Call us: 555-555-5555

Blog Post

10 Reasons You Should Love Blogging

  • By Haneef Sabree
  • 30 Dec, 2016

Blog posts are a great way to get recognized within your community and share your voice. Here are the top 10 reasons you should love writing blog posts.

Anyone can make one:
For better or worse, anyone can write a blog post about anything they want. Everyone has a voice and the best voices will rise to the top.

The writer can show their personality:
In blog posts, the writer has more leeway to add in their voice and personality than other types of writing.

Blogs are a great form of mass communication:
You can help people, learn new things, entertain your audience—the possibilities are endless and amazing. Blogging opens up all of these to a very wide audience.

You can make money:

Get the right blog going and you can make a lot of money through advertising and sponsored posts.

It allows people to craft better thoughts:
Instead of reading haphazard, uneducated Facebook statuses, it’s much better to see people’s thought process in a well-written blog post.

You can establish a community:
Blogging allows you to connect with other individuals who share the same interests. Sharing ideas and opinions within your community helps establish yourself as a thought leader.

Good for SEO:
Keeping content on your site fresh and relevant, you can use your blog to boost the search engine ranking (SEO) of your site and your business.

It brings people back to your site:

If your blog is strong enough and updated regularly, people will come back looking for more and bring traffic back to your site as well.

It’s free:
It costs you a grand total of zero dollars to post to the blog, so if you have something to say, there’s nothing to stop you.

You can establish yourself as a thought leader:

A blog is a great place for your original thoughts, and it can be a wonderful way to show off your individuality. If people like your ideas, you can become a thought leader in your industry!

What else do you love about blogs? Let me know!
By Haneef Sabree 28 Apr, 2023
If you have any questions about the phenomenal services that we offer, do not hesitate to inform us by phone or email (see flyer above). These pilot services will end after May 27, 2023. We at JRH & SONS, LLC. look forward to working with you!  Much appreciation. 

"Sticks in a bundle are unbreakable." 
By Haneef Sabree 30 Apr, 2022
"Run It Up Sport Performance is a lifestyle. It is about more than just Sports. It’s about creating a community of hard-working people that are dedicated to getting better and improving each and every day." -Mr. L. Roberson 

Please see website below, thank you!

http://www.runitupperformance.com
By Haneef Sabree 30 Apr, 2022
Shoe Snobb, C.E.O. Mrs. R. Johnson, specializes in shoes for women. This resource provides a perfect gift for yourself or for someone else. Please check out the link below. Thanks!

https://shoesnobb.com/?sld=9
By hjsabree@att.net 22 Aug, 2020
"Black People and the Coming Depression" By Jawanza Kunjufu and Hakir Madhubuti.  These writings are an honest attempt by the Sabree Team to summarize the valuable messages from the brothers Kunjufu and Madhubuti.

The Ant and the Grasshopper:

In a grassy field one summer's day a Grasshopper was busy hopping about chirping and singing to his heart's content.  An Ant passed by lugging a huge ear of corn that he was taking to his nest.  "Why don't you come and talk with me," said the Grasshopper; "instead of working so hard?"
"I am storing up food for the winter," said the Ant; "and I strongly suggest that you do the same."  "Why worry about the winter?" said the Grasshopper; "we've got plenty of food right now."  But the Ant went on his way and continued to work.  When winter came, the Grasshopper was without food, while he watched the Ants eating the corn and grin that they had stored from the summer.  When the unhappy Grasshopper saw this he knew.

* It is a wise man who prepares for the days of necessity. - Aesop

             ________________________________________________________________________________________________________

A depression/recession in the community is a situation in which our American society, the federal and state governments, businesses and their supportive agencies can not provide an adequate standard of living, as we expect, for the large number of middle and poor American citizens.  Our lives are under the control of capitalistic actions.  Capitalism being an economic system.  Private owners own the land, the stores, the factories, the businesses and they compete among themselves for profits.  The cars, the houses, the food and other goods and services are destined for use by us. The masses of middle and poor folks are like a red dot on a rolling white wheeled tire; sometimes the red dot is up at the top and sometimes its down at the bottom.  When it is at the top, employment is high, incomes are plentiful, money for new cars, houses, clothes, jewelry, and other things exist.  When it is at the bottom, the reverse occurs; food stamps, unemployment benefits, warming centers, soup lines, foreclosures, repossessions and many more crisis exist in our neighborhoods. 

