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.

The Largest IPO in African History Is Happening. Where Are African America’s Institutions?

Our work is the presentatoin of our capabilities. – Edward Gibbon

There is an old story about a village that lived along a great river. Every season, merchants from distant lands traveled that river, loading their boats with timber, ore, and grain pulled from the very land the villagers had worked for generations. Those merchants sailed downstream to markets where fortunes were made and power was consolidated, and season by season, neighboring tribes who had learned to build boats and send their own goods to market grew stronger their granaries fuller, their children better protected, their voices louder in the councils where decisions were made about who owned what and who owed whom. The village elders watched all of this from the bank. They were not ignorant men and women. They knew the river better than any merchant who passed through. They understood its currents, its seasons, its dangers. But they had never built boats. The lumber was expensive. The tools were hard to come by. The timing was never quite right. And so the resources of their land flowed downstream in other people’s vessels, enriching other people’s villages, while their own families and sibling villages just around the bend, bound to them by blood and history grew more exposed with each passing year. Then one season, a young man and a young woman stood before the elders and said: we know how to build the boats. We know where the timber is. We know the market downstream. The only question is whether this village will finally decide that the river belongs to us too.

The most consequential capital markets event in African history is unfolding in real time, and there is no reason for HBCU endowments and alumni associations to be spectators.

Aliko Dangote, the Nigerian industrialist whose Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals FZE has already reshaped the energy economics of West Africa, is preparing to take the refinery public. The offering structured as a coordinated multi-exchange IPO spanning the Nigerian Exchange, the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, the Nairobi Securities Exchange, the Ghana Stock Exchange, and several additional African bourses carries a valuation range of $40 billion to $50 billion. At a 10% stake offering, the actual transaction size approaches $5 billion, making it by a wide margin the largest equity offering ever conducted on an African stock exchange. The IPO subscription window is expected to open later in 2026.

For HBCU endowment officers, foundation boards, and alumni association investment committees who have spent the last decade searching for alternative assets that offer both competitive returns and meaningful institutional alignment, this transaction deserves serious analysis. It is not a charity play or a symbolic gesture toward Pan-African solidarity. It is a hard industrial asset, generating real revenue in hard currency, operating at the center of a continental energy transformation that will define the next quarter century of African economic development.

The strategic case begins with the asset itself.

The Dangote Refinery, located in the Ibeju-Lekki Free Trade Zone on the outskirts of Lagos, is the world’s largest single-train crude oil processing facility, with a current capacity of 650,000 barrels per day. It reached full operational capacity in early 2024, has already turned Nigeria into a net fuel exporter, and has disrupted global trade routes that previously ran refined petroleum products from European refineries back into the African market. The refinery currently supplies over 90% of Nigeria’s domestic petrol demand and has exported refined fuel to five African countries. The Dangote Group’s revenues have grown from $3.3 billion to $18 billion over the past five years, and the refinery’s expansion roadmap which envisions more than doubling capacity to 1.4 million barrels per day is the central purpose of the IPO capital raise.

One structural feature of the transaction is particularly noteworthy for institutional investors operating in the United States: dividends will be paid in US dollars, even though shares are purchased in naira. This is not a minor administrative detail. It addresses the core foreign-exchange risk concern that typically limits American institutional appetite for African equity markets. Dollar-denominated dividends from an asset generating dollar-denominated revenues — the refinery sells its output at global commodity prices — transforms the currency risk profile of the investment from speculative to manageable. For HBCU endowments that are overwhelmingly concentrated in US equities and fixed income, this creates a genuine entry point into the African investment universe without the full currency risk exposure that has historically made direct African market participation unattractive.

Now consider where HBCU endowments currently stand in the landscape of American higher education finance.

According to the most recent NACUBO-Commonfund Study of Endowments, HBCU institutions accounted for approximately $2.4 billion of the $944 billion in total endowment assets reported by participating institutions. The average HBCU endowment was $236.7 million, compared to $1.4 billion for all NCSE respondents. Only two HBCUs — Howard University, which crossed the $1 billion threshold, and Spelman College hold endowments above $500 million. The PWI-to-HBCU endowment gap among the top 10 institutions in each category stands at roughly 129 to 1. HBCU endowment gift flows fell to $67.7 million in FY25 from $91.9 million in FY24. On nearly every metric, the structural undercapitalization of HBCU institutional wealth is not merely significant; it is a threat to the long-term viability of institutions that serve as the backbone of African American professional formation.

The investment allocation patterns compounding this problem are equally stark. HBCU endowments allocate just 14% of their portfolios to alternative asset classes, compared to 41% for their non-HBCU peers — a 27-percentage-point gap that systematically excludes them from the asset classes driving the highest long-term returns. The reasons are structural and understandable: smaller endowments have fewer investment staff, face higher minimum investment thresholds at most alternative asset managers, and operate with more conservative board mandates. But the consequence is that HBCU endowments are systematically excluded from the alternative and international asset classes that generate the outsized returns sustaining the endowments of Harvard, Yale, and the University of Texas system. The compounding effect of this exclusion over decades is not a gap — it is a chasm.

The Dangote IPO, precisely because of its scale, its multi-exchange structure, and its dollar dividend commitment, represents an unusual opportunity to begin addressing one dimension of this allocation problem.

For institutions with sufficient endowment size to participate as institutional investors in the international tranche of the offering — Howard, Spelman, Hampton, and a small handful of others — the case for direct participation is straightforward. A position in the world’s largest single-train refinery, at an entry valuation of $40 to $50 billion, in an asset whose expansion is already funded and whose revenues are denominated in the currency in which your dividends will be paid, provides genuine portfolio diversification, inflation protection through commodity-linked revenues, and exposure to the fastest-urbanizing, fastest-growing consumer energy market on earth. Africa’s urban population is projected to double by 2050. Every major city added to the African urban grid requires energy infrastructure. The Dangote Refinery is positioned at the center of that demand trajectory.

