This Is Just the Beginning
What a way to slam America’s rotten political and social system! Leonard McMillian lets out angst against an age-old system that dates back to 1619, when the first slaves arrived—the discrimination against African Americans—in this collection of poetry.

It turns out that America is not what she seems to be as a champion of equality the moment you scratch beneath the surface. Talk about justice, with a disproportionate number of Blacks in jail, he writes in “Lady Justice”: If she would open her eyes and take off the veil/She could witness a system that somehow have failed…How in the world could a brother prevail/When the white man prints were all over the scales.

Feeling its ill effects on his country’s economic situation, he deplores America’s involvement in wars overseas. With all of this nonsense I don’t know where to begin?/Let’s bring home the troops and I’d call that a win/To me it doesn’t make any sense/When you spend less for the people and more for defense, he laments in “Enough Is Enough!”

These and other eye-opening poems that tackle the failure of American leaders and his criticisms on American businessmen are all in This Is Just the Beginning.
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This Is Just the Beginning
What a way to slam America’s rotten political and social system! Leonard McMillian lets out angst against an age-old system that dates back to 1619, when the first slaves arrived—the discrimination against African Americans—in this collection of poetry.

It turns out that America is not what she seems to be as a champion of equality the moment you scratch beneath the surface. Talk about justice, with a disproportionate number of Blacks in jail, he writes in “Lady Justice”: If she would open her eyes and take off the veil/She could witness a system that somehow have failed…How in the world could a brother prevail/When the white man prints were all over the scales.

Feeling its ill effects on his country’s economic situation, he deplores America’s involvement in wars overseas. With all of this nonsense I don’t know where to begin?/Let’s bring home the troops and I’d call that a win/To me it doesn’t make any sense/When you spend less for the people and more for defense, he laments in “Enough Is Enough!”

These and other eye-opening poems that tackle the failure of American leaders and his criticisms on American businessmen are all in This Is Just the Beginning.
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This Is Just the Beginning

This Is Just the Beginning

by Leonard McMillian
This Is Just the Beginning

This Is Just the Beginning

by Leonard McMillian

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Overview

What a way to slam America’s rotten political and social system! Leonard McMillian lets out angst against an age-old system that dates back to 1619, when the first slaves arrived—the discrimination against African Americans—in this collection of poetry.

It turns out that America is not what she seems to be as a champion of equality the moment you scratch beneath the surface. Talk about justice, with a disproportionate number of Blacks in jail, he writes in “Lady Justice”: If she would open her eyes and take off the veil/She could witness a system that somehow have failed…How in the world could a brother prevail/When the white man prints were all over the scales.

Feeling its ill effects on his country’s economic situation, he deplores America’s involvement in wars overseas. With all of this nonsense I don’t know where to begin?/Let’s bring home the troops and I’d call that a win/To me it doesn’t make any sense/When you spend less for the people and more for defense, he laments in “Enough Is Enough!”

These and other eye-opening poems that tackle the failure of American leaders and his criticisms on American businessmen are all in This Is Just the Beginning.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940014437455
Publisher: Dorrance Publishing Co. Inc.
Publication date: 05/14/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 50
File size: 163 KB

About the Author

Leonard McMillian was born and raised in North Carolina, where he finished high school and attended Cape Fear Tech. He then moved to Virginia and studied at Kee Business College. He still lives in Richmond, Virginia, after retiring from his job at a chemical company.
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