Philadelphia and Boston, Jaylen and Jayson, Black and Biracial, and America’s Continued and Growing Reshaping of Blackness

“The doll that’s a nice doll… the doll that’s a bad doll.” – Dr. Kenneth Clark, recalling the study’s core questions, 1985

In the old Akan trading towns along the Gold Coast, a young carver could choose one of two paths once his hands proved skilled enough to earn coin. The first path led to the chief’s court, where a steady commission awaited any carver willing to produce masks and stools bearing the court’s preferred likeness, paid promptly, praised publicly, and forgotten the moment a newer hand arrived. The second path led to the carver’s own workshop, built slowly with his own timber, stocked with his own apprentices, selling to whoever would buy but owned by no patron. The court path paid faster. The workshop path paid forward, to sons, to students, to a guild that outlived the carver himself. Both carvers were skilled. Both were paid. Only one built something that did not depend on being chosen again tomorrow.

On July 1, 2026, the Boston Celtics traded Jaylen Brown to the Philadelphia 76ers for Paul George and four draft picks, ending a ten-season partnership that produced an NBA championship and six trips to the Eastern Conference finals. Boston’s stated rationale was structural, and every part of it is true: a roster straining under two supermax contracts, a collapsed pursuit of Giannis Antetokounmpo, and a first-round exit that exposed real fit problems on the floor. None of that is manufactured. But a trade’s stated logic and its full logic are rarely the same document, and this one is worth reading past the press release.

For a decade Boston fielded one pairing of stars, and the city called them, with the affection reserved for a matched set, “the Jays.” Brown and Tatum arrived within a year of each other, won a championship together in 2024, and built back-to-back supermax contracts that made them two of the highest-paid athletes in league history. They shared a locker room, a coaching staff, and a fan base that likes to believe it is more progressive than any other in professional basketball. What they never shared was an economic strategy, and that gap is worth sitting with not because one man was more talented, but because their divergence resembles a pattern in how American capital treats Black masculinity that this piece can only describe, not adjudicate.

What makes the trade’s timing worth reading closely is what did not happen in the weeks before it. As speculation mounted that Boston might move Brown, Tatum said nothing; no public defense of his co-star, no stated wish that the front office keep the partnership intact. The silence was loud enough that Bill Simmons devoted airtime to it, speculating it reflected an understanding, shared inside the organization, that Brown wanted a team of his own and Tatum probably wanted him to have it. Tatum had separately acknowledged in a January interview that the partnership carried real “growing pains.” None of this proves intent, and this piece draws no conclusion about what Tatum was or wasn’t thinking. It does mean the silence around the trade was not neutral, it had already been noticed and discussed by the same media apparatus this piece is describing.

Start with the ledger. In 2023, Brown turned down more than $50 million in conventional endorsement offers — turned them down, not failed to receive them — to fund 741 Performance, his own apparel and footwear company, and to scale 7uice, the media venture he had already built. A year later he launched Boston XChange, an incubator modeled on the idea of Black Wall Street, targeting $5 billion in community wealth across Greater Boston, with a first cohort of grants, workspace, and Harvard Business School (we will forgive him for it not being an HBCU Business School) delivered coaching for local Black founders. Brown’s public language around these moves is institutional rather than personal: he describes the goal as addressing a wealth disparity “no one wants to talk about,” not building his own celebrity profile.

Tatum’s ledger runs the other direction, and it runs long. By industry counts he has endorsed more than two dozen brands; Nike and Jordan Brand, Gatorade, AT&T, Amica, Coach, Subway, 2K Sports, Ruffles, JBL, and others making him one of the most heavily endorsed players in the league by sheer volume of paid-spokesman relationships. This is not a marginal career; it is the standard model for a superstar of his caliber, the same model that has generated wealth for Black athletes going back to Michael Jordan. Tatum is good at it, and there is nothing dishonorable in the choice. But it is a fundamentally different choice than his backcourt partner made, and the difference invites a question rather than answers one since it is not about talent or marketability, since both men have those in comparable measure.

What explains two stars, on the same roster, choosing such different relationships to capital? Part of the answer may be personal preference, which deserves respect without further interrogation. But part may sit inside research worth taking seriously: the market narrates lighter skin and biracial identity differently than it narrates darker skin, even within a league that is overwhelmingly Black. A 2019 American Journal of Sociology study of televised college basketball found broadcasters consistently described lighter-skinned players in terms of intelligence and control, and darker-skinned players in terms of raw physicality, a gap that held even after controlling for on-court performance and the announcer’s own race. A Brookings review reached the same conclusion: skin tone, not race alone, shapes how a player is narrated, and that narration is the raw material brands buy in an endorsement deal. A separate compensation study found weaker evidence that skin tone directly moves pay, a useful caution against overclaiming. None of this proves what happened between one front office and two players. It documents a pattern the Brown-Tatum split resembles closely enough to raise, not settle.

This is not a new pattern, and skin tone alone has never been the whole explanation for it, values and choices may matter just as much. Muhammad Ali’s refusal of the draft cost him three years of his career and most of his commercial appeal, not because promoters doubted his marketability but because his assertion of autonomy over his own body and institutional affiliations read as a threat rather than a story brands wanted to rent. A generation later, Craig Hodges, a two-time NBA champion and elite three-point shooter, tested that same autonomy from inside his own locker room: he asked Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson to boycott Game 1 of the 1991 Finals over the beating of Rodney King, wore a dashiki to the Bulls’ White House visit that year, and handed President Bush’s staff a letter demanding a real plan to address poverty in Black communities. He was out of the league within a year, still one of its most accurate shooters, and no team called. Jordan is instructive precisely because he is not light-skinned or biracial, he is one of the most conventionally marketed dark-skinned athletes in American history, and by Hodges’s own account, Jordan understood that taking a political stance could hamper his economics, and declined to test that trade-off. Hodges and Jordan shared a skin tone and a locker room. Only one was pushed out, a fact that raises a question rather than answers it. Colin Kaepernick’s endorsement portfolio collapsed to essentially one relationship after asserting similar autonomy from NFL ownership, and Kaepernick himself is biracial, a detail that should complicate any account of this pattern as pure colorism rather than erase colorism’s role elsewhere. Two of these three men do not even share a skin tone. What they may share, more than pigment, is a decision to make institutional autonomy non-negotiable; though a pattern across three careers is a pattern, not a proof. Brown’s version is lower-stakes than any of the three, but the same open question recurs: does capital move more easily toward Black athletes who remain legible as spokesmen for institutions they do not control, and more cautiously toward those who assert control of their own, regardless of skin tone? This piece cannot answer that with certainty. It can only note how often the shape recurs.