For institutions whose endowment size makes direct participation in the IPO difficult which is the reality for most of the HBCU sector the answer is not to sit out. It is to aggregate. The 1890 Foundation, which serves as the coordinating hub for the nation’s 19 historically Black land-grant universities and has already demonstrated its capacity to administer large-scale federal partnerships, is the most credible existing infrastructure for a consortium investment vehicle among its member institutions. A formally structured investment fund operating through the 1890 network governed by participating endowment officers, managed by professional advisers with international markets experience, and capitalized through pooled contributions from member institutions would provide access to investment minimums and due diligence resources that no individual 1890 institution could assemble independently. The SWAC, MEAC, SIAC, CIAA, and HBCU Athletic Conference represent analogous organizing structures across the sector where the same consortium investment logic applies where each already functions as a governance body with member institutions, shared administrative infrastructure, and collective standing that could anchor a pooled investment vehicle.

HBCU alumni associations belong in this conversation, but not as secondary vehicles for the institution’s benefit. They belong as independent institutional investors making strategic decisions on their own financial merits. An alumni association that builds an investment fund with its own governance, its own professional management, and its own return targets is building institutional wealth for its membership, not running a philanthropic pipeline to its parent institution. The distinction matters. An alumni association investment fund capitalized by members seeking competitive financial returns will attract a different level of participation, a different quality of governance, and ultimately a different scale of capital than one framed as an alumni giving mechanism wearing investment clothes. Where coordination between a university endowment and its alumni association investment fund makes strategic sense such as co-investment in a shared opportunity, shared due diligence costs, complementary positions in the same offering that coordination should happen by design, not by default. But each institution must be making an independent decision of financial merit.

The argument for this model is not merely aspirational. It has historical precedent in other diaspora investment networks. The Indian American diaspora has consistently channeled capital into Indian infrastructure and technology sectors through organized networks of high-net-worth investors coordinated through professional associations and regional affinity groups. Cuban American capital networks have played a documented role in channeling investment back into businesses serving the diaspora in South Florida. Jewish American institutional networks have sustained diaspora bond programs through organized professional and philanthropic structures for decades. The mechanisms are known. The question is whether African American institutional leadership will build the organizational infrastructure to replicate them.

But the case for HBCU institutional participation in the Dangote IPO extends beyond portfolio diversification or even diaspora solidarity. It is about the connective tissue between two halves of the same people that has never been fully built. African American institutions sit on intellectual capital in agriculture, medicine, engineering, law, public policy, and the sciences that is directly relevant to the development challenges facing African Core nations. African institutions sit on natural capital, emerging market infrastructure, and a demographic growth trajectory that represents the most significant economic expansion of the twenty-first century. The relationship between the two has been episodic and philanthropic where it should be structural and transactional. An HBCU endowment that holds equity in the Dangote Refinery is not making a charitable gesture toward the continent — it is establishing a financial relationship that creates the institutional logic for research partnerships, faculty exchanges, student pipelines, and joint ventures that philanthropy alone never compels. Capital is the language institutions speak to each other when they intend to be taken seriously. Beyond the bilateral opportunity, there is a harder truth: Africa’s resources have been extracted, its assets undervalued, and its markets structured to serve outside interests since the colonial era. That dynamic does not end on its own. It ends when African institutions and their diaspora counterparts accumulate enough ownership stake in African Core assets that the continent’s wealth begins compounding inward rather than flowing out. Every dollar of HBCU and African American institutional capital deployed into African equity markets is a dollar that does not go to the outside investors who have historically treated the African Core as a source of raw return without reciprocal obligation. Ownership is the only permanent answer to extraction.

The Dangote IPO is not only an investment proposition. It is a test of whether Black institutional America can organize itself to participate in the capital formation of the African Core, the region whose industrialization will define the global economy’s next chapter or whether, once again, the value created in this geography will accrue primarily to investors who had the institutional organization to show up.

Nigeria’s regulatory environment carries the political and macroeconomic variance typical of any large, resource-rich emerging economy no more inherently unstable than the frontier and emerging markets of Eastern Europe, Southeast Asia, or Latin America that well-capitalized endowments have allocated to for decades without treating the risk as exceptional. That Nigerian markets have historically been characterized as uniquely risky reflects less about Nigeria’s actual risk profile than about the systematic undervaluation of African Core economies by external rating frameworks designed to serve the capital interests of institutions that benefit from keeping African assets mispriced. The multi-exchange listing structure presents a genuine operational challenge: coordinating clearing, settlement, and trading standards across multiple African exchanges simultaneously has no established precedent at this scale, and execution risk is real. Currency risk, while substantially mitigated by the dollar dividend structure, is not eliminated. And the refinery carries $3.65 billion in outstanding debt, with plans to repay through operations and asset sales — a material factor in any serious valuation analysis.

These risks are real. They do not, however, distinguish this offering from the risk profile of the emerging market private equity and infrastructure funds that well-capitalized non-HBCU endowments have been allocating to for the past two decades. The difference is not that those endowments found risk-free investments in emerging markets. The difference is that they built the institutional capacity to analyze and manage those risks, and they positioned themselves to capture the returns that came with accepting them.

HBCU endowments that remain concentrated in domestic equities and fixed income because they lack the investment staff to evaluate an African infrastructure IPO are not being prudent. They are being institutionally underpowered in a way that will compound against their beneficiaries for generations.

The path forward requires several concrete steps. First, HBCU endowment boards and foundation leadership should commission formal analysis of the Dangote prospectus as it becomes available and engage the offering’s appointed advisers — Stanbic IBTC Capital, Vetiva Advisory Services, and FirstCap — to understand the terms available to international institutional participants. Second, the 1890 Foundation, UNCF, the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, the HBCU Faculty Development Network, and the leadership of the SWAC, MEAC, SIAC, CIAA, and HBCU Athletic Conference should open formal conversations now about the governance structure of consortium investment vehicles within their respective networks, before this offering closes and before the next one arrives. Each of these organizations already operates across multiple institutions with shared administrative infrastructure; the investment coordination function is an extension of capacity they already possess, not a capability they would need to build from scratch. Third, HBCU alumni association leadership (national organizations, alumni chapters, and the professional networks that shadow every major HBCU) should be building investment fund infrastructure as a parallel track, governed independently and capitalized on financial merit, with coordination with institutional endowments happening where it creates genuine value for both parties.

