Blog Entry
New Youth Jazz Movement in SAN FRANCISCO
Written by Romeofwar on January 24, 2009
San Francisco is about to start a new Jazz movement. There will be homeless people getting off the streets and living in houses, the rich helping out the poor, music moving people in new ways, kids on the streets selling bike tours instead of drugs at night, and a lot more. Tune in to San Francisco. The youth and old here are doing it big.
Comments (2)
Romeofwar said on January 24, 2009:
I see San Francisco's new Jazz error as the start of what I like to call the CREATIVE CLASS. The create class are just students that have ideas about how to make this world, their community, their home or themselves and all in between a better place to live. If you want to be part of this movement leave a message and I will get back to you with more information. We are the generation, we cant afford to wait, the future started yesterday and we're already late.
Add Comment
Add comment
You need to be logged in to do this
You will need a Dipdive account and you will need to be
logged in to use this function. An account is free, let's create one right now!
Romeofwar

Colie is a guy who is 24 that lives in United States. He joined Dipdive on December 28, 2008. The last time he logged in was on January 30, 2009.

So I was thinking that if anyone have any good quote that they would like to put up on the blog, feel free to do that at any time. Or even your own poetry. We are trying to start what I like to call the create class youth movement.
I was walking in the business department of Skyline College yesterday and I saw a quote from Martin Luther King Jr. on the wall. It read, " Now I realize that there are those all over who are telling us that we must slow up... But we cannot afford to slow up. We have a moral obligation to press on. We have our self-respect to maintain. But even more we cant afford to slow because of our love for America and our love for the democratic way of life... We must keep moving . We must keep going."
From " The Montgomery Story", an address to the 47th annual NAACP convention
San Francisco, June 27, 1956