The pattern extends past Boston, and past sports entirely, though here too what follows is an observation, not a verdict. Patrick Mahomes and Dak Prescott, the two most heavily endorsed quarterbacks of their generation, are both biracial, sons of Black fathers and white mothers. Mahomes has built one of the largest endorsement portfolios in American sports, anchored by a record-setting Adidas deal alongside State Farm and Oakley; Prescott’s corporate slate runs comparably broad. None of this proves brands set out to favor biracial athletes. But it sits alongside the pattern documented above closely enough to warrant the question, in a league and sport where the majority of players are Black. A second pattern is worth placing beside the first, one this publication has already reported without moralizing: Black men have recorded the fastest-growing intermarriage rate of any male demographic group in America, from 8 percent of newly married Black men in 1980 to 24 percent by 2015, according to Pew Research Center analysis, concentrated precisely among the educated, high-earning cohort most likely to reach the kind of professional visibility Mahomes and Prescott occupy. No causal line connects that statistic to either man’s marriage, and this piece draws none. What it raises is a broader question this publication is positioned to ask: whether a market’s comfort with biracial Black men and a fast-growing intermarriage rate concentrated in the same professional class are two separate stories, or two readings of one. If they are one story, the connective thread is unlikely to be race in the abstract. It is more plausibly ownership, or the absence of it, across every domain a community needs to hold its own capital. Jaylen Brown’s story, told above, describes what happens when a Black athlete tries to build wealth inside institutions he controls rather than institutions that rent his image. Does the intermarriage data describe a parallel mechanism operating on family formation — capital and talent flowing toward whichever institutions exist to receive them, absent Black-owned alternatives built to receive them instead? This piece cannot answer that with the data available. It can note that no institutional framework currently exists to prepare African American partnerships before formation, comparable to what other communities have long maintained for their own members, and that this absence, not any individual’s marriage, may be the more consequential gap. Whether it constitutes a liability the community carries into every domain where Black institutional ownership remains thin — family, business, media, capital — is the question this piece leaves open. Patterns are not proof. But a community that declines to ask the question because it lacks proof is choosing a different kind of vulnerability.

The trade also relocates Brown to a city whose relationship with Black institutional life is a different proposition than Boston’s. Bill Russell, who won eleven championships in this same uniform, called Boston a flea market of racism in his memoir, describing a city that layered institutional bigotry over civic pride without ever reconciling the two. That reputation has proven durable: in Boston Globe surveys of Black residents conducted in 2010, 2013, and 2017, Boston finished last among seven major cities behind Atlanta, Chicago, New York, Charlotte, San Francisco, and Philadelphia on how welcoming it is to people of color. The same reporting found the median net worth of non-immigrant Black households in Greater Boston to be $8, against $247,500 for white households, and Black representation on Massachusetts corporate boards at roughly one percent. Philadelphia carries its own history of segregation and disinvestment, and no one should romanticize it. But it is also the city where, in 1837, a Quaker philanthropist’s bequest founded what became Cheyney University, the nation’s first institution of higher learning for African Americans, and where Lincoln University, seventeen years later, became the first HBCU to confer degrees. Whether a builder of Black-owned infrastructure landing in the city that produced the nation’s first Black-serving colleges, rather than remaining in the city its own most decorated Black player once called a flea market of racism, is coincidence or pattern is a question this publication’s readers are equipped to sit with.

None of this requires believing any single Celtics executive consciously weighed Jaylen Brown’s politics before making the call, and treating it as a boardroom conspiracy would badly undersell how institutional racism can function when it exists. It can survive in culture rather than decision memos. Boston’s sports-media environment has its own well-documented record independent of any front office. In 2017, Baltimore Orioles outfielder Adam Jones said he had been called a racial slur and had peanuts thrown at him at Fenway Park; Black journalists who covered the aftermath have said the dominant response on Boston sports radio was indignation directed at Jones rather than reckoning with the city’s reputation. In February 2023, a host on Boston’s top sports-talk station was suspended for a racist joke; weeks later, another used an ethnic slur on air against a Black woman sportswriter. Black reporters who cover Boston teams have described vetting spaces before entering them; Black fans have described watching games at home rather than risk a stadium environment they cannot control. None of that required anyone in the Celtics organization to think a conscious thought about Brown specifically. It raises the question of whether the trade simply moved through a press box and a call-in culture that have, for decades, treated assertive Black men with more suspicion than compliant ones, an environment that would not need anyone’s permission to shape which star ends up costing more to keep. This piece does not claim to have proven that. It notes only that the pattern, once named, is difficult to unsee.

None of this is an accusation against Jayson Tatum, who has built a disciplined, values-driven endorsement career, including a foundation for generational wealth-building in his hometown of St. Louis. The point is not that one Jay is virtuous and the other compromised. The point is structural, and it is a pattern this publication keeps observing rather than a verdict on any single institution’s intent: corporate America has a well-developed machinery for renting a Black athlete’s image, and a comparatively undeveloped machinery for financing his ownership stakes in Black-controlled infrastructure. Endorsement money flows easily because it requires nothing of the brand except a media budget and a face. Ownership capital, the kind Brown is building with Boston XChange; requires a brand, a bank, or an institution to accept a Black founder as a peer with equity claims rather than a spokesperson with a contract term. The endorsement machine is fast and comfortable. The ownership machine barely exists, and where it does, it is disproportionately built by athletes willing to walk away from the safer story.

This is where this publication’s readers should focus, because the lesson is about capital formation, not sports pages. If African American-owned financial institutions, HBCU business schools, and Black venture networks are serious about closing the wealth gap Brown keeps naming publicly, they cannot treat athletes as donor targets for one-time gifts or career-day speakers. Boston XChange is, functionally, an unincorporated development fund with a five-year, $304 million balance sheet behind it. Institutions like Fisk, Tougaloo, and Grambling’s business programs, not only the flagships that already receive this attention, have more to gain by building pipeline relationships with athlete-founded ventures like Brown’s than by waiting for a landmark gift that may never come. Equity partnerships, curriculum ties to incubators like BXC’s creator accelerator, and coordinated deal flow between HBCU alumni networks and athlete-backed funds would do more for capital retention than another round of applause for a sneaker deal.