The architecture of African wealth is being redrawn. The Dangote IPO is not a metaphor for that process. It is the process, in concrete form, open for institutional participation by any investor with the organizational capacity to engage it.

The young man and the young woman are standing before the elders. The boats can be built. The only question is whether this village will finally decide that the river belongs to them too.


This article is for informational and analytical purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Prospective investors should conduct independent due diligence and consult qualified financial advisers before making investment decisions.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

Putting Away Childish Things: The Maturation Imperative for African American Men

“When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish things.” — 1 Corinthians 13:11

Jay-Z’s departure from Roc-A-Fella was not a betrayal. It was a passage and Memphis Bleek understood it better than most. For African American men, the path from performer to institution-builder begins with the willingness to put down the version of yourself the crowd still expects.

There is a moment in every man’s life when the role he has been playing begins to feel too small for the person he is becoming. The costume still fits. The crowd still cheers. But something interior has shifted, and he knows even if he cannot yet name it that the next chapter requires him to walk out of the theater entirely. Memphis Bleek described this moment, in someone else’s life, with more clarity than most people manage about their own. Sitting across from the hosts of The Breakfast Club, Bleek spoke about watching Shawn Carter evolve out of Roc-A-Fella Records, the label that had made Jay-Z a household name, the street mythology that had made him a god, and into something the culture had no ready category for. “I knew he had to,” Bleek said, with the ease of a man who had long since made peace with the shape of things. “He was going corporate… Roc-A-Fella had a different aura, a different presence.” What Bleek was describing, without using the language of developmental psychology or scripture, was the act of putting away childish things, not in shame, not in apology, but as a deliberate passage into a fuller version of manhood.

The verse from 1 Corinthians 13 is often quoted at graduations and funerals, deployed as a gentle nudge toward seriousness. But read in full context, the charge is more radical than it first appears. Paul is not merely asking his readers to grow up. He is arguing that the vision available to a child — sincere, earnest, but necessarily incomplete — must be surrendered before a larger sight becomes possible. “For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face.” The childish things are not simply bad habits or juvenile pleasures. They are entire frameworks for understanding the world, entire identities organized around a reality that has since been outgrown. Putting them away is not the work of an afternoon. It is the work of a life.

Jay-Z’s departure from Roc-A-Fella was, on its surface, a business decision. He and Damon Dash had built something extraordinary together, a label that captured the particular genius of late-nineties New York, that dressed ambition in Timberlands and Cristal and made the streets feel like boardrooms before Black men were welcome in actual ones. But the identity that made Roc-A-Fella irreplaceable was also the identity that would have made Jay-Z permanent. The brand had an aura, as Bleek said. And auras, however intoxicating, are also cages. Jay-Z understood, and this is the part that separates him from the many artists who simply aged without maturing, that the institutions he needed to build next required a different kind of man to build them. Roc Nation, the ventures in streaming and spirits and sports management, the quiet equity stakes and the louder philanthropic commitments: none of these were available to the version of himself that Roc-A-Fella needed him to be. He had to let go of one identity to grow into another.

This is a story the culture does not tell African American men often enough, or clearly enough. The dominant narratives available to Black men in this country are built almost entirely around acquisition and performance through the come-up, the flex, the status signal broadcast at maximum volume. These narratives are not without their own intelligence. They emerged from real conditions: from communities that were systematically denied access to the levers of legitimate wealth-building, from generations of men who understood that visibility was sometimes the only form of power available to them. To perform confidence when the system was designed to strip it from you is not childish. It is survival. But survival strategies, when they outlive the conditions that made them necessary, become prisons. The man who learned to announce himself loudly in rooms that would not otherwise see him must eventually learn a different kind of presence, the quiet authority of someone who no longer needs the room’s permission to take up space.

“The man who learned to announce himself loudly in rooms that would not otherwise see him must eventually learn a different kind of presence — the quiet authority of someone who no longer needs the room’s permission to take up space.”

The cultural machinery surrounding Black men in America has a vested interest in keeping this transition from happening. The entertainment industry, the sports complex, the social media economy, all of them profit most handsomely from Black men performing youth. The reckless energy, the conspicuous consumption, the bravado organized around individualism rather than institution-building: these are commercially legible, endlessly marketable, and ultimately extractive. They convert Black male vitality into content while leaving no equity behind. The men who escape this machine and who move, as Jay-Z moved, from being the product to owning the means of production do so against active commercial resistance, not with the industry’s blessing.

Memphis Bleek, notably, did not resent the distance. He honored it. And this is its own form of maturity, quieter but no less significant. The man who can watch someone he loves evolve beyond the shared context of their early years and choose respect over grievance, understanding over bitterness — that man has also done the work. Not every African American man is positioned to become a platform-builder at Jay-Z’s scale. But every man is positioned to make the choice that Bleek made: to understand that another person’s expansion is not a diminishment of his own. This is the emotional intelligence that peer culture most aggressively undermines, the capacity to hold space for someone else’s becoming without interpreting it as a verdict on your own.

Financial maturity and emotional maturity are not separate projects. They are expressions of the same underlying shift from a framework organized around the immediate to one organized around the durable. Jay-Z’s pivot from artist to investor, from performer to institution-builder, was only possible because he had already done the interior work. He had to stop needing the crowd’s immediate validation before he could think in the timescales that equity requires. He had to stop organizing his identity around a single role before he could occupy the multiple, sometimes contradictory roles that serious institution-building demands. The financial strategy followed the psychological one. It always does.

