Opinion
OP-ED: Freedom is Not Free
“The only two that have been willing to freely sacrifice their life for us is Jesus Christ and a soldier” ~ anonymous
General William T. Sherman’s famous quote that “war is hell” is not debatable. As we prepare to celebrate Veterans Day it is important that we be reminded that there has not been any American war or military conflict in which black men have not served.
Blackmen have valiantly fought and received honorary recognition from the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican-American War, the Civil War, the Spanish American War, both World Wars, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Iraq War and the War in Afghanistan.
Even though Congress passed legislation in 1776 that allowed black men to enlist in the Armed Services it would take until 1948 for President Truman to sign Executive Order #9981 that would officially end segregation in the military, and declare “equality of treatment and opportunity for all persons in the Armed Services without regard to race, color, religion or national origin.”
Per the latest US Census, 20.9% of all enlisted soldiers in the Army are black, 18.6% in the Navy, 10.6% in the Marine Corp and 16.6% in the Air Force respectively. The black population of 18 – 55 year olds with a minimum high school diploma is only 12.9%. When we think of our great nation and our freedoms it is all due to the cost paid by our military that have braved the cold and the heat and the hunger and that have been wounded in foreign lands for us all.
G. K. Chesterton stated that “the true soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him but because he loves what is behind him.”
As you are reading this column be reminded that there are hundreds of thousands of our men and women serving in the military far away from their families and the comforts of their home defending us right now. The cost paid by these soldiers is beyond the potential loss of their life and health.
Per a January 2014 Stars and Stripes report, about 22 veterans a day take their own life, 62,619 veterans were homeless on a single night in the United States in 2012 – 2013, which represents 13 percent of all homeless adults, according to Department of Housing and Urban Development’s 2012 Annual Homeless Assessment Report.
We must do better to care and protect those, who have given all to protect us. You can help by contacting any of the following organizations dedicated to helping members of our armed services: The VFW; The American Legion; The Navy League; Air Force Association and the Association of the United States Army are just a few.

Karen Watson is the author of the book, “Being Black and Republican in the Age of Obama”. Email karen.watson@gopbuzz.com
The world is a dangerous place, be thankful for those who protect us so well. From the blood of Crispus Attucks, a black man who was the first to die for our nation at what has come to be called the Boston Massacre in 1770, to today’s brave black men and women in uniform who proudly serve our nation, we as a people have so much to be proud of, on this Veteran’s Day and every day, thank a veteran because freedom is not free.
Activism
Oakland Post: Week of December 17 – 23, 2025
The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of – December 17 – 23, 2025
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Advice
COMMENTARY: If You Don’t Want Your ‘Black Card’ Revoked, Watch What You Bring to Holiday Dinners
From Thanksgiving to Christmas to New Year’s Day, whether it’s the dining room table or the bid whist (Spades? Uno, anyone?) table, your card may be in danger.
By Wanda Ravernell
Post Staff
From the fourth week of November to the first week in January, if you are of African descent, but particularly African American, certain violations of cultural etiquette will get your ‘Black card’ revoked.
From Thanksgiving to Christmas to New Year’s Day, whether it’s the dining room table or the bid whist (Spades? Uno, anyone?) table, your card may be in danger.
It could take until Super Bowl Sunday for reinstatement.
I don’t know much about the card table, but for years I was on probation by the ‘Aunties,’ the givers and takers of Black cards.
How I Got into Trouble
It was 1970-something and I was influenced by the health food movement that emerged from the hippie era. A vegetarian (which was then considered sacrilegious by most Black people I knew) prepared me a simple meal: grated cheese over steamed broccoli, lentils, and brown rice.
I introduced the broccoli dish at the Friday night supper with my aunt and grandfather. She pronounced the bright green broccoli undone, but she ate it. (I did not, of course, try brown rice on them.)
I knew that I would be allowed back in the kitchen when she attempted the dish, but the broccoli had been cooked to death. (Y’all remember when ALL vegetables, not just greens, were cooked to mush?)
My Black card, which had been revoked was then reattained because they ate what I prepared and imitated it.
Over the decades, various transgressions have become normalized. I remember when having a smoked turkey neck instead of a ham hock in collard greens was greeted with mumblings and murmurings at both the dining room and card tables. Then came vegan versions with just olive oil (What? No Crisco? No bacon, at least?) and garlic. And now my husband stir fries his collards in a wok.
But No Matter How Things Have Changed…
At holiday meals, there are assigned tasks. Uncle Jack chopped raw onions when needed. Uncle Buddy made the fruit salad for Easter. My mother brought the greens in winter, macaroni salad in summer. Aunt Deanie did the macaroni and cheese, and the great aunts, my deceased grandmother’s sisters, oversaw the preparation of the roast beef, turkey, and ham. My father, if he were present, did the carving.
These designations/assignments were binding agreements that could stand up in a court of law. Do not violate the law of assignments by bringing some other version of a tried-and-true dish, even if you call it a new ‘cheese and noodle item’ to ‘try out.’ The auntie lawgivers know what you are trying to do. It’s called a menu coup d’état, and they are not having it.
The time for experiments is in your own home: your spouse and kids are the Guinea pigs.
My mother’s variation of a classic that I detested from that Sunday to the present was adding crushed pineapple to mashed sweet potatoes. A relative stops by, tries it, and then it can be introduced as an add-on to the standard holiday menu.
My Aunt Vivian’s concoctions from Good Housekeeping or Ladies’ Home Journal magazine also made it to the Black people’s tables all over the country in the form of a green bean casserole.
What Not to Do and How Did It Cross Your Mind?
People are, of all things holy, preparing mac ‘n’ cheese with so much sugar it tastes like custard with noodles in it.
Also showing up in the wrong places: raisins. Raisins have been reported in the stuffing (makes no sense unless it’s in a ‘sweet meats’ dish), in a pan of corn bread, and – heresy in the Black kitchen – the MAC ‘n’ CHEESE.
These are not mere allegations: There is photographic evidence of these Black card violations, but I don’t want to defame witnesses who remained present at the scene of the crimes.
The cook – bless his/her heart – was probably well-meaning, if ignorant. Maybe they got the idea from a social media influencer, much like Aunt Viv got recipes from magazines.
Thankfully, a long-winded blessing of the food at the table can give the wary attendee time to locate the oddity’s place on the table and plan accordingly.
But who knows? Innovation always prevails, for, as the old folks say, ‘waste makes want.’ What if the leftovers were cut up, dipped in breadcrumbs and deep fried? The next day, that dish might make it to the TV tray by the card table.
An older cousin – on her way to being an Auntie – in her bonnet, leggings, T-shirt, and bunny slippers and too tired to object, might try it and like it….
And if she ‘rubs your head’ after eating it, the new dish might be a winner and (Whew!) everybody, thanks God, keeps their Black cards.
Until the next time.
Activism
Oakland Post: Week of December 10 – 16, 2025
The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of – December 10 – 16, 2025
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