The two Jays no longer share a locker room, and nothing here requires believing anyone in Boston’s front office consciously moved against Jaylen Brown for what he represents. Institutional racism, when it operates at all, rarely announces itself as intent. It can accumulate instead as a weather pattern in press boxes, call-in shows, and roster rooms, quietly making the assertive, self-determined Black star cost more to keep than the compliant one, until a trade that reads as pure salary-cap logic also leaves the more marketable Jay standing alone as the face of the franchise. Whether that is what happened here is a question this piece raises rather than settles. What is not in question is where Brown lands: a city with a deeper institutional relationship to Black self-determination than the one that just let him go. What HBCU business schools, alumni networks, and Black venture funds can control is what they do with his arrival in a city already home to Cheyney and Lincoln and whether they treat it as a genuine opening or let it pass as sports-page trivia.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by Claude AI.

The Deed and the Broom: What a Clark Atlanta Alum’s Return to San Francisco Teaches About Owning Black Culture, Not Just Staffing It

A house kept alive by donations, year after year, is not yet an institution. It is a beloved dependency — and the job of the leader who inherits it is to make it stop being one.– William A. Foster, IV

Dr. Murrell D. Green’s appointment as permanent Executive Director of San Francisco’s African American Art & Culture Complex is a leadership story. The balance sheet underneath it is the real story and it is one every institution builder in the Diaspora should be reading closely.

A boy swept the floor of a house that was not his. He was paid little and understood less, only that the house held things worth protecting; paintings, records, the particular quiet of people who had built something out of almost nothing. Years passed. The boy left, earned degrees, learned how institutions actually survive: budgets, boards, the difference between a gift and a foundation. When the house needed someone to hold its deed, the family that had raised it did not look for a stranger with a impressive resume. They looked for the boy who already knew where the floor creaked. He returned, not as a favor to his childhood, but because he alone understood that a house kept alive by donations year after year is not yet an institution. It is a beloved dependency. His first job was not to sweep. It was to ask who owns the walls, who owns the roof, and what happens the year the sweeping stops being enough.

The African American Art & Culture Complex in San Francisco’s Western Addition announced on June 1, 2026, that Dr. Murrell D. Green will become its permanent Executive Director, closing a six-month national search that drew more than 300 applicants. Coverage of the appointment has, understandably, centered on sentiment: a Fillmore native, raised in the shadow of the very building he now leads, returning home to steward a 32-year-old cultural institution. That framing is accurate. It is also incomplete. The more consequential story is what Dr. Green inherits financially, and what his selection signals about how HBCU-trained leadership is increasingly being asked to solve problems that Black cultural institutions have never fully solved for themselves — capital structure, revenue diversification, and reserve strength.

Dr. Green’s credentials read as a case study in institutional density built across multiple systems rather than one. He holds degrees from two PWIs, and most importantly Clark Atlanta University, and currently serves as Dean of Counseling and Wellness Services within the California Community College system. He previously sat as an elected Trustee of City College of San Francisco, having first been appointed by then-Mayor London Breed. His resume also includes President-Elect of the African American Male Education Network & Development, Board Vice President of Alive & Free/Omega Boys Club, and Advisory Board Chair for the Bayview YMCA. This is not a cultural sector career. It is a governance and education-administration career that happens to be arriving at a cultural institution and that distinction matters for how the Complex should now be run.

It matters because Dr. Green’s own history with the Complex predates his credentials. He served the organization years ago as Office Manager and Youth Leader, and, in a detail the Complex’s own announcement highlighted with evident affection, once played both Santa and “Wakanda Claus” at its community holiday events. The Board’s decision to return to a familiar face after a lengthy, well-publicized national search is itself an institutional signal worth reading. Continuity of relationship, not novelty of resume, was treated as the higher-value asset. For institutions built on community trust rather than market share, that is often the correct call but it is a call that only pays off if the returning leader is empowered to change the underlying model, not simply preserve it.

The Complex’s own recent history underscores why continuity was treated as a strategic asset rather than a consolation choice. Dr. Green succeeds Niquole Esters, who served as Interim Executive Director beginning last August after the departure of co-directors Melonie and Melorra Green (no relation) following eight years of joint leadership. In a short window, Esters opened a building-wide exhibition on artist Emory Douglas that drew significant crowds and press coverage, overhauled the Complex’s communications infrastructure, and expanded its Community Day partnerships. The Board’s public praise for that tenure suggests the institution enters this transition with operational momentum rather than crisis. That is a genuine advantage. It is also a reason the coming period should be judged on capital strategy, not merely on programming and visibility, both of which the Complex has already demonstrated it can produce.

That underlying model is where the self-interest case begins. Public tax filings show the Complex generated $3.84 million in revenue against $3.43 million in expenses for the fiscal year ending June 2024, a net gain of roughly $410,000 and net assets of $1.42 million. On its face, a healthy year. Underneath it, a structurally fragile one: contributions accounted for 85.9 percent of total revenue, program services for just 7.9 percent, and investment income for zero dollars — in any year on record. The building itself, a 32,000-square-foot former brewery converted into cultural space across the 1980s and ’90s, is owned outright by the City and County of San Francisco, not the Complex. The organization that Dr. Green now leads appears to hold no real estate, no endowment, and no investment portfolio. It holds relationships, and it converts those relationships into contributions, year after year, at whatever rate donors are willing to sustain.

That rate is not stable. The prior fiscal year, ending June 2023, produced $4.45 million in revenue but a net loss of $188,000. The year before that, ending June 2022, produced a net loss of $138,861. A donation-dependent institution with no investment income and no owned capital does not merely risk a bad year it risks a bad year becoming a permanent contraction, because there is no reserve architecture designed to absorb it. This is the same structural vulnerability that HBCU Money has documented repeatedly in HBCU endowment reporting: thin reserves, revenue concentration in gifts rather than diversified income, and an absence of owned, appreciating assets standing between the institution and its next difficult fiscal year. The Complex is not an HBCU. But it is subject to the identical arithmetic, and it is now led by someone whose training runs directly through one.

The timing raises the stakes further. The Complex’s building at 762 Fulton Street is slated to close temporarily for seismic renovation beginning in January 2027 — seven months into Dr. Green’s tenure. A forced closure of a donation-dependent institution’s only physical venue is precisely the scenario a thin balance sheet is least equipped to survive. Board Vice President Mattie Scott framed the closure as a test of resilience, the certainty that the Complex will reopen stronger. That certainty will be manufactured by financial planning, not sentiment, and it is now Dr. Green’s job to manufacture it.

There is a broader pattern here worth naming plainly for readers building their own institutions across the Diaspora. Clark Atlanta, like Fisk, Tougaloo, Dillard, and Xavier of Louisiana, continues to produce administrators who move into leadership of civic and cultural institutions well outside the HBCU ecosystem itself, an export of trained human capital that rarely gets counted in conversations about HBCU return on investment, but that compounds institutional capacity across Black America regardless of which building the leader ultimately sits in. The question African American institution builders should be tracking over the next eighteen months is not whether Dr. Green succeeds as a beloved, familiar presence. He clearly already has. The question is whether he converts an institution held together by annual generosity into one held together by owned capital; diversified program revenue, an actual investment posture, and reserves sized to survive a scheduled closure rather than merely announce faith in the reopening.

