Here is a quote courtesy of Starwise from Angela's wisdom;
For 50 years liberals have conned and used blacks, Latinos and Women into supporting an agenda that sells them out and betrays their values. We've(Angela is black) become the dupes of the Democrat party. Liberals have gotten away with their civil rights shell game for too long. They've boxed blacks, Latinos and women in their predetermined pens because without a strange hold on these three groups dems can't win elections. So I decided to call them what they are:BAMBOOZLERS
Here is a lady that literally has it all,the best there is.
Angela appears occasionally on FNC as a commentator. Her appearances are far and few between and I hope she starts getting out more and more. She was terrific this morning; too bad she was only on for half an hour.
She was featured in Washington Life on the occasion of her marriage .. don't know how long ago.
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Bold book
In the words of Angela McGlowan, who was feted Tuesday night at Finemondo Italian restaurant on F Street, the liberal "script" never changes: the Democratic Party is the party of racial freedom and equality.
"Just ask them," writes the black founder and president of the District-based public relations and government affairs firm Political Strategies and Insights, in her new book, "Bamboozled: How Americans Are Being Exploited by the Lies of the Liberal Agenda."
Mrs. McGlowan, who has appeared everywhere from the stage of Bill Maher's "Politically Incorrect" show to the pages of Jet, takes particular aim at the Democratic National Committee, which contends it has led the fight "on every civil rights issue." She considers the statement "so brazenly false that one wonders where to even begin in dismantling it."
A black leader she does praise for his "intellectual honesty" is Rep. Jesse L. Jackson Jr., Illinois Democrat, who once observed there is "no doubt that the Democratic Party is the party of the Confederacy; historically, that the Democratic Party's flag is the Confederate flag."
"She makes bold statements, but they are backed up by facts," the author's husband, John Venners, remarked at his wife's crowded book party. Case in point: The pastor of a black church in Memphis, Tenn., recently invited his wife to speak to his congregation, and told her to "bring 500 of your books with you."
As for stepping on so many toes -- from politicians and absentee fathers to high-school dropouts and drug dealers -- Mrs. McGlowan told Inside the Beltway: "Are you asking me if this is all worth it? This book contains my dream, and the whole reason for writing it is to spread this dream to as many people as possible."