The 4:44 album, released in 2017 when Jay-Z was 47, is in many ways the most instructive document of this transition. Here was a man who had spent his career mastering the art of armor; linguistic cleverness as deflection, bravado as preemptive defense, and who had chosen, at the height of his institutional power, to take the armor off. He talked about his infidelities, his father’s abandonment, his own failures as a partner and as a son. He talked about wealth not as performance but as inheritance strategy, about acquiring art not for status but for his children’s futures. He talked about therapy. The album was received with the kind of discomfort that genuine vulnerability always produces in a culture organized around performed toughness but it resonated, deeply and across generations, because it modeled something the culture is desperately hungry for: a Black man reckoning publicly with the gap between who he had been and who he wanted to become.

That reckoning is the work. Not the achievement that follows it, but the reckoning itself. The willingness to look honestly at the childish things; the ego investments, the comfort in performance, the arrangements that served you when you were smaller than you are now, and to set them down. Not because they were shameful. Because you have grown past them, and pretending otherwise would cost you the future you are capable of building.

For African American men navigating this passage in 2026, the context is both more complicated and more urgent than it has ever been. The institutional ecosystem that should support this kind of maturity; the HBCUs, the Black-owned financial institutions, the fraternal organizations with genuine civic reach exists, but it exists under continuous pressure, structurally underfunded and culturally undervalued by the very communities that most need it. Growing into institutional manhood requires institutions worth growing into. Building those institutions requires men who have already done the interior work and who have moved beyond the performance of power into its actual exercise. The two projects are not sequential. They are simultaneous, each one making the other possible.

What Bleek understood, watching Jay-Z from close range, is that the departure from Roc-A-Fella was not an ending. It was an expansion. The man who could build Roc Nation had to first become someone Roc-A-Fella could not contain. That becoming that is uncomfortable, disorienting, and finally liberating is available to every African American man willing to take inventory of what he is still carrying that no longer belongs to who he is. The childish things are not always dramatic. Sometimes they are simply the stories we tell about ourselves that stopped being true a long time ago, the versions of ourselves we keep performing because the audience still expects them. Putting them away is not a loss. It is the prerequisite for everything worth building next.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by Claude AI.

Invite Allies to the Potluck but Protect the Cookout

Do not show me the person dancing to our music, enjoying our food, fetishizing the Black man, or some other cultural consumption. Show me the one who is demanding Harvard deposit $100 million of their own funds to OneUnited Bank so that OneUnited, Liberty Bank, and other African American owned banks can make loans to our community for business and homeownership. Show me the ones who uses their privilege to stick up for what society has done and does to Black women and Black family. That is who can come to the potluck, but the cookout is ours. We have a tendency to shrink ourselves to Others’ fragility of real conversations that we need to have for ourselves when Others are present. – William A. Foster, IV

There is an old story, told in various forms across African American communities, about a family that learned to cook in secret. For generations, they had grown their own food, developed their own techniques, and built a kitchen that could feed a neighborhood. One day, a neighbor knocked on the door, drawn by the smell. They were welcomed in, fed generously, and they returned often. They brought friends. They praised the food. They called themselves part of the family. Eventually they began to suggest improvements to the kitchen — a different arrangement, a new appliance, a recipe adjusted for broader tastes. The family, grateful for the company, accommodated each request. By the time they looked up, the kitchen still stood. The neighbor’s name was on the deed. The family was still cooking. They just no longer owned the stove.

But generosity extended without institutional clarity is not community building. It is exposure. And the history of African American institutional life is, in no small part, a history of spaces built with collective sacrifice that were subsequently absorbed, diluted, defunded, or dismantled once their value became legible to the outside world.

The cookout, in other words, is not a metaphor. It is an asset. And assets require more than governance, they require protection. Not the passive protection of a community that hopes its institutions will be respected, but the active, disciplined defense of people who understand that what they have built has value precisely because others will seek to capture it. Protection, at the institutional level, is not always a defensive posture. Sometimes it means going on offense by organizing buying power before the crisis arrives, building legal capacity before the lawsuit is filed, funding Black media before the narrative is set by someone else. Communities that wait to protect what they have until after it is threatened are communities that spend their energy on recovery rather than accumulation. The history of Black Wall Street, of the Freedman’s Bank, of the systematic dismantling of Black-owned cooperatives during the mid-twentieth century is not a history of insufficient gratitude from the outside world. It is a history of insufficient institutional defense from within. The lesson is not to be less generous. It is to be better armed.

The analytical literature on Black wealth formation is consistent on a foundational point: communities that retain capital, talent, and institutional loyalty generate compounding returns across generations. Communities that allow those resources to migrate outward whether through spending patterns, marriage partners, talent pipelines, or cultural appropriation subsidize the wealth accumulation of others while undermining their own. The cookout dynamic maps directly onto this framework. When African American cultural production, social spaces, and institutional knowledge are shared without reciprocal investment, the result is a net transfer of value from Black institutions to non-Black ones. This is not a theoretical concern. It is the operating condition of the present economy.

Consider the structure of the music industry, where Black artists have generated the dominant commercial genres of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries — blues, jazz, rock and roll, hip-hop, R&B — while the majority of accumulated wealth from those genres has resided in non-Black-owned labels, distributors, publishing houses, and streaming platforms. Consider the food economy, where Black culinary traditions have been commodified into billion-dollar restaurant chains and packaged goods while the originators of those traditions remain systematically underbanked and undercapitalized. Consider the fashion and beauty industries, where aesthetics developed within African American communities command global markets while the infrastructure of those markets sits largely outside Black institutional ownership. In each case, the cultural product was welcomed. The economic architecture was not extended.

Allies who celebrate Black culture without supporting Black institutions are not allies in any operationally meaningful sense. They are consumers. The distinction is not semantic. An ally, by institutional definition, extends their power, capital, and access in support of an aligned party’s strategic objectives. A consumer extracts value from a community’s production without contributing to the institutional conditions that make that production possible. The presence of a non-Black person at the potluck enjoying the food, the music, the wit, the aesthetic while opposing or simply ignoring the policy conditions, banking relationships, and institutional investments that African American communities require to sustain themselves, is the profile of a consumer, not a coalition partner. They have not earned the potluck. They have certainly not been invited to the cookout.