That is the difference between staffing a culture and owning it. San Francisco’s Black community will be watching Dr. Green’s leadership for what it means to the Fillmore. Institution builders elsewhere in the Diaspora should be watching it for what it reveals about the financial architecture underneath nearly every comparable Black cultural institution in the country and whether HBCU-trained leadership can finally be the generation that rebuilds that architecture, not just occupies it.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

Can We Talk About More Than Sports? The Disappearance of the African American Male Intellectual

If I want intellectual rigor, I have to go into spaces with people who do not look like me. The spaces where we talk objectively about military strategy, economics, technology, space, institutional development, endowments, and the systems that build power. When I need institutional work done, I look to African American women because they show up. For reasons that are numerous, most Black men are on the sidelines or consumed by individualism. Our Diaspora awaits the next generation of Dr. John Henrik Clarke, Kwame Nkrumah, Steve Biko, DuBois, Garvey, Washington, and countless men who were thinkers, fighters, builders, and doers. But I am no longer sure they are coming. – William A. Foster, IV

When a community’s most visible men are athletes, entertainers, and algorithm-driven provocateurs, the institutions that could translate attention into power are left to build themselves. There is a particular kind of institutional poverty that does not show up in endowment reports or balance sheets. It is subtler and, in the long run, more corrosive than the capital deficits that HBCU Money typically examines. It is the poverty of visible intellectual leadership specifically, the near-total absence of African American men from the serious public discourse of economics, geopolitics, institutional strategy, and capital formation. What fills the vacuum is well documented by anyone who has spent time on YouTube, on cable television, or in a social gathering of professional Black men: sports commentary, entertainment industry gossip, and a growing genre of conspiratorial self-help that markets itself as political awakening but delivers little more than grievance with a production budget. The consequences of this vacancy are institutional, not merely cultural, and any honest account of why African American community-building institutions remain fragile must reckon with it.

Romaine Bostick, the Bloomberg Television anchor, is frequently cited and for good reason as something close to an anomaly. He is an African American man with a prominent platform inside a credentialed financial media institution, covering markets, macroeconomics, and capital with the rigor the subject demands. That his name is cited as singular rather than representative is not a reflection on him; it is an indictment of the structural conditions that produced only one of him at that level of visibility. The financial influencer class that has proliferated across social media in the last decade is a poor substitute. These platforms trade in individual wealth accumulation tips like portfolio aesthetics, real estate flipping, credit score optimization framed in aspirational language that carefully avoids any structural critique or institutional prescription. They are, in the language of the economist, private goods masquerading as public ones: they may benefit the individual subscriber but they produce nothing resembling the collective institutional infrastructure that a community’s long-term capital position actually requires.

The geopolitical vacancy is if anything more severe. The Jewish American community, the Indian American community, the Irish American political diaspora each has produced, over generations, a class of intellectuals, strategists, and institutional builders who translate geopolitical analysis into concrete lobbying architecture, foreign policy positioning, and diaspora coordination frameworks. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee did not emerge from a vacuum; it emerged from decades of serious people doing serious analytical work and then building the organizational scaffolding to convert that work into leverage. The African American community, with a diaspora that spans the Atlantic world and a set of geopolitical interests that touch on the entire African continent, U.S. foreign policy in the Caribbean, trade frameworks, and international development finance, has produced no comparable institution anchored in credentialed, rigorous, non-partisan strategic analysis. What exists instead is a loosely connected series of advocacy organizations whose analytical capacity is episodic at best and whose institutional memory rarely survives leadership transitions.

This is not an argument about individual men failing to apply themselves. It is an argument about the structural incentive architecture that shapes which kinds of African American male expression receive platforms, capital, and cultural reinforcement. Sports and entertainment are not accidents; they are the products of a media and investment ecosystem that has found it profitable to channel Black male talent into spectacle and to treat Black male intellectual output as a niche product with limited commercial upside. The algorithm that governs YouTube’s recommendation engine is not neutral; it reflects and amplifies the market logic that has always been more comfortable monetizing Black performance than Black analysis. The red pill content ecosystem which deserves to be understood as an ideological product, not an organic community is filling a genuine vacuum in the discourse by offering what appears to be structural critique while systematically redirecting legitimate grievance away from institutional analysis and toward interpersonal conflict. It is, in this sense, a distraction infrastructure with considerable commercial and political utility to those who benefit from African American institutional disorganization.

What makes this dynamic particularly difficult to dislodge is that it has produced a convincing counterfeit of intellectual engagement. A podcast downloaded by a hundred thousand people, a YouTube channel with three-hour deep dives assembled from Google searches, a social media account that circulates economic statistics stripped of their methodological context none of these is institutional development, and none constitutes rigorous research or analysis. The distinction matters enormously. Genuine analytical infrastructure requires peer accountability, primary source methodology, longitudinal data collection, and the kind of institutional memory that persists beyond any individual’s attention span or content calendar. A think tank analyst who has spent five years building a quantitative model of African American capital flows in the Gulf South is doing categorically different work than a podcaster who has spent five years doing the same Google searches on a better microphone. Conflating the two does not merely flatter the latter; it degrades the standard against which the former is measured and obscures the actual vacancy the community needs to address. Fluency in the language of analysis is not the same as the capacity to produce it, and a community that cannot distinguish between the two will continue to mistake audience size for institutional weight.

African American male YouTuber whose room is filled with sports and rap on the walls and TV while he discusses sports commentary.

The pattern repeats at every level of Black public life. When prominent African American athletes and entertainers, men with platforms reaching millions and net worths that rival the asset bases of the largest Black-owned banks in America, comment on the condition of majority-Black cities, the frame is almost invariably that of the consumer: the amenities, the hotel, the general atmosphere of a road trip. The institutional landscape like the HBCU that has anchored the city’s intellectual life for over a century, the Black-owned bank that King named from the pulpit, the planned African American neighborhood that once constituted an entire economic ecosystem is simply not visible from that vantage point. That invisibility is not a personal failing. It is the predictable output of a system, diagnosed with precision by William C. Rhoden in Forty Million Dollar Slaves, in which Black wealth is generated within structures designed to route it outward from communities rather than back through the institutions those communities need to build durable power. Individual civic commitment, however genuine, does not substitute for the analytical infrastructure that would make institutional orientation the default rather than the exception.

