College Podcast @ Metro State University

WIN $200 — ASK ME HOW

40 min · 7 jun 2026
aflevering WIN $200 — ASK ME HOW artwork

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WIN $200-Ask Me How Order My Book: weusoursluckybooks.com [radiotaklr@gmail.com] Thesis Statement Democratic institutions after Reconstruction suppressed Black historical achievements while later claiming credit for Black innovations, distorting public memory and civic education. Learning Objectives 1. Identify historical erasure: Students will analyze how Democratic‑controlled school boards and archives omitted Black inventors and soldiers. Example: Examine textbook excerpts excluding Lewis Latimer or Granville T. Woods. 2. Evaluate narrative reclamation: Students will assess modern efforts to restore Black contributions to innovation. Example: Compare Carter G. Woodson’s documentation with current museum exhibits. Learning Outcomes 1. Critical awareness: Students can explain how political power shaped historical narratives. Example: Write a short reflection connecting Reconstruction politics to textbook bias. 2. Restorative engagement: Students propose one method to re‑center Black innovators in curricula. Example: Design a classroom poster honoring Garrett Morgan’s invention. 5E Learning Model * Engage: Display the yellow‑black poster; discuss first impressions. * Explore: Analyze primary sources showing omission. * Explain: Connect findings to political motives. * Elaborate: Create mini‑projects restoring erased figures. * Evaluate: Conduct a formative reflection on how reclaiming history change's civic identity. Bonus Click into the webpage and use one of the codes to redeem my book Relationships: The Power of Illusion. Hurry and claim a code before someone else does. Please do not use more than one code. www.iuniverse.com/en/redeem [http://www.iuniverse.com/en/redeem] 10600000441446 10600000441447 10600000441448 10600000441449 10600000441450 10600000441451 10600000441452 10600000441453

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aflevering White Christians =Niggers, Rape, Slavery in God's Name artwork

White Christians =Niggers, Rape, Slavery in God's Name

Open Challenge to Any Faculty Member to Prove Me wrong. For Your Next Religious/Ethnicity Classroom Conversations. “Christian systems, churches, and leaders weaponized Scripture to justify racial oppression.” Mr. Lucky FAMILY, CAMPUS AND CHURCH LESSON PLAN Learning Objectives Participants examine how Scripture and Christian institutions were used to justify slavery, racial violence, and segregation, and how Black communities reclaimed the Bible, gospel music, and faith traditions as tools of liberation. Opening Activity Read aloud: “They said their hatred was holy.” Participants write one sentence explaining what this reveals about the misuse of religion. Mini‑Lesson Highlight key moments from the chapter: * Misuse of Scripture: Curse of Ham, Ephesians 6:5, plantation theology. * Religious complicity in lynchings, segregation, and silence during racial terror. * Black reclamation of Scripture through hush‑arbors, spirituals, gospel music, and Civil Rights theology. * White allies beaten or murdered confronting racial violence (Goodman, Schwerner, Reeb, Liuzzo). * Billy Graham removing segregated seating ropes and facing backlash for desegregating his crusades. Discussion Prompts * How did enslavers twist Scripture to make cruelty sound like obedience? * What does “the silence was its own theology” mean? * How did gospel songs function as spiritual guidance and escape direction? * Why did white allies become targets of racial hatred? * How does Billy Graham’s removal of segregated seating challenge the theology of hate? * What does reclaiming the Bible for liberation reveal about Black resilience? * How does the line “My God have mercy on those using the Bible and God’s words for evil reigns” speak to accountability today? Independent Activity Write a short reflection: “How did Black communities transform the Bible from a weapon of oppression into a source of liberation?” Exit Ticket Identify one example of biblical misuse and one example of biblical reclamation, then write one sentence contrasting the two. Comments to: radiotalklr@gmail.com [radiotalklr@gmail.com]

Gisteren53 min
aflevering For Students Only-No Faculty Should Listen artwork

For Students Only-No Faculty Should Listen

WIN $200-Student comments are appreciated. Respond with comments to: radiotalklr@gmail.com [radiotalklr@gmail.com] and you could be a winner. For Your Next Religious/Ethnicity Classroom Conversations. “Christian systems, churches, and leaders weaponized Scripture to justify racial oppression.” Mr. Lucky FAMILY, CAMPUS AND CHURCH LESSON PLAN Learning Objectives Participants examine how Scripture and Christian institutions were used to justify slavery, racial violence, and segregation, and how Black communities reclaimed the Bible, gospel music, and faith traditions as tools of liberation. Opening Activity Read aloud: “They said their hatred was holy.” Participants write one sentence explaining what this reveals about the misuse of religion. Mini‑Lesson Highlight key moments from the chapter: * Misuse of Scripture: Curse of Ham, Ephesians 6:5, plantation theology. * Religious complicity in lynchings, segregation, and silence during racial terror. * Black reclamation of Scripture through hush‑arbors, spirituals, gospel music, and Civil Rights theology. * White allies beaten or murdered confronting racial violence (Goodman, Schwerner, Reeb, Liuzzo). * Billy Graham removing segregated seating ropes and facing backlash for desegregating his crusades. Discussion Prompts * How did enslavers twist Scripture to make cruelty sound like obedience? * What does “the silence was its own theology” mean? * How did gospel songs function as spiritual guidance and escape direction? * Why did white allies become targets of racial hatred? * How does Billy Graham’s removal of segregated seating challenge the theology of hate? * What does reclaiming the Bible for liberation reveal about Black resilience? * How does the line “My God have mercy on those using the Bible and God’s words for evil reigns” speak to accountability today? Independent Activity Write a short reflection: “How did Black communities transform the Bible from a weapon of oppression into a source of liberation?” Exit Ticket Identify one example of biblical misuse and one example of biblical reclamation, then write one sentence contrasting the two. Comments to: radiotalklr@gmail.com [radiotalklr@gmail.com]