This distinction becomes especially critical in the current political economy. Federal and state policy over the past several decades has systematically defunded or defanged the institutional infrastructure of Black America: HBCUs chronically underfunded relative to their peer institutions; Black-owned banks capitalized at a fraction of the levels needed to serve their communities; Black neighborhoods subject to environmental, housing, and educational policies that extract tax revenue while withholding proportional investment. In this context, cultural adjacency or rather the willingness to celebrate Juneteenth, consume Black media, or engage Black social vernacular is insufficient as an expression of solidarity. It may, in fact, function as cover for the absence of the structural commitments that matter.

The HBCU sector offers a particularly instructive case study. Historically Black Colleges and Universities were built precisely because African Americans were excluded from the educational institutions of their own country. They were not a gesture of separatism; they were an institutional response to exclusion. Over the course of the twentieth century, HBCUs produced a disproportionate share of the Black professional class, trained the majority of Black doctors, lawyers, engineers, and teachers of their generation, and served as incubators for the civil rights movement’s leadership and organizational capacity. They are, by any rigorous measure, among the most productive institutions in American higher education history relative to the resources they have been given.

Yet HBCUs now operate in a competitive landscape that rewards endowment size, federal research designation, and alumni giving rates; all measures that reflect historical access to capital rather than institutional quality or community impact. Predominantly white institutions that previously excluded Black students now recruit them aggressively, drawing talent and tuition revenue that would otherwise compound within the HBCU ecosystem. The language used to justify this recruitment is almost always the language of inclusion and opportunity. But inclusion in another institution’s ecosystem is not equivalent to investment in your own. A Black student who attends a well-resourced predominantly white institution may gain individual credentials. The HBCU they did not attend loses the tuition, the alumni relationship, endowment compounding, and the network density that transforms good universities into great ones.

This is not an argument against shared space. There are potlucks to which allies are genuinely welcome that inlcude moments of coalition, cross-cultural solidarity, and mutual investment where the presence of non-Black partners strengthens rather than dilutes collective purpose. But a potluck is not a cookout, and the distinction is not decorative. At a potluck, everyone brings something to the table. The host provides the space; the guests contribute to the meal. It is a transaction of mutual provision, and it works precisely because no one arrives empty-handed expecting to be fed. A cookout is different. A cookout is the community’s own table that is prepared by Black hands, funded by Black resources, held in Black space, for Black people. Its purpose is not coalition. Its purpose is sustenance, honesty, and the particular freedom that only comes when a people can speak plainly among themselves without managing anyone else’s comfort. Both gatherings have their place. They are not interchangeable, and confusing one for the other is how communities lose the only space that was ever entirely their own.

What African American institutional life requires is a clear distinction between spaces of engagement and spaces of sovereignty. Spaces of engagement are where coalitions are built, where allies demonstrate reciprocity, where the community interfaces with the broader economy and polity on its own terms. Spaces of sovereignty are where Black families and communities convene among themselves to assess the wealth gap without softening the diagnosis, to discuss the particular pressures facing Black women and Black men without moderating the conversation for outside sensibilities, to make strategic decisions about institutional investment and political alignment without the distortion that comes from managing the reactions of those who do not share the same structural position. Both kinds of space are necessary. Only one of them is currently treated as optional.

What does that governance structure look like in practice? It looks like HBCU alumni choosing, as a default rather than an afterthought, to bank with Black-owned financial institutions the Liberty Banks, the OneUnited Banks, the First Independence Banks rather than routing deposits to institutions that do not reinvest proportionally in Black communities. It looks like Black professionals who have achieved positions of institutional authority actively directing contracts, investment mandates, and philanthropic dollars toward Black-owned firms and HBCU vendors rather than defaulting to the institutional relationships they inherited. It looks like African American civic organizations insisting on quantifiable reciprocity as a condition of coalition not cultural appreciation, not rhetorical solidarity, but measurable investment.

There is a separate and equally important argument that must be made here, because it is the one most frequently obscured by well-intentioned framing: inclusion is not ownership. Even in the most favorable version of the ally relationship where non-Black partners, institutions, and individuals are genuinely committed to diversity, sincerely supportive of Black participation, and actively working to open doors none of that changes the structural necessity of Black-owned institutions. Inclusion operates within someone else’s architecture. Ownership builds your own.

This distinction is not abstract. It has a balance sheet. When a Black professional is included in a non-Black-owned firm, their labor generates returns that compound within that firm’s ownership structure and those are returns that flow to shareholders, partners, and stakeholders who are, in the aggregate, not Black. The professional may advance. They may be compensated well. They may even occupy positions of genuine authority. But the wealth generated by their inclusion does not build Black institutional capital; it builds the institution that included them. Inclusion, at scale, is a mechanism by which Black talent subsidizes non-Black institutional growth. It is not a substitute for ownership. It is, in many cases, its alternative.

The same logic applies to HBCUs operating in a landscape of ostensibly inclusive predominantly white institutions. The argument made against HBCU investment that the best Black students should simply attend the best-resourced universities, wherever those happen to be is structurally an argument against Black institutional ownership in higher education. It accepts inclusion as a terminal condition rather than a transitional one. A Black student included at Harvard is not the same institutional fact as Harvard-level resources flowing into an HBCU. One is a credential extended to an individual. The other is capacity built within a community-owned institution that will outlast any single student and compound across generations.

Ownership is also the only form of institutional participation that is durable against shifts in political will. Inclusion depends on the continued goodwill of those doing the including. When political climates shift, when diversity commitments are deprioritized, when administration changes, when economic contractions force budget realignments the “included” are the first to absorb the cost. Ownership is not subject to another party’s goodwill. A Black-owned bank does not require a non-Black institution to remain committed to serving Black depositors. A Black-owned media organization does not require a conglomerate’s editorial patience. An HBCU does not require a predominantly white institution to remain interested in Black academic excellence. Ownership is the only form of institutional security that does not expire when someone else’s priorities change.