The think tank gap is perhaps the most concrete expression of this structural absence. The Brookings Institution, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Center for Strategic and International Studies are not merely academic repositories; they are influence infrastructure. They produce the analysis that shapes congressional testimony, executive branch policy, corporate strategy, and media framing. The African American intellectual presence within these institutions is real but peripheral; what does not yet exist is a Black-led, HBCU-anchored, intellectually credentialed think tank with the resources and gravitas to place African American institutional interests at the center of national economic and foreign policy debate. This is not a complaint; it is a specification. The W.E.B. Du Bois tradition, rigorous, data-grounded, institutionally minded provides the intellectual lineage. The question is whether the generation of African American men currently consuming sports highlight reels and financial influencer content will produce the institutional builders who can turn that lineage into operating infrastructure.

The HBCU system is the most logical anchor for that infrastructure, and the institutions best positioned to build it are not necessarily the ones that already carry the heaviest brand weight. Morgan State University in Baltimore, with its pathway to R1 research designation and deep roots in urban economic analysis, is positioned to anchor a serious institute for African American urban policy, one that could feed analysis directly into the D.C. policy corridor less than an hour away. Fisk University in Nashville carries the intellectual lineage of W.E.B. Du Bois’s Atlanta Studies and the American Missionary Association’s most rigorous scholarly tradition; it has no dominant professional program crowding out an identity, which means a well-capitalized center for African American diaspora economics and geopolitical strategy could become the institution’s defining contribution to the next generation of scholarship. Delaware State University, with its proximity to the financial and legal infrastructure of Wilmington and the policy apparatus of Washington, has the geographic position to build an international trade and diaspora investment research program that no other HBCU is currently occupying. And Tougaloo College in Mississippi — small, historically central to the civil rights intellectual tradition, located in the heart of the Black Belt — represents exactly the kind of institution where an endowed center for African American political economy could become a flagship program rather than an appendage. The argument for these institutions over the obvious names is not that the obvious names lack talent. It is that talent concentrated in already-crowded institutional identities produces marginal gains; talent concentrated in institutions with open institutional real estate produces defining ones.

None of this infrastructure can be built without reckoning honestly with what the pipeline into it looks like. The analytical deficit does not begin in adulthood; it begins well before any young man ever encounters a university campus. According to DC Action’s analysis of District assessment data, only 23 percent of Black students demonstrate reading proficiency and a mere 11 percent demonstrate math proficiency — compared to 82 and 75 percent respectively for their white peers. These are not Washington anomalies; they are a concentrated reflection of a national pattern. Compounding the academic deficit is the enrichment deficit: a Wallace Foundation study found that while nearly 1.9 million Black children participated in structured summer learning programs in 2019, an additional 2.3 million would have enrolled if programs had been available, with cost cited as the primary barrier. Debate leagues, Model UN chapters, economics competitions, civic enrichment programs develop the extracurricular architecture that socializes young people into rigorous analytical discourse before they arrive at college are precisely the programs that disappear first in underfunded majority-Black school systems. An HBCU cannot build a think tank culture if the students arriving have spent twelve years in environments that did not reward that kind of engagement and had no institutional infrastructure to cultivate it.

But the educational deprivation is only one layer of the pipeline problem. Boys and in particular Black boys are not exempt from this, arguably face an intensified version of it are socialized from an early age into codes of masculinity that position intellectual seriousness as a threat to social belonging. Yanis Varoufakis, an economist and former Finance Minister of Greece, reflecting on his own formation, observed that even in the most progressive environments, boys construct their identity through hierarchies among themselves and in relation to girls, a dialectic of recognition that has little room for the boy who reads political economy or debates monetary policy at the lunch table. For Black boys in particular, this universal male socialization pressure is compounded by the specific cultural script that the media ecosystem has assigned to Black masculinity: athletic dominance, entertainment charisma, and street credibility. Anti-intellectualism is not merely tolerated within that script it is frequently enforced, with academic seriousness coded as a form of social betrayal. The community pays for that enforcement every generation, in the form of men who arrive at adulthood with the raw intelligence for serious analytical work and none of the institutional orientation or scholarly habits that would convert that intelligence into research, analysis, and institutional leadership. The misogyny that runs alongside the anti-intellectualism is not incidental to it; both are features of a masculinity script that defines strength as dominance rather than as the capacity to build something that outlasts you.

There is also an honest conversation to be had about the social environments in which African American professional men operate and the norms those environments reinforce. A friend group that discusses travel plans and makes no space for discussions of institutional investment, community capital formation, or coordinated political strategy is not merely a social observation; it is a microcosm of a broader norm enforcement mechanism. Social belonging within many African American professional male networks has been decoupled from the kind of civic and institutional seriousness that characterized the generation of men who built the original HBCU infrastructure, the African American financial institution network, and the civil rights legal architecture. That decoupling is not random; it is the downstream consequence of decades of systematic underinvestment in the institutions like the historically Black newspapers, the civic fraternal organizations with genuine programmatic ambitions, the professional associations with real research and advocacy functions that once transmitted serious institutional norms across generations of Black men.

The isolation felt by those who maintain a serious institutional orientation in this environment is real and should be named plainly. It is the isolation of working against the grain of both a mainstream media architecture that has no structural interest in platforming Black male institutional seriousness and a community social architecture that has internalized the substitution of individual aspiration for collective institutional ambition. It is exhausting in the way that all labor against structural inertia is exhausting. But exhaustion is a data point, not a reason for retreat. The work of rebuilding the intellectual infrastructure of African American institutional life — the think tanks, the policy journals, the credentialed analytical voices, the geopolitical strategy apparatus — is among the highest-leverage investments available to the HBCU ecosystem and its allies. The vacancy at the table is not permanent. It is a structural problem, which means it has structural solutions. The task is to build them with the same seriousness that previous generations built everything from Tuskegee to the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, one institution at a time, on a foundation of rigor rather than spectacle.

EDITOR’S NOTE

The argument in this article is not that African American men lack the intellectual capacity for institutional seriousness. It is that the infrastructure which would reward and amplify that seriousness has not been built and that building it is a higher-order priority than any individual wealth-building strategy this publication will ever publish. A community with no analytical architecture is a community that will always be responding to other people’s institutional decisions rather than shaping its own. The athletes will keep playing. The entertainers will keep performing. The influencers will keep posting. The question is whether, alongside all of that, the institutions get built. That is the only question that matters at scale.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by Claude AI.

