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Sunday, November 5, 2017
African-North Carolina Pride Heritage Flag
The African-North Carolina Heritage flag is based upon the colour style of David Hammons. Like the Hammons African American Flag, the colour red is conserved and white is replaced with black.
African-Texan Heritage Pride Flag
In the style of David Hammons's African-American flag, we have the African-Texan Pride flag. Flags of the Hammons nature conserve the red. The other colours are usually replaced with black and green.
Saturday, November 4, 2017
African-New Zealand Pride Flag
The African-Kiwi Pride flag takes is colours and clues from the American American flag as designed by David Hammons. In this case the pattern of the New Zealand flag is conserved but the colours of the Pan-African movement dominante.
African-Australian Pride Flag
The African-Australian Pride flag is based upon the colour pattern found on David Hammons' African American flag, which uses the colours black, red, and green.
African-British UK Pride Flag
The African British Pride flag is based upon the official UK flag, but has colours that come from the David Hammons' African American Flag. As with the Hammons' flag the red colour is conserved in the flag of the USA as with the flag of the UK, as to also reflect England. However blue is replaced by black and white is replaced by green.
This flag if for British citizens of African-British heritage. The red colour is conserved because the colour of blood is always red in all races be it: black, white, yellow, red, or brown.
North American-African Liberian Pride Flag
The North American-African Liberian Pride Flag is based upon the African-American Pride flag. However it is for Liberians who made the journey from North America to Liberia.
Like the African American flag of David Hammons, the colour red is conserved and the pattern follows his style for the canton of a black star on green.
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
It's the Great Canadian Pumpkin Mr. Brown!
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Halloween is often considered an American holiday of the USA. Truth is, its a Canadian-American tradition. It is one of those weird organically initiated holidays that caught on both sides of the border. Halloween is for anyone and everyone. There is no official group that holds the title of Halloween authority, so all can participate.
Sure, its connected to the Irish, which is connected to Rome, which is connected to Egypt, which goes who knows where? But this holiday is nearly of the same flavor in the both the USA and Canada. Likewise the orange pumpkin is a domestic fruit native to this continent of North America. So it's a true blue, oops a true black and orange custom for two radically different nations. Yet they are connected by a rather delicious type of squash every October 31st. It is a true Ameri-Canadian non-denominational holiday open to any faith, race, creed, or age.
Halloween is a holiday that connects the community on the local level. Sometimes there is a parade, but the at the heart of the celebration is the weave of love between neighbors. Rarely is there a time when you get to potentially meet all the people who live in your hometown. At no other time of the year do kids make the most fleeting of face to face bonds with people in the tribal-community unity: the neighborhood.
The fun fact about Halloween is this is the time of the year when Earth's orbit is at a maximum distance away from the Milky Way's Galaxy's Core, meaning it's our closest visit to the outer rim of our hometown galaxy, the Milky Way Galaxy.
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