This is why the recent assault on diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in American corporations and universities however dismaying as a political signal is not the fundamental crisis for African American institutional life that it is sometimes framed as being. The fundamental crisis predates the DEI rollback and will outlast its reversal. It is the historical condition of a community that has been systematically excluded from ownership while being selectively included in participation. DEI programs, at their most effective, opened doors into institutions that someone else owned. Their elimination forecloses that access. But their presence never resolved the ownership question. The community that owns nothing is equally vulnerable in both eras, it simply has a longer walk to the door in one of them.

The same analytical framework applies to an institution that is rarely named as such in discussions of Black economic strategy: the Black family. The family unit is not a private matter sealed off from institutional analysis. It is the primary site of intergenerational wealth transfer, the first school of civic and financial literacy, and the foundational node in any network of community institutional density. How the Black family is formed, sustained, and oriented toward community investment is therefore a question of institutional consequence, not merely personal preference.

This makes the question of interracial partnership and specifically, the assumptions that sometimes travel with it a legitimate subject of institutional inquiry. The concern here is not interracial partnership as such. It is the set of ideological commitments that non-Black partners sometimes bring into Black family formation, and what those commitments mean for the community institutions that depend on family-level investment and loyalty to survive.

A non-Black person who partners with a Black man or woman has not, by virtue of that partnership, demonstrated any commitment to African American institutional empowerment. The relationship is personal. The institutional question is separate, and it must be asked separately. Does this person bank at Black-owned financial institutions? Do they support HBCU attendance, alumni giving, and network loyalty as a family value? Do they understand that the wealth gap their Black partner navigates is not an abstraction but a structural condition reproduced through specific policy and capital allocation decisions and that their own family’s economic choices either mitigate or compound that condition? Personal love does not answer institutional questions. Only institutional behavior does.

The specific case of non-Black women partnered with Black men warrants direct analysis, because it intersects with a set of structural realities that the colorblind framework is particularly ill-equipped to see. Black women in America face a documented and compounding disadvantage in the partner market, a disadvantage produced not by individual preference alone but by the structural devaluation of Black femininity in American cultural and economic life, by the incarceration and early mortality rates that reduce the available pool of Black men, and by media and social ecosystems that actively hierarchize desirability along racial lines. These are not grievances. They are measurable structural conditions with identifiable institutional causes.

Non-Black women who partner with Black men enter this landscape with structural advantages they did not earn and, in the colorblind framework, are not required to acknowledge. The colorblind framework of “we are the world,” love is love, race doesn’t matter to me functions in this context not as enlightenment but as insulation from accountability. It allows a person to benefit from the aesthetics and community of Blackness, to be welcomed into Black family life and Black social space, while remaining ideologically committed to a universalism that forecloses any obligation to the specific institutional needs of the community whose door they have entered. The distinction between a potluck and a cookout becomes precise here: they have been given a seat at the table of coalition, but they have wandered into the cookout consuming its warmth, its honesty, its intimacy without ever acknowledging who built the table or accepting any obligation to help it stand.

This matters institutionally because family formation is where ideology meets capital allocation. A household in which one partner is oriented toward Black institutional investment and one is oriented toward a colorblind universalism that treats all institutions as equivalent is a household with a structural conflict embedded in its financial decisions. Where will their children attend college? Which financial institutions will hold their savings? Which civic organizations will receive their philanthropic commitments? Which political candidates and policy frameworks will they support? These are not questions that love resolves. They are questions that ideology answers and the colorblind ideology consistently answers them in ways that route resources away from the Black institutional ecosystem and toward the universal one, which in practice means the mainstream one, which in practice means the predominantly non-Black one.

The institution of the Black family, therefore, must be understood as requiring the same institutional clarity as any other node in the African American ecosystem. Welcoming a non-Black partner into Black family life is not categorically different from inviting a non-Black guest to the potluck. In both cases, the question is not the warmth of the welcome. The question is whether the guest understands what was built, what it cost, and what it requires to survive and whether they comprehend that the cookout, the sovereign space, the honest table, was never theirs to enter simply because they were loved by someone who belonged there. Structural advantages do not disappear because they are unacknowledged. They accumulate. And a household ideology that refuses to see those advantages and to accept the institutional obligations they create is not a neutral position. It is a position that benefits from Black institutional labor while declining to contribute to it.

It also looks like intellectual clarity about co-optation, which is the more subtle and in many ways more consequential threat to Black institutional space. Co-optation does not require hostility. It requires only that a framework, a concept, a methodology, or a space developed with Black intellectual labor and institutional capital be adopted and repackaged by actors who do not acknowledge its origin, do not direct resources back to its source, and do not bear the institutional costs that made its development possible. This happens in academia, where Black Studies frameworks migrate into mainstream curricula without corresponding investment in Black Studies departments. It happens in corporate diversity programs, where the conceptual vocabulary of African American equity movements is deployed in the service of institutional reputation management rather than structural change. It happens in media, where Black cultural aesthetics are packaged for mass consumption while Black-owned media organizations operate on fractional budgets.

The question facing African American institutional leadership is not whether to engage with the broader economy and polity of course it must. The question is on what terms. Engagement without institutional conditions is simply absorption. The HBCU sector, the network of Black-owned banks and CDFIs, the ecosystem of Black professional associations and civic organizations, the tradition of Black media, these are not relics of a segregated past. They are the institutional architecture of a future in which African Americans participate in American (and global) economic and political life from a position of institutional strength rather than perpetual dependency.

That institutional architecture does not sustain itself through cultural warmth. It sustains itself through capital, coordination, and the disciplined exercise of institutional loyalty. The potluck can be generous and it should be, because coalition requires genuine exchange. But the cookout is not the potluck. The cookout is where the community gathers to be honest with itself, to protect what it has built, and to plan for what it still must build. Allies are welcome at the potluck when they bring something real. The cookout is not their invitation to extend.