The $10 Solution: Why Small, Recurring Gifts Are the Missing Pillar of Black Institutional Finance

The African American institutional ecosystem—comprising HBCUs, Black-led nonprofits, community health organizations, and civic associations—faces a structural financing problem that no single grant cycle, federal appropriation, or celebrity donation can solve on its own. The challenge is not a shortage of Black generosity. It is a shortage of organized, recurring, and institutionally directed Black generosity. The $10 monthly donation—modest by any individual measure—represents, in aggregate, one of the most underutilized instruments of capital formation available to African American institutions today.

This is not an argument for charity. It is an argument for institutional finance through democratized recurring revenue.

Before prescribing solutions, the data demands a reckoning with the scale of the funding disparity confronting African American-led institutions. According to research compiled by the Bridgespan Group and Echoing Green, the revenues of Black-led organizations are 24 percent smaller than the revenues of their white-led counterparts. When it comes to unrestricted funding—the holy grail of financial support—the picture is even bleaker: the unrestricted net assets of Black-led organizations are 76 percent smaller than their white-led counterparts. That disparity in unrestricted assets is not a footnote. It is the operating condition under which virtually every Black-led institution functions daily.

The revenue figures are equally sobering in aggregate. In terms of total sector-wide revenue, majority Black-led organizations receive less than $3 billion, compared with majority white-led organizations that receive about $85 billion. The ratio of roughly 28 to 1 reflects decades of what practitioners in the sector have termed “philanthropic redlining,” a structural pattern in which institutional funders extend trust, operating support, and scale capital disproportionately to white-led organizations. The organizational profile of the sector makes this crisis especially acute. Majority Black-led nonprofits tend to be smaller, with 61 percent operating with budgets under $100,000 and only 2 percent with budgets over $10 million. The median annual revenue of majority Black-led nonprofits is $302,000, compared with $908,000 for majority white-led nonprofits. An organization operating at $302,000 in annual revenue has little margin for program investment, staff development, or reserve accumulation. It is, by any financial standard, an institution surviving rather than building.

The Association of Black Foundation Executives found that 60 percent of Black-led organizations surveyed had budgets of $500,000 or less, and just 23 percent had reserves of three months or more. A three-month operating reserve is considered the absolute minimum threshold for organizational resilience. The fact that more than three-quarters of Black-led nonprofits fall below that floor means that any disruption to funding—a grant not renewed, a donor who lapses, a federal program curtailed—can be existential. HBCUs face a structurally analogous problem in higher education finance. The PWI-HBCU NACUBO Top 10 Endowment Gap for 2024 stands at $129.2 to $1. HBCUs comprised 1.5 percent of NACUBO’s reporting institutions and 0.3 percent of the reporting endowment assets, while PWI endowments with assets over $5 billion hold 58.5 percent of the $884.3 billion in total reporting endowment assets. Even Howard University, which became the first HBCU to cross the $1 billion endowment threshold, a genuine milestone, remains an order of magnitude behind flagship PWIs whose endowments measure in the tens of billions.

These figures, taken together, describe an ecosystem that is generationally undercapitalized. The structural solution requires multiple interventions: federal policy reform, corporate accountability, philanthropic sector reorientation, and enhanced major gift cultivation. But each of those levers operates on a long timeline and with significant uncertainty. What African American households, alumni chapters, and giving groups can control today is the flow of their own recurring dollars into the institutions that serve them.

African Americans are among the most generous donors in the United States, a fact that is consistently underappreciated in both mainstream philanthropic discourse and internal community conversations. Nearly two-thirds of Black households donate to community-based organizations and causes, totaling $11 billion each year. Black households on average give away 25 percent more of their income per year than white households, and of all racial or ethnic groups, Black families have contributed the largest proportion of their wealth to charity since 2010. High-net-worth Black families are reportedly more likely to have family traditions around giving than their white counterparts and report more fulfillment from their charitable giving. Research by the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy documents that Black Americans donated 3 to 4 percent of their income to charity on average across the years studied, a rate that outpaces other demographic groups relative to income.

The generosity is not in question. What is in question is the institutional destination of that generosity and the form it takes. A community that donates $11 billion annually but whose primary institutional ecosystem of HBCUs, Black-led nonprofits, Black hospitals, Black media operates on poverty-level budgets has a capital distribution problem, not a giving problem. The money is there. The institutional routing is not. A significant portion of that giving flows to religious congregations, mutual aid to extended family networks, and causes with no institutional anchor in the African American ecosystem. None of those giving patterns are illegitimate. But they do not build endowments. They do not fund operating reserves. They do not provide the recurring, unrestricted revenue that allows a Black-led nonprofit to hire a development officer, invest in data infrastructure, or weather a single major donor’s departure.

The $10 monthly donation ($120 annually) is not a symbolic gesture. At scale, it is a recapitalization strategy. There are approximately 47 million African Americans in the United States. If only 5 percent of Black households which is roughly 2.5 million households out of an estimated 17 million committed $10 per month to a Black-led institution, the aggregate annual flow would reach $300 million. Directed strategically across HBCUs, Black-led nonprofits, and community health institutions, that represents more than 10 percent of the current total revenue flowing to the majority Black-led nonprofit sector.

The power of recurring giving extends beyond the dollar amount. Industry data confirms that monthly donors give 42 percent more than one-time givers on an annualized basis, driven by the cumulative effect of consistent contributions and the reduced likelihood of lapsing. For nonprofits, recurring revenue is categorically different from episodic revenue: it is predictable, plannable, and bankable in ways that grant income and campaign proceeds are not. An organization with 500 monthly donors at $10 each has a guaranteed $60,000 annual baseline; modest but stable enough to justify hiring, to secure a line of credit, or to launch a matching gift campaign. Unrestricted monthly giving is also the form of philanthropy most urgently needed by Black-led institutions. The systemic deficiency in unrestricted funding, that 76 percent gap compared to white-led peers, reflects a structural pattern in which Black organizations receive grants with narrow programmatic restrictions that prevent investment in the internal capacity required for organizational growth. A $10 monthly donation from an HBCU alumnus to their alma mater’s annual fund, or from a community member to a local Black-led nonprofit, is by definition unrestricted. The institution decides how to deploy it: toward a staff position, a technology upgrade, an emergency reserve, or a matching gift that unlocks foundation dollars.

The most efficient mechanism for scaling these commitments into institutional capital is not individual action—it is collective action through organizational infrastructure. HBCU alumni chapters and African American giving groups represent an underutilized distribution network for democratized recurring philanthropy. An alumni chapter with 200 active members in which 60 percent commit to $10 monthly generates $14,400 annually—directed, unrestricted, recurring. A national HBCU alumni association with 50 chapters operating at that participation rate generates $720,000 annually for institutional endowment or operating support. Multiply that across the more than 100 HBCUs, many of which have alumni association networks across dozens of cities, and the aggregate potential is measured in the tens of millions of dollars per year, capital that currently does not exist on HBCU balance sheets.

