Tag Archives: economic empowerment

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. Because we have a tendency to shrink ourselves to others’ fragility of real conversations we need to have for ourselves when they 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.

The Institutional Imperative: Moving Beyond Individual Black Wealth Narratives

I would rather earn 1% off a 100 people’s efforts than 100% of my own efforts. – John D. Rockefeller

The contrast is stark and telling. On one screen, a promotional poster for a docuseries about Black wealth features accomplished individuals—entrepreneurs, entertainers, and personal finance influencers. On another, the Bloomberg Invest conference lineup showcases representatives from Goldman Sachs, BlackRock, sovereign wealth funds, and central banks. This visual juxtaposition reveals a fundamental problem in how African American wealth building is conceived, discussed, and ultimately constrained in America: we’re having an individual conversation while everyone else is having an institutional one.

When African American wealth is discussed in mainstream media and even within our own communities, the focus overwhelmingly centers on individual achievement and personal financial literacy. The narrative typically revolves around budgeting tips, entrepreneurship stories, side hustles, and the importance of “building your own.” While these elements certainly matter, they represent only a fraction of how wealth is actually created, preserved, and transferred across generations in America.

Compare this to how other communities approach wealth building. Bloomberg conferences don’t feature panels on how to save money or start a small business. Instead, they convene institutional investors managing trillions of dollars, central bankers who set monetary policy, executives from asset management firms overseeing pension funds, and sovereign wealth fund managers representing entire nations’ financial interests. The conversation isn’t about individual wealth accumulation it’s about institutional capital allocation, market infrastructure, regulatory frameworks, and systemic wealth generation. This isn’t merely a difference in scale; it’s a difference in kind. Individual wealth building, no matter how successful, operates within a system. Institutional wealth building shapes that system.

The economic implications of this gap are staggering. Consider the arithmetic presented in the text message exchange: if approximately 95% of African American debt is held by non-Black institutions, and that debt carries an average interest rate of 8%, African American households collectively transfer roughly $120 billion annually in interest payments to institutions that have no vested interest in Black wealth creation or community reinvestment. This figure isn’t just large it’s transformative. To put it in perspective, $120 billion annually exceeds the GDP of many nations. That likely at least 10% of African America’s $2.1 trillion in buying power is leaving the community for interest before a single bill is paid or single investment can be made. It represents capital that flows out of Black communities without generating corresponding wealth-building infrastructure within those communities. This is the cost of institutional absence.

When communities lack their own lending institutions, investment banks, insurance companies, and asset management firms, they become permanent capital exporters. Every mortgage payment, every car loan, every credit card balance becomes a wealth transfer rather than a wealth circulation mechanism. Other communities long ago recognized this dynamic and built institutional frameworks to capture, recycle, and multiply capital within their own ecosystems.

Institutional wealth building operates on fundamentally different principles than individual wealth accumulation. It involves capital pooling and deployment, where institutions aggregate capital from thousands or millions of sources and deploy it strategically for returns that benefit the collective. Pension funds, for instance, don’t teach their beneficiaries how to pick stocks they hire professional managers to generate returns that secure retirements for entire workforces. Large institutions don’t just participate in markets; they shape them. They influence interest rates, capital flows, regulatory frameworks, and investment trends. When BlackRock or Vanguard shifts their investment thesis, entire sectors respond.

Institutions are designed to outlive individuals. They create mechanisms for wealth transfer that transcend personal mortality, ensuring that capital accumulates across generations rather than dispersing with each estate. By pooling resources, institutions can absorb risks that would devastate individuals, enabling them to pursue longer-term, higher-return strategies that individuals cannot access. Perhaps most importantly, institutional capital commands political attention and shapes policy in ways that individual wealth, however substantial, simply cannot.

The current institutional deficit in African American communities isn’t accidental it’s the product of deliberate historical forces. During the early 20th century, Black communities did build impressive institutional infrastructure. Black Wall Street in Tulsa, thriving business districts in Rosewood, Florida, and numerous Black-owned banks, insurance companies, and investment firms represented genuine institutional wealth building. These were systematically destroyed sometimes literally, as in the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921, and sometimes through discriminatory policies, denial of business licenses, exclusion from capital markets, and targeted regulatory enforcement. The institutions that survived faced existential challenges during desegregation, as the most affluent Black customers gained access to white institutions that had previously excluded them. The result is that African Americans today face a unique challenge: rebuilding institutional infrastructure in a mature capitalist economy where the institutional landscape is already dominated by established players with centuries of accumulated capital, networks, and political influence.

Given this context, why does African American wealth discourse remain so focused on individual action? Several factors contribute to this pattern. American culture celebrates individual achievement and self-made success. This narrative is particularly seductive for African Americans seeking to overcome discrimination through personal excellence. However, it obscures the reality that most substantial wealth in America is institutional, not individual. Teaching people to budget or start a business is concrete and actionable. Discussing the need for African American-owned asset management firms managing hundreds of billions in capital is abstract and seemingly impossible for most people to influence. Individual success stories make compelling content. Institutional finance is complex, technical, and doesn’t generate the emotional engagement that drives social media metrics and television ratings.