4 jul 202653 min
aflevering In Treatment: Alone - The Bible or the Bottle artwork

In Treatment: Alone - The Bible or the Bottle

11 Ways to Choose God Instead of Relapse When You’re Alone 1. Remember God’s Love in the Moment of Temptation (John 3:16) When the urge hits, pause and remind yourself: God still loves me right now. Temptation grows strongest when a person forgets they are loved. Recalling God’s love interrupts the separation that leads to relapse. 2. Tell the Truth About the Struggle Instead of Hiding It (Romans 3:23) “All have sinned…” means you don’t have to pretend. Admitting the struggle out loud — even if only to God — breaks the secrecy that fuels relapse. Honesty is the doorway back to connection. 3. Use the Authority God Already Gave You (John 1:12) You have the right to choose differently. Speak it: I have authority to walk away from this. Authority unused becomes relapse; authority exercised becomes recovery. 4. Replace the Escape with a Scripture You Can Say Out Loud When the group show is gone, your voice becomes your weapon. Speak one line: * “God so loved the world…” * “All have sinned…” * “By His wounds I am healed…” * “He gave the right…” Speaking Scripture disrupts the mental pattern that leads to relapse. 5. Change Your Physical Position Immediately Relapse often begins with stillness. Stand up. Walk. Step outside. Move your body. Movement breaks the chain between thought and action. 6. Call One Person Who Knows the Real You Not the group version. Not the testimony version. The real you. Connection kills isolation, and isolation is where relapse grows. 7. Pray a Short, Honest Prayer Instead of a Long Religious One God doesn’t need performance. Say: God, I’m struggling. I need You right now. Honesty reconnects you faster than religious language. 8. Identify the Lie Behind the Temptation Every relapse begins with a lie: “I need this.” “I can handle this.” “No one will know.” Name the lie. Naming it breaks its power. 9. Choose a Healing Action That Matches 1 Peter 2:24 “By His wounds you were healed.” Healing requires action: * Drink water * Take a shower * Read one verse * Step outside * Write one sentence Small healing actions reinforce the larger spiritual healing Christ already provided. 10. Remove the Object of Temptation From Your Immediate Reach Relapse is often proximity-based. If it’s near you, it owns you. Distance creates clarity. Clarity creates strength. Strength creates obedience. 11. Ask Yourself the Question That Defines Your Essay “The group show is gone. What are you going to do?” This question forces the person to confront the truth: Recovery is not what they say in the group. Recovery is what they choose when they are alone. Summary * John 3:16 — Remember God’s love * Romans 3:23 — Tell the truth about the struggle * 1 Peter 2:24 — Walk in healing * John 1:12 — Use your authority Share Your Opinions: radiotalklr@gmail.com [radiotalklr@gmail.com]

1 jul 202634 min
aflevering STUDENTS: Correct Your Instructor During Class-SAY SOMETHING artwork

STUDENTS: Correct Your Instructor During Class-SAY SOMETHING

Lesson Plan: Real Black History Started Before Slavery Order My Book: www.weusoursluckybooks.com [http://www.weusoursluckybooks.com] Grade/Group: High school–adult learners Duration: 30–45 minutes Objective: Learners will understand that Black history includes powerful civilizations and leaders long before the transatlantic slave trade and recognize how post‑Civil War record‑keepers omitted major parts of Black history. Thesis for Learners Black history was distorted after the Civil War because former slaveholders and their political allies controlled historical records, leaving out major Black achievements before and after slavery. Materials Image of the historical figures (Mansa Musa, Tutankhamun, Nefertiti, Nzinga, Taharqa, Shaka Zulu). Engage (5 min) Ask: “What do you know about Black history before slavery?” Show the shirt image and let learners identify any familiar names. Explore (10 min) Briefly introduce each figure: * Mansa Musa: Wealth, scholarship, Mali Empire. * Tutankhamun & Nefertiti: Egyptian leadership, art, religion. * Nzinga: Anti‑colonial resistance, diplomacy. * Taharqa: Nubian pharaoh ruling Egypt. * Shaka Zulu: Military innovation, nation‑building. Explain (10 min) Discuss how post‑Civil War Southern historians—many former slaveholders—controlled textbooks and historical narratives, omitting Black excellence to preserve their political power. Elaborate (10 min) Small‑group prompt: “How does knowing this history change your understanding of Black identity and America’s historical record?” Evaluate (5 min) Exit reflection: “Name one untold truth you will carry forward.” Mr. Lucky, Master of Advocacy and Political Leadership (M.A., MAPL) Graduate Student, M.S., School of Urban Education Host, Campus Podcast @ Metro State University Social Sciences Educator-Licensed Comments: radiotalklr@gmail.com [radiotalklr@gmail.com]

30 jun 202623 min