The fire is on. The food is ready. But the table was built by people who had no other table to go to. That history is not decoration. It is the deed.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by Claude AI.

A Permanent Emergency: Black Homelessness & the Housing Cost Trap

Where you live should not determine whether you live. — Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

There is a kind of emergency that does not announce itself with sirens. It settles instead into the permanent infrastructure of a city into shelter intake forms, into eviction court dockets, into the quiet calculus of a family deciding which bill goes unpaid this month so the rent does not. It becomes, over time, not an emergency at all but a condition: expected, budgeted for, managed at the margins, never resolved. Black homelessness in America has become that kind of emergency. It is measured every January, reported every summer, and addressed with the institutional energy of a problem that everyone has agreed, without saying so directly, will not be solved.

On a single night in January 2024, the federally mandated Point-in-Time census counted more than 240,000 people experiencing homelessness who identified as Black, African American, or African. That figure represented 31.6 percent of everyone sleeping in shelters, tents, cars, or on city streets in a country where Black Americans represent 13.7 percent of the population. The disproportionality is not new. What is new is the magnitude: 2024 produced the largest raw count of unhoused Black Americans ever recorded in the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s modern Point-in-Time series. The trend line does not suggest an aberration. It suggests a permanent condition whose scale is still expanding.

The arithmetic of the crisis is straightforward. Zillow’s national rental index placed the average advertised lease at approximately $2,100 per month in early 2025. A parallel Apartment List survey, which strips luxury units from its methodology, pegged the median at $1,398. A reasonable blended figure sits near $1,700 per month or $20,400 per year. That is not the price of comfort. It is the price of a mailing address, a bathroom that locks, and a bed that belongs to no one else. Multiply that annual cost by 240,000 unhoused Black individuals and the minimum annual bill for basic housing stability comes to $4.9 billion. Finance professionals design endowments to distribute approximately 5 percent of principal annually without eroding real value. The corpus required to generate $4.9 billion in perpetuity is approximately $98 billion, call it $100 billion. That is the number. It is not an estimate or an aspiration. It is arithmetic.

To understand why that number has never been assembled, it is necessary to understand what produced the crisis it would address. The Census Bureau defines households paying more than 30 percent of income toward housing as cost-burdened. In 2023, 56.2 percent of Black renter households met that definition. The Federal Reserve’s 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances reported median Black household wealth at $44,900, roughly 15 percent of the $285,000 median for white households. The Black homeownership rate sits between 44 and 45 percent, compared to 74 percent for non-Hispanic white households. Home equity is the primary mechanism by which American families absorb life shocks — job loss, illness, family dissolution — without falling into housing instability. A community with a homeownership rate 30 points below the national white average has 30 points less cushion against every emergency that precedes homelessness. This is not a coincidence of individual financial behavior. It is the compounded output of subsidized mortgage programs that excluded Black borrowers, exclusionary zoning that confined Black families to undervalued land, and GI Bill benefits that built the white middle class while systematically denying equivalent access to Black veterans. The policy record is not ambiguous. The consequences are still being counted every January.

The community’s own financial institutions offer the starkest measure of the structural gap. According to HBCU Money’s 2024 African American Owned Bank Directory, African American-owned banks hold $6.4 billion in total assets across 18 institutions. The 2025 African American Owned Credit Union Directory documents 205 active credit unions holding $8.15 billion in assets serving 726,929 members. The entire African American-owned financial institution sector between every bank, every credit union in the country, combined controls approximately $14.5 billion. The endowment required to permanently resolve Black homelessness is seven times that figure. African American households hold $7.1 trillion in total assets according to HBCU Money’s 2024 Annual Wealth Report, and command approximately $1.8 trillion in annual buying power, yet corporate equities and mutual fund shares, the asset class that most reliably converts income into intergenerational capital, represent less than 5 percent of African American holdings and a mere 0.7 percent of total U.S. household equity assets. Consumer credit has climbed to $740 billion, now approaching parity with Black mortgage debt of $780 billion, a near 1:1 ratio that represents a fundamental inversion of healthy household finance (3:1 being seen as the baseline for a health household finance). The topline wealth figures are real. The structural vulnerabilities beneath them are equally real. A community whose financial institutions control $14.5 billion in assets is not positioned to self-capitalize a $100 billion endowment, not now, and not without a generational shift in how African American institutional capital is accumulated, retained, and deployed.

HBCU campuses are not observers of this crisis. They are inside it. A 2020 Hope Center survey of nearly 5,000 students at 14 HBCUs found that 46 percent had experienced food insecurity in the prior 30 days, 55 percent had experienced housing insecurity in the prior year, and 20 percent had been homeless at some point during that academic year. One in five students at institutions whose entire institutional mission is economic mobility trying to complete coursework from a couch, a car, or a shelter. The 2021 Howard University student occupation of the Blackburn Center brought national visibility to conditions that students at dozens of HBCUs navigate without cameras: mold, rodent infestation, deferred maintenance that years of constrained operating budgets cannot absorb. At institutions like Alcorn State University, Coppin State University, and Edward Waters University, the competition between student housing needs and every other institutional priority is not a policy question. It is a weekly budget decision. An HBCU cannot produce the physicians, engineers, and policy architects that African American communities require if the students admitted to those programs cannot secure the stability that sustained academic work demands.

The conventional philanthropic response to a crisis of this scale would invoke a combination of federal investment, corporate giving, and foundation capital. That architecture has not assembled for Black housing, and the current environment offers no evidence that it will. Federal housing policy has moved in the opposite direction from what the scale of Black housing instability requires. Corporate philanthropy directed toward racial equity initiatives contracted sharply following 2023, as major corporations withdrew or quietly defunded commitments made in 2020. Foundation capital, while more durable, has never operated at the scale this problem requires and has shown no institutional appetite to do so. The community has waited across multiple political cycles for external capital to arrive at the necessary scale. It has not arrived. There is no credible reason, given the current political and philanthropic environment, to expect that it will.

