I was just going over some of the amazing things that the NAACP has done for America. Yes, not just Black America, but all of America. Brown v. Board Of Education. Voting Rights Act. NAACP Defense Fund. Thousands of scholarships. Dissing of black quarterbacks. Like the old Sesame Street Song goes, one of these things just doesn't belong here. Don, you don't know me. Not that it matters, you've been getting shots from random strangers lately.

But relax, unlike your season, this is not coming from the blind side. Man to man, one homeboy to another, I just wanted to say keep your chin up. I saw where you responded to some 'journalist' named J. Whyatt Mondesire, who also happens to be an NAACP officer. Seems that in his, er "interesting" analysis, he labeled you among other things, mediocre. I guess he missed you taking a limited offensive team to four straight conference championship games. Even accused you playing the race card, because you didn't want to be stereotyped as a running quarterback. Some free advice in the future - ignore the loser. And any other losers like him. Such as Rush Limbaugh. Your performance is fair game; hey you've been Philly long enough (more than 30 minutes) to know that already. But what makes him different from any other yahoo? The fact that he used his NAACP "leadership" card? Forget that. Either we've won the battle for social justice for once and for all, meaning that NAACP leadership has about as little to do in 2005 as the USC punter did this season, or a great organization has some people who are flailing about for relevancy. You judge. So in the future Don, ignore this guy and all others of his ilk. I know you don't want to take the High Road anymore. What does it get you? Terrell Owens and Whyatt trying to drive you into a guard rail. I know, I've been there on a lesser scale. It is bad enough that because of all of this publicity, I have to learn a new way to spell Whyatt. Oh, and I hate to say this, but as a expert fan, you really do need to scramble more. Forget the critics. Warren Moon stayed home in the pocket, wound up in the Top 5 of every major passing category, despite starting his NFL career at 28, and people still try to diminish what he did. Run to win Donovan. Run to win.