Institutional finance is deliberately exclusionary, with high barriers to entry, specialized knowledge requirements, and established networks that are difficult to penetrate. This makes it harder for diverse voices to participate in and shape these conversations. Moreover, focusing on individual responsibility can deflect attention from systemic inequalities and the need for institutional reform. If wealth gaps are framed as the result of individual choices rather than institutional access, the solution becomes personal change rather than structural change.

The problem is that individual wealth building, while important, simply cannot close the wealth gap or address the capital hemorrhage happening through institutional absence. You cannot budget your way to institutional power. You cannot side-hustle your way to sovereign wealth fund influence. Closing the institutional gap would require coordinated action across multiple domains. This means growing and creating Black-owned banks, credit unions, insurance companies, asset management firms, and investment banks capable of competing at scale—institutions managing not millions but billions and eventually trillions in assets.

It requires ensuring that the substantial capital in public pension funds, university endowments, and foundation assets that serve African American communities is managed with intentionality about wealth creation within those communities. Building investment funds that can provide growth capital to Black-owned businesses beyond the startup phase, enabling them to scale to institutional size, becomes essential. Creating institutions that can acquire, develop, and manage commercial and residential real estate at scale, capturing appreciation and rental income for community benefit, must be prioritized. Developing institutional voices that can effectively advocate for policies that support Black wealth building, from community reinvestment requirements to procurement set-asides to tax structures that favor long-term capital formation, is critical.

This isn’t a call to abandon individual financial responsibility or entrepreneurship both remain important. Rather, it’s a recognition that these individual efforts need institutional infrastructure to support them, multiply their effects, and prevent the constant capital drain that currently undermines them. The Bloomberg conference model reveals what serious wealth building conversations look like among communities that already possess institutional power. The participants aren’t there to learn how to balance their personal checking accounts they’re there to discuss macroeconomic trends, regulatory changes, emerging markets, and trillion-dollar capital allocation decisions.

African American communities need forums that operate at the same level of institutional sophistication. This means convening the leaders of Black-owned financial institutions, pension fund managers, university endowment chiefs, foundation presidents, private equity partners, and policymakers to discuss not individual wealth tips but institutional strategy. It means asking questions like: How do we coordinate capital deployment across Black-owned financial institutions to maximize community impact? How do we leverage public pension fund capital to support Black wealth building without sacrificing returns? What regulatory changes would most effectively support Black institutional development? How do we build the pipeline of talent needed to manage billions in institutional capital?

The real challenge can be distilled into three interconnected imperatives: individually Black people must get wealthier, there must be an increase in Black institutional investing, and the overall wealth of Black people as a whole must increase. All three are important, yet the current discourse focuses almost exclusively on the first element while neglecting the second and third. The reality is that without institutional infrastructure, individual wealth gains will continue to leak out of the community rather than accumulating into collective wealth.

A fundamental truth that much of African American wealth discourse has yet to fully internalize is that wealth is created through institutions. There exists a critical misalignment between how wealth is actually built and how we talk about building it. We prioritize individual wealth accumulation without recognizing that the causality runs in the opposite direction—institutional infrastructure creates the conditions for sustainable individual and collective wealth building, not the other way around. We can celebrate individual achievement, teach financial literacy, promote entrepreneurship, and encourage personal responsibility all we want. But until African American communities build and control institutions that can pool capital, shape markets, influence policy, and deploy resources strategically across generations, the wealth gap will persist and likely widen.

A docuseries about successful individuals may be inspiring. But inspiration without infrastructure leads nowhere. Other communities learned this lesson generations ago (from us) and built accordingly. A critical question cuts to the heart of the matter: Who in these wealth-building conversations is representing an African American institution? When wealth dialogues feature only individuals representing themselves or individual brands rather than institutions representing collective capital and community interests, we’re having the wrong conversation at the wrong altitude.

It’s time for African American wealth conversations to graduate from the individual focus to the institutional imperative. The Bloomberg model isn’t just for other people it’s a template for how serious wealth building actually works. The question isn’t whether African Americans can produce individually wealthy people we’ve proven that repeatedly. The question is whether we can build the institutional infrastructure that turns individual success into collective, multigenerational wealth. That’s the conversation we should be having, and it needs to happen at the same level of sophistication and institutional focus that other communities take for granted. Until then, we’re simply rearranging deck chairs while hundreds of billions if not trillions flow out of our communities annually, enriching institutions that have no stake in our collective prosperity.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

Virginia Union University’s Keller Williams Partnership Exposes HBCU’s Fundamental Misunderstanding of Wealth Building

It is disappointing that HBCUs and any African American institution for that matter have not figured out yet that the circulation of our social, economic, and political capital with each other at the institutional level is where the acute crisis of closing the wealth gap truly lies. Yet, we still chase colder ice.” – William A. Foster, IV

The percentage of PWI dollars that flow into African American owned businesses is likely limited to catering a social event. Beyond that, their dollar never even likely floats pass an African American business. However, HBCUs certainly cannot say the same. HBCU capital leaving the African American financial ecosystem looks like every dam on Earth broke at the same time.

