Letter from Deborah: What I learned from your book: I won’t back down.

May 7, 2015 — Leave a comment
Read it now.

Read it now.

Colin,

I opened up my window and read the first three chapters of Don’t Make the Black Kids Angry to my neighbors.

No one acknowledged me specifically, but kept on walking past my window. I played the videos for them and then finished with Tom Petty’s I Won’t Back Down.

Sometimes, Colin, when you feel like your power has been snatched from you, you have to find a way to take it back and that’s what I’m doing by reading this through my open window. I want to help educate and inform the masses. People may think I’m crazy, but I could go and get a permit and stand on the street and do the same thing, but this is cheaper:D
Lots of Love coming your Way. I look forward to buying your most recent book Don’t Make The Black Kids Angry as soon as I can.

Debbie

P.S. I feel so empowered and positive as if I could actually take my life back. For so long I’ve felt defeated and like there was nothing I could do ., now I feel differently and I owe it all to your book and your encouraging words. Thank you for Sasquatch. For if it hadn’t been for him I would never have seen your videos and never have learned about the emotional vampire that was stealing all my energy.

 

Click below to win Screen Shot 2015-05-07 at 6.17.37 PM

 

 

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Colin Flaherty

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Colin Flaherty is the author of #1 Amazon Best Selling Book: White Girl Bleed a Lot: The return of racial violence and how the media ignore it. He is an award winning journalist whose work has been published in over 1000 news sites around the world, including the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, and others. He is a frequent guest in local and national media talking about racial violence. Thomas Sowell said ”Reading Colin Flaherty’s book made painfully clear to me that the magnitude of this problem is greater than I had discovered from my own research. He documents both the race riots and the media and political evasions in dozens of cities.” – National Review.