Giving groups offer a parallel vehicle. Giving circles like the New Generation of African American Philanthropists, which began as a 15-person circle in Charlotte, have grown into significant collective giving entities committed to disrupting conventional philanthropy. These structures are particularly well-suited to the $10 monthly model because they combine the social accountability of a group commitment with the financial efficiency of pooled, recurring capital. A giving group that aggregates 100 members at $10 monthly generates $12,000 annually in deployable grants, small enough to be accessible to any working professional, large enough to meaningfully support a Black-led organization’s operating budget. The alumni chapter as a philanthropic vehicle is also strategically superior to individual giving in one critical respect: it creates an institutional relationship between the donor and the institution that survives any individual’s personal financial fluctuation. When the chapter commits, the institution can plan around that commitment. When an individual donor commits in isolation, attrition erodes the revenue base unpredictably.

The compounding returns of this approach are significant. An HBCU with 10,000 alumni in which 15 percent participate at $10 monthly generates $1.8 million annually. Invested at a conservative 5 percent return, sustained over ten years with reinvestment, that giving program alone produces an endowment contribution of more than $22 million, enough to fund two endowed faculty chairs or establish a meaningful scholarship fund. The compounding logic of recurring philanthropy, applied to institutional endowment-building, is the same logic that has built the multibillion-dollar endowments of elite PWIs over generations: not a handful of transformative gifts alone, but a consistent culture of giving across a broad alumni base, sustained over decades. For Black-led nonprofits, the calculus is more immediate. More than half of Black-led nonprofit leaders report that their organization would shut down if they lost one or two key funders. An organization that replaces that concentration risk with 300 monthly donors at $10 each has effectively immunized itself against the collapse of any single funding relationship. Donor diversification, the standard recommendation of every organizational capacity consultant in the sector, is operationally achieved through the accumulation of recurring small donors, not through the pursuit of larger restricted grants. According to the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy, funding to Black communities accounts for only 1 percent of all community foundation funding, resulting in an underfunding of Black communities of $2 billion. Community philanthropy from within the ecosystem is not a substitute for external institutional accountability but it is the only source of capital over which African American institutions have direct and immediate control.


Recommendations for Institutional Action

For HBCU Development Offices: The immediate priority is building and marketing a monthly giving program with a specific $10 entry point. The language should be explicit: this is not charity; it is institutional investment. Alumni who would not write a $120 check will often commit to $10 monthly if the onboarding is frictionless and the institutional communication is consistent and strategic. Technology infrastructure for recurring giving is low-cost and widely available. The barrier is not technical it is a development culture that has historically prioritized major gift cultivation at the expense of broad-base annual fund growth.

For Alumni Chapters: Chapters should establish a formal monthly giving commitment as a condition of active chapter membership or officer eligibility not as a financial barrier, but as a cultural signal that institutional support is a baseline expectation of HBCU alumni engagement, not an exceptional act. Chapters with robust monthly giving programs should publicize their aggregate contribution totals, creating competitive social proof across the alumni network.

For African American Giving Groups: Existing giving circles and collective philanthropy organizations should formally adopt Black-led nonprofits and HBCU foundations as priority beneficiaries and structure their pooled contributions as recurring monthly flows rather than single annual grants. The stability value of a twelve-month recurring commitment to a recipient organization exceeds the programmatic value of a larger, one-time check.

For Individual Households: The allocation question is straightforward. African American households already give. The strategic question is whether a portion of that existing generosity is directed toward institutions with the capacity to aggregate capital, build reserves, and generate long-term community returns. Setting up one $10 monthly recurring gift to an HBCU foundation or Black-led nonprofit requires less than ten minutes and commits less than the cost of two streaming subscriptions per month.


The structural underfunding of African American institutions is not primarily a story of insufficient generosity—it is a story of insufficient institutional routing. Black households give $11 billion annually. Black-led institutions capture a fraction of that flow. The gap between those two figures is the organizing challenge of African American institutional philanthropy.

The $10 monthly commitment is not the complete answer. It does not replace federal investment, it does not substitute for corporate accountability in philanthropic grantmaking, and it does not eliminate the need for transformative major gifts to HBCU endowments. But it is the instrument most immediately available, most broadly accessible, and most structurally valuable to the organizations that need stable, unrestricted, recurring revenue to survive and eventually to scale.

Communities are built by institutions. Institutions are built by capital. Capital, in the absence of inherited wealth and equitable access to external philanthropy, must be built from within—one recurring commitment at a time.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

Elon Musk Is Wrong: Humanity And The Earth Do Not Need EVs, It Need A Carless Society

“In every walk with nature, one receives far more than he seeks.” – John Muir. 

The car did not just change how we move. It changed what we built, what we valued, and who we decided could be left behind. Getting out from under it will require more than a better battery.

In 1956, a city planner in Birmingham, Alabama, submitted a highway routing proposal that would thread the new interstate system directly through Titusville, one of the city’s most prosperous African American neighborhoods. The route was not selected because it was the most efficient path from point A to point B. It was selected because the land was cheap and cheap, in that era, was another word for Black. The families displaced did not receive relocation assistance equal to what they lost. The businesses did not reopen elsewhere. The churches, the insurance offices, the barbershops, the fraternal lodges that had made Titusville a functioning community were scattered. What had been a neighborhood became a slab of elevated concrete moving white commuters from the suburbs to downtown and back. Birmingham was not unusual. From the Tremaine neighborhood in Los Angeles to Rondo in Saint Paul to Overtown in Miami, the same story played out in city after city, funded by the federal government and executed with asphalt. The car did not just reshape American cities. It demolished specific ones, in specific places, inhabited by specific people, for the convenience of everyone else.

This history is the necessary starting point for any honest reckoning with where the automobile has brought us, and why Elon Musk’s vision of an electrified car culture is not a solution to the problem but a continuation of it under a different brand name. The electric vehicle has been marketed as the clean future of personal transportation; zero emissions at the tailpipe, climate guilt absolved, the open road preserved. It is a compelling product. It is not a compelling answer. Because the problem was never just what cars burn. The problem is what cars demand: of land, of household budgets, of city design, of public investment, of the communities that get sacrificed whenever the automobile’s appetite for space needs to be fed.

Start with the land. The United States has devoted more than 100 million acres to automobile infrastructure. Roads and highways alone consume roughly 63,000 square miles of land, an area approximately the size of the state of Florida. In dense cities, up to 40 percent of developable land is given over to streets and parking. Los Angeles has more parking spaces than it has people, with estimates placing the number around 18.6 million spots. That land does not produce food. It does not house families. It does not generate the kind of economic activity that funds schools, libraries, or public health systems. It stores machines that sit idle approximately 95 percent of the time. Every one of those acres is an acre that cannot be a home, a garden, a park, a clinic, or a business. The car does not merely use land. It consumes it, and it consumes it permanently, because once you have built a city around the assumption of universal car ownership, every subsequent decision like where to put the grocery store, where to locate the employer, how wide to make the sidewalk, whether to build a sidewalk at all follows from that original premise. You do not escape the logic by electrifying the vehicle. You just power the prison with renewable energy.

Then there is what cars cost the people who own them. In the United States, the average household spends more than $10,000 per year on vehicle ownership, maintenance, fuel, and insurance. For a working-class family earning $50,000 a year, that is 20 cents of every dollar earned going out the door before groceries, rent, or healthcare are even considered. Car ownership is not, for most Americans, a consumer preference. It is a compelled expense, the price of living in a country that built its cities to require a car for every adult who wants to participate in economic life. You need a car to get to the job. You need the job to afford the car. It is a circular dependency that has been engineered into the physical shape of the American landscape over 70 years of federal highway spending and local zoning codes written to mandate parking minimums and prohibit the kind of density that would make transit viable. An electric vehicle does not break that dependency. It makes it slightly cleaner while keeping it fully intact.

The environmental case against EVs as a solution is equally straightforward, even if it gets less attention than the tailpipe emissions story. Electric vehicles require lithium, cobalt, and rare earth metals extracted from mining operations that carry their own significant environmental and human costs much of it borne by communities in Africa Core and South America with limited political leverage to resist it. EV batteries degrade over time and create toxic disposal challenges that the industry does not yet have a credible plan to manage at scale. The electricity that charges those batteries comes, in large portions of the United States, from natural gas and coal-fired power plants. And the roads those vehicles drive on are made of cement and asphalt, which together represent some of the largest sources of industrial carbon emissions in the construction sector. The electric vehicle reduces the carbon footprint of the vehicle itself. It does not reduce the carbon footprint of the system the vehicle requires to function. Musk is not selling sustainability. He is selling the most expensive component of an unsustainable system and calling it a revolution.

The deeper problem with the EV framework is that it forecloses the conversation we actually need to be having, which is about city design. The countries and cities that have most dramatically reduced their transportation emissions and improved their residents’ quality of life have not done so by switching their car fleets from gasoline to electric. They have done so by building cities where you do not need a car to live a full life. In Amsterdam, nearly 40 percent of all trips are made by bicycle. In Tokyo, the train station is the center of commerce, culture, and daily life not the parking garage. In Bogotá, a citywide investment in bus rapid transit and protected bike infrastructure transformed mobility for millions of people who had never been able to afford a car, electric or otherwise. These are not utopian thought experiments. They are functioning cities with lower transportation costs, lower carbon emissions, lower traffic fatality rates, and measurably higher quality of life by most measures than the car-dependent American metropolitan model.

The concept gaining the most traction in serious urban planning and economic research is the “15-minute city” — an urban environment designed so that work, school, groceries, healthcare, and recreation are all accessible within a 15-minute walk or bike ride from home. The idea sounds simple, but its implications are radical. It requires reversing 70 years of zoning policy that has separated where people live from where they work and shop. It requires investing in transit systems rather than highways. It requires eliminating parking minimums that force developers to build garages instead of apartments. It requires, in other words, making a deliberate decision to build cities for people rather than for the machines people currently have no choice but to use. Every one of those decisions is available to American cities right now. Minneapolis has already eliminated single-family zoning citywide. Several American cities have abolished parking minimums. Raleigh, Sacramento, and Spokane are among those that have begun allowing higher-density housing near transit corridors. The policy tools exist. What has been missing is the political will to use them, and a cultural framework that makes the necessity clear.

The political will question brings us back to Musk, because the EV industry’s dominance of the transportation policy conversation has not been a neutral outcome of superior technology. It has been the result of enormous lobbying investment, enormous marketing spend, and the structurally convenient alignment between the EV industry’s interests and the desires of the affluent consumer class that has historically set the terms of American transportation policy. An EV costs, on average, significantly more than a comparable gasoline vehicle. The federal tax credits designed to incentivize EV adoption have disproportionately benefited households with sufficient income and tax liability to claim them. The charging infrastructure being built to serve EVs is concentrated along highway corridors and in affluent urban neighborhoods, not in the lower-income communities where transportation costs consume the highest share of household income and where the greatest public health benefits from reduced tailpipe emissions would be realized. The EV transition, as currently structured, is a premium product for a premium market, marketed as a solution for everyone.

What would a genuine solution look like? It would look like the $200 billion the United States spends annually on road maintenance being progressively redirected toward transit, protected bike infrastructure, and the land use reforms that make both viable. It would look like parking minimums being eliminated in every American city and the resulting land being converted to housing, urban agriculture, and green space. It would look like the elevated highways that bisected Titusville and Rondo and Overtown being removed as has already happened in San Francisco, Milwaukee, and Seoul and the land beneath them being returned to the communities they displaced. It would look like a federal transportation policy that measures success not in lane-miles of highway constructed but in the percentage of Americans who can get to work, school, and the doctor without owning a vehicle.

None of this requires eliminating every car in America. It requires being honest about what the car has cost us and making different choices with the public money that has, for 70 years, been used to optimize for the automobile at the expense of everything else. The planet is not in danger because we drive gasoline-powered cars. It is in danger because we built an entire civilization on the assumption that every adult would own and operate a private motor vehicle, and then constructed a global economy to supply, fuel, insure, park, and repair that vehicle in perpetuity. Swapping the engine type does not change the assumption. It just makes it quieter.

Elon Musk is not a visionary in any meaningful sense of that word when it comes to transportation. He is a very effective entrepreneur (we think) who has identified a product that allows affluent consumers to feel better about a behavior they were already committed to. That is a legitimate business. It is absolutely not a solution to climate change, to urban inequality, to the destruction of walkable communities, or to the 40,000 Americans who die in traffic collisions every year. Those problems require something the EV industry cannot sell: a different way of organizing the relationship between human beings and the places they inhabit. That reorganization begins not in a factory in Texas but in a city council chamber, a zoning board hearing, a transit agency budget meeting, and the accumulated small decisions about what we build, where we build it, and who we decide it is for. The age of the car will end. The only question is whether we end it deliberately, on terms we choose, or whether we wait for the consequences of not choosing to end it for us.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.