What remains, then, is the harder question, the one that the data forces and that no external institution is positioned to answer. African American households hold $7.1 trillion in assets. African American consumers generate $1.8 trillion in annual spending, $64 billion of which flows into higher education, much of it leaving the Black institutional ecosystem entirely. The financial infrastructure of 205 credit unions and 18 banks exists, undercapitalized but functional, as a potential deployment mechanism for any capital that could be directed toward it. The institutional networks of HBCUs, Black nonprofits, and community land trusts represent governance capacity that has been demonstrated across generations. None of this adds up, in its current configuration, to $100 billion. But it raises the question that Black institutional leadership has not yet had to answer at this scale: what would it take to get there from within, and what is the cost, measured in bodies counted each January, of not trying.

That question does not have a comfortable answer. The honest answer may be that the problem is larger than what any single generation of institutional actors can resolve, that the structural deficit created by four centuries of policy violence cannot be closed by the institutions those policies were designed to prevent from forming. That possibility deserves to be named plainly rather than papered over with funding architectures that do not exist. What can be said with equal plainness is this: the external path has been tried across multiple administrations, multiple philanthropic cycles, and multiple corporate giving moments. The count goes up every January. Whatever the solution is, if one exists at this scale, it will have to be generated from within the African American community and our institutions whose members are being counted. There is no other honest conclusion available from the data.

The Sliding Scale: 10 Infrastructure Categories

1. African American Emergency Shelter Networks
The Salvation Army, Catholic Charities, and Gospel Mission dominate this space almost entirely. There is no Black-led national shelter network equivalent. Individual Black churches operate shelter programs locally but with no coordination, no shared data, and no pooled capital. This is the most visible absence and arguably the easiest to begin at city level — a single congregation with property can open beds. The barrier is operating capital, not concept.

2. African American Eviction Prevention Funds
Eviction is the primary on-ramp to homelessness for Black renters who are not chronically unhoused. Right-to-counsel programs — where they exist — reduce eviction rates 50–80 percent. African American-owned credit unions are the logical vehicle for rapid emergency rental assistance lending because they already have underwriting relationships in these communities. This is financial infrastructure, not charity: a revolving loan fund capitalized through credit unions and HBCU alumni networks could catch families before they hit shelters.

3. African American Tenant Legal Defense Organizations
The eviction court system is structurally adversarial. Landlords routinely appear with counsel; tenants routinely appear alone. Black bar associations in major cities — the Cook County Bar Association, the Wiley Branton Inn of Court in D.C., the Charles Houston Bar Association — have the professional infrastructure to organize pro bono tenant defense clinics. What they lack is a coordinated national framework and stable funding to make this a standing operation rather than an episodic volunteer effort.

4. African American Community Land Trusts
This is the one category with genuine Black institutional roots. The community land trust model traces directly to the Civil Rights Movement — New Communities Inc., founded in 1969 in Albany, Georgia, is credited as the original CLT model in the U.S., created specifically to prevent displacement of Black communities through community-owned land. The Africatown Community Land Trust in Seattle has established mixed-use spaces supporting Black-owned businesses and over 100 affordable rental units. The Crescent City Community Land Trust in New Orleans has focused on racial equity, permanently affordable housing, and restoring Black businesses in the Seventh Ward. The model works. It is undercapitalized and geographically fragmented. A national network of Black-led CLTs with pooled acquisition capital would be the most durable long-term housing infrastructure available.

5. African American-Owned Property Management Companies
This is an underexamined gap. Affordable housing units exist in Black communities. Who manages them determines where operating revenues go — and currently, most flows to firms with no institutional relationship to those communities. Black-owned property management companies operating within affordable housing portfolios would retain fees inside the ecosystem while also setting service standards in buildings that disproportionately house Black tenants.

6. African American Transitional Housing Organizations
Between emergency shelter and permanent housing is a gap that kills stability: transitional housing with wrap-around services for 6–24 months. This is where formerly incarcerated individuals, domestic violence survivors, and people exiting addiction treatment fall through. Black churches collectively hold the physical assets — underutilized buildings, parking lots, adjacent parcels — to host transitional housing at scale. The barrier is the operational and clinical infrastructure to run such programs, which requires coordination beyond what individual congregations can typically sustain.

7. HBCU Student Emergency Housing Funds
This is the most institutionally natural starting point for the network. HBCUs already have the administrative infrastructure, the student relationships, and the moral authority. A national HBCU Student Housing Emergency Fund — capitalized through alumni associations and administered through financial aid offices — would address the 20 percent homelessness rate the Hope Center documented without requiring new institutions. It requires only that existing institutions add a function.

8. African American Credit Counseling and Housing Stability Organizations
The path back from housing instability runs through credit repair, budgeting support, and landlord negotiation — skills that cost nothing to teach but require trusted institutional relationships to deliver. African American-owned credit unions already have member financial counseling as part of their charter obligations. Expanding and formalizing that function specifically around housing stability would leverage existing infrastructure at minimal additional cost.

9. African American Mental Health and Addiction Recovery Housing
Chronic homelessness — the population that does not resolve with a voucher or a loan — is disproportionately driven by untreated mental illness and addiction. This is the hardest category and the one where the African American institutional ecosystem has the least current capacity. Black-led behavioral health organizations exist in most major cities but are chronically underfunded and have no residential housing component. Sober living homes, recovery residences, and mental health step-down housing operated by Black-led organizations would address the population that no other category reaches.

10. African American Housing Data and Advocacy Infrastructure
None of the above can be built, funded, or defended without data. The Point-in-Time count is federal data collected by local Continuums of Care that are rarely Black-led. There is currently no African American-owned institution systematically tracking Black housing instability, eviction rates, credit denial rates, and shelter utilization at national scale and publishing it as a public resource. HBCU Money’s Annual Wealth Report is the closest thing. A dedicated African American Housing Data Collaborative — potentially housed within an HBCU research center — would give every other institution on this list the evidence base to make its case.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by Claude AI.