8 pm, on CKLN Radio 88.1 FM, Rogers Cable 947 or CKLN.fm online. Public domain mp3s for re-posting, re-using, adapting or sharing are available after 8 am at radio4all.net, archive.org and blackkrishna.blogspot.com. Please feel free to contact blackkrishna@gmail.com with any questions, answers, suggestions, tips, music and more.
Gerald Celente CKLN Rude Awakening hosted by Black Krishna
[Ed -- One 20 minute YouTube clip of a radio show uploaded with one simple image by multi-millionaire genious trends forecaster Gerald Celente. It probably took him 5 minutes. It's been viewed over 7000 times by people who learned something they wouldn't have; or learned something they want to know better. Thanks. That was worth the 5 minutes to him and many others. Anybody with a computer and Windows Media Maker can do this in 5 minutes with any show, or add background music to add "Ooomph!" to what's being said to give people the stones to handle it, or add more images or video to create a narrative. Whatever, it's not like in the 21st Century we don't have enough tools to "communicate" with each other, so we may as well try to say better stuff, especially stuff that stops worse stuff from happening by consistently revealing what it is and might be to people who don't know to make sure we're all perpetually prepared to reject it.]
7,529 views
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0l3lbLWWAnw
Donât panic â eco fees will break bad buying habits and save public cash
Wayne Roberts | NOW Magazine | July 15, 2010
Every time I see a shopper at the checkout counter stuff an armful of food into a purse or briefcase, Iâm reminded how willing we are to put ourselves out to save the 5 cent tax on plastic bags and cheerfully do the right thing. Now weâre being asked to put out some more. (Ed -- have you ever smacked a dog on the nose with a newspaper? Guess it hurts eh?)
Activist, radio journalist and emcee Black Krishna [click to read] has offered HipHopDX the chance to premier his exclusive new collection of songs, entitled Obamacide: The Album. Based in Toronto, Canada, the social and poltical-minded man, who also goes by "BK," said the following of his Barack Obama Administration-inspired work. "What Obama supporters want to believe in is great; it's the same thing as nearly everyone who wants peace and prosperity, but there were and are people behind the scenes who influence decisions that we have to know about, including the political "system" that Obama is currently President of. All we have to do to stop the global recession and move forward is to see who's behind it, or who's getting money when we're not supposed to, which is not right." [Click Here] to download.
Right now, there is a lot of politics - politics in Hip Hop, politics in American and politics of business. Regardless of how much dialog is going on, it's very hard to get the truth. You know it when you hear it, it often stings, or causes a reaction. One man who legions of radio listeners, art fans and political supporters believe to be speaking this kind of truth is Toronto's Black Krishna.
The Shot Is The Pandemic Part 1/2: Swine Flu Vaccines and The CBC
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4VSKC1Fu5Ys
Vijay Sarma: Stopping The North American Union 1/4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CdtWyJUyak
Original source materials for this journey that explain the whole thing:
Kicking it in a kurtha
Vijay Sarma | Toronto Star | August 20, 2004
Some clothes make the man, but clearly the sports jersey doesn't cut it in Toronto's bar scene, says Black Krishna.
[Ed -- it was "Vijay Sarma" in the original print with a 4" x 8" picture of my head and online version, and yeah, I miss that guy too.]
[Ed -- it was "Vijay Sarma" in the original and reprinted widely online worldwide as many fans liked it, this guy was even nice enough to review it.]
Tupac Shakur: Going Above and Beyond "Thug Life"
Rory Geraghty | Associate Content | July 10, 2006
More Than What Meets the Eye
"Here's a hidden fact: you want to be like Tupac. Not like Mike. Not like Shaq. Like Tupac." Freelance writer Vijay Sarma begins his essay, entitled "Tupacumentary: Living How You Want To Live" with this statement. With a title like that, this essay seems like it could be a self-help guide.