Brother Kunjufu and Brother Haki have suggested some concrete useful ways of dealing with a depressed economy.  They are as follows:

(1) Everyone in the neighborhood should have a garden.

(2) Buy or make clothing based on usefulness and not fashion.

(3) Buy essentials and do not be bashful about shopping at second-hand stores or military surplus businesses.

(4) Buy and grow on vacant land.  Regardless of economic conditions the land will produce food.

(5) Form co-ops (neighborhood families buying and selling goods + services to each other while sharing all profits and losses of the co-op.  Co-ops can include food, daycare centers, community schools, and much more.  Also, co-ops can be used to increase bargaining power, and buying power which can lead to a greater savings for everyone in the co-op.

(6) Store up at least six (6) months of dried foods, beans, rice, millet, cornmeal, oats, fruit, vegetables and honey.

(7) Store up staple goods such olive oil, nuts in their shells, apple cider vinegar, sea salt, garlic and onions, vitamins, and grains.

(8) Store away a supply of basic everyday needs---plastic eating utensils, flash lights with their batteries, wind-up clocks, can opener, soap, toothbrushes, first aid supplies, a strong painkiller in case of a serious injury, wax sealed matches, scissors, needles + thread, and more.

(9) Store away some warm, and waterproof clothing and shoes-boots-socks, and do not forget a compass for location.

(10) Check out your exercise and diet, being a "couch potato" and consumption of the wrong types of food (junk food) can be a serious health habit.

(11) Use art fairs, fellowshipping, and social media to keep us aware of food, fuel, political and money happenings in our city.... the nation and internationally--worldwide.

(12) Spend more time with the family, especially the better-half and the kids.

(13) Do not forget a defensive weapon or two and ammunition to protect and preserve.  Be able to use what defensive weapon(s) you have.

(14) As far as communication, battery operated radios, walkie-talkies, and word of mouth can be employed to spread the word. 
            ________________________________________________________________________________________________________

While it is true that our condition is substantial due to outside forces.  The world does not specifically care about us or our neighborhood.  It will not care until we understand that our blackness cannot be an excuse for inactivity; but it must be an impetus to work, to cooperatively work together, to alter the old mindset of dancing, singing, and rapping---to also include the new mindset of working together putting neighbor back into the hood for the benefit of everyone working.  Thanks Brothers.

- The Sabree Team
By hjsabree@att.net 09 Aug, 2020
Ubiquitous health problems in Brown Communities: diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, obesity, stroke, heart disease, dementia, arthritis, cancer, etc.
Peruse the following information 4 Solutions ~

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iSpglxHTJVM

$   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDxZfVPYNNA

$   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nV04zyfLyN4

$   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GRPSeVyrd68

$   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RvAOuhyunhY

~ Book Recommendations ~

^ African Holistic Health By llaila Afrika
^ Research Literature By Dr. Sebi
^ How to Eat to Live By Hon. Elijah Muhammad
^ Art of War By Sun Tzu, Lionel Giles...



2 B Cont....

By hjsabree@att.net 18 May, 2020
Literary material and African art fostered by a Detroit centered and community oriented Co-op bookstore. Now offering online business with the option of shipping and curbside pickup. Don't miss out, KAN Books is truly a "Diamond in the rough."
By hjsabree@att.net 10 Mar, 2019
Mental Therapy.......  The cradle of all civilization

"What Good is it for a man or woman to inherit the earth, at the forfeiture of his/her soul."

Nos Vemos
By hjsabree@att.net 02 Jan, 2017
A key step to Black/Brown empowerment, is genuinely supporting B l ack O wned B usinesses consistently;  let me present to you --- F reedom P aper C ompany and T rue P roducts.  Here are some reasons the Sabree Team recommends  FPC and True:

- excellent products
- black owned
- solid customer service
- eco-friendly 
- community rooted 

For more information, please peruse: www.fpcpower.com & https://www.thetrueproducts.com/

Thank you!
By Haneef Sabree 31 Dec, 2016
There is no substitute for time..
By hjsabree@att.net 31 Dec, 2016
Objective(s) are to inform/provoke thought, expound on socially conscious matters, raise awareness and promote the incredible contributions Brown People have gifted the world.
Show More
Share by: