The Power of Family Oral History – April 19, 2008

The Endpoint Imperative: In a Software World, Hardware Does Matter

By G C Network | January 9, 2018

Hardware matters. From productivity to security to innovation, make sure your machines can keep up. Intel’s Sarah Wieskus joins The End Point Imperative: A Podcast series from Intel to discuss…

IT Transformation with Watson

By G C Network | January 5, 2018

Credit: Shutterstock by Kevin Jackson & Dez Blanchfield   IBM recently launched an exciting new project in the form of a podcast series produced and hosted Dez Blanchfield, appropriately titled the…

The Endpoint Imperative: A Form Factor Renaissance

By G C Network | December 22, 2017

Workplace expectations are changing, and along with them, the devices we use to do our jobs. In this episode of “The End Point Imperative”, Intel’s Sarah Wieskus tells us about…

Cloud Storage 2.0 Set To Dominate Market

By G C Network | December 19, 2017

The enterprise data storage marketplace is poised to become a battlefield. No longer the quiet backwater of cloud computing services, the focus of this global transition is now going from…

Top “Cloud Musings” Posts For 2017

By G C Network | December 17, 2017

    ( This content is being syndicated through multiple channels. The opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent the views of GovCloud Network, GovCloud…

The Endpoint Imperative: ID’ing and Overcoming the Stumbling Blocks to Digital Transformation

By G C Network | December 6, 2017

Digital Transformation is the No 1 priority for organizations large and small. It’s imperative that IT remove any obstacles to digital transformation success – including outdated PCs and mobile devices.…

Industry Verticals Tackle Unstructured Data

By G C Network | December 1, 2017

  Organizations around the world are struggling to cope with the current data explosion. A vital characteristic of this data is that it is unstructured and represents things like email,…

The Endpoint Imperative: The Perimeter is Dead; Long Live the Perimeter!

By G C Network | November 27, 2017

Cloud, mobility and the Internet of Things have obliterated the traditional perimeter that protected organizations. The result: Higher productivity, but bigger challenges for security, data protection, and mobile device management.…

The Data Storage Explosion

By G C Network | November 25, 2017

Cloud computing innovation will power enterprise transformation in 2018.  Cloud growth is also driving a rapid rise in the storage market, exacerbating the enterprise challenge around storage cost and complexity.…

Digital Transformation Drives Mainframe’s Future

By G C Network | November 15, 2017

  Digital Transformation is amplifying mainframe as mission critical to business growth more than ever before. With 70% of the world’s corporate data and over half of the world’s enterprise…

Although I just started this yesterday, I’ve decided to backdate this entry to last Saturday, April 12, 2008. That’s when my family had it’s 3rd Annual Black History Party. The main reason I’m doing this is because of the life lesson that experience taught me. That lesson was the power of family oral history.

For a little background, my 8-yr old niece, Natalie, has been very interested in black history since she could comprehend the subject. As a result, her parents have been obliged to feed her curiosity through books, trips and everyday discussions. As a result of the fascinating stories this interest has uncovered, three years ago, our family started having these black history parties. The typical format is to set a topic that selected attendees would speak on in the hopes of sparking discussion and enlightenment among the guest. This year, the topic was education. I spoke on “When the Naval Academy Gave Up Jim Crow”, others spoke on Historically Black Colleges & Universities and African American Fraternities and Sororities. Of particular note to me personally was the discussion led by my father on the struggle for educational equality in the deep south during the 1960’s. He actually played a part in the operational activities of the Child Development Group of Mississippi (CDGM) in Biloxi and Gulfport, and broadened the discussion through references to Polly Greenberg’s THE DEVIL HAS SLIPPERY SHOES.

Now this is where the Six Degrees of Separation theory proves itself:

  • I am the son of Gilbert Jackson …
  • In the mid-60’s, my father Gilbert worked as an activist in the Child Development Group of Mississippi and knew Marian Wright Edelman ……
  • During the same time period,Marian Wright Edelman, the first African-American woman admitted to the Mississippi State Bar Association, served as a lawyer for the CDGM. Edelman later in 1973, founded the Children’s Defense Fund (CDF) ….
  • Marian Edelman is “a friend and intellectual soul mate” to former First Lady and current Presidential Candidate Hillary Clinton, who served as chairman of the CDF !
  • In 1992, Edelman and the CDF began its “No Child Left Behind” campaign, famously championed by President George W. Bush only three days after taking office in January 2001 !!

So I’m currently…..

  • 3 degrees from one possible future President of the United States – Hillary Clinton…
  • 4 degrees from the other two contenders – Barack Obama and John McCain…
  • 3 degrees from the current President of the United States – George W. Bush…
  • 4 degrees from former Presidents Bill Clinton and George H. W. Bush ….
  • and still have up to two degrees left to reach anyone else in the world !!!!!!!!!

Bottom line – I would never have known this without my father passing his oral history to us all during the family African American History Party.

If you are interested in contributing to America’s Oral History, please participate in National Public Radios’s PR’s StoryCorps project.

Follow me at https://Twitter.com/Kevin_Jackson

G C Network