Virginia Union University’s recent announcement of a partnership with Keller Williams Richmond West represents a familiar pattern in HBCU decision-making, one that undermines the very mission these institutions claim to champion. While VUU proudly touts this collaboration as “groundbreaking” and positions it as a pathway to “closing the racial wealth gap,” the partnership reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of how wealth gaps are actually closed. The reality is stark: you cannot close a racial wealth gap by systematically excluding institutions from your own community from the economic opportunities your institution creates.

When HBCUs partner exclusively with non-Black institutions, they create what economists call a “leaky bucket” effect. The money, talent, and social capital generated by these historically Black institutions flow outward to other communities rather than circulating within the African American ecosystem. Every dollar spent with a non-Black vendor, every partnership signed with a non-Black firm, every opportunity directed away from Black-owned businesses represents wealth that could have been building generational prosperity in Black communities—but instead enriches other groups. This is where the fundamental disconnect lies: HBCUs understand the importance of encouraging individual African Americans to support Black-owned businesses, yet these same institutions fail to apply this principle at the institutional level where the real economic power resides.

The conversation about the circulation of the African American dollar has historically focused on individual consumer behavior. We’ve heard for decades about the need for Black consumers to shop at Black-owned stores, bank with Black-owned financial institutions, and hire Black-owned service providers. Studies have shown that a dollar circulates in Asian communities for approximately thirty days, in Jewish communities for around twenty days, in white communities for seventeen days, but in Black communities for only six hours before leaving. This abysmal circulation rate is correctly identified as a critical factor in the persistent wealth gap. But what these discussions almost always miss is that individual consumer behavior, while important, pales in comparison to institutional spending power.

When Virginia Union University signs a multiyear partnership with Keller Williams, it’s not spending a few hundred or even a few thousand dollars. Institutional partnerships involve hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars in direct and indirect economic benefits—facility usage, marketing exposure, student referrals, commission opportunities, and brand association. A single institutional partnership can equal the spending power of hundreds or thousands of individual consumers. Yet HBCUs consistently fail to recognize that their institutional spending decisions have exponentially more impact on wealth circulation than any individual consumer choice their students or alumni might make.

VUU’s partnership with Keller Williams is particularly emblematic of this pattern. According to the announcement, this collaboration will create “the first Keller Williams Real Estate Hub on an HBCU campus in Virginia” and will be “designed to bridge education, entrepreneurship, and real estate into one powerful ecosystem.” The goals are admirable: career readiness, economic mobility, wealth-building opportunities through real estate education and professional pathways. The partnership is positioned as being co-led by members of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated, with explicit language about sisterhood, brotherhood, and service in action. But here’s the question VUU administrators apparently didn’t ask: Why not create this “powerful ecosystem” with a Black-owned real estate company?

The assumption underlying most HBCU partnerships with non-Black firms seems to be that suitable Black-owned alternatives don’t exist. This assumption is demonstrably false. Black-owned real estate companies operate throughout the United States, including in Virginia and the Richmond area. These firms possess the expertise, resources, and commitment to serve HBCU students and alumni. United Real Estate Richmond, which describes itself as the largest Black-owned real estate firm in the Mid-Atlantic region, operates right in VUU’s backyard. CTI Real Estate is a Black-owned, woman-owned firm serving Virginia and Maryland. Nationally, companies like Braden Real Estate Group—a Black-owned Houston-based brokerage co-founded by Prairie View A&M University graduate Nicole Braden Handy—demonstrate the success of HBCU alumni in building substantial real estate businesses. H.J. Russell & Company, founded in 1952, stands as one of the largest minority-owned real estate firms in the United States. These Black-owned firms have proven track records of success, deep community connections, and explicit missions to build wealth in African American communities. These firms could provide the same—or better—opportunities that Keller Williams offers, with the added benefit of keeping wealth circulating in the Black community.

The difference would be transformative. A partnership with a Black-owned real estate firm would actually contribute to closing the wealth gap. It would demonstrate to students what Black excellence in business looks like. It would create mentorship opportunities with professionals who understand the unique challenges and opportunities facing Black Americans in real estate. It would ensure that the commissions, fees, and other economic benefits generated by the partnership stay within the African American economic ecosystem. Most importantly, it would model the institutional behavior necessary for true wealth accumulation—showing students that circulation of Black dollars must happen at every level, not just in their personal spending habits.

But to truly understand what institutional circulation looks like, consider this scenario: An African American real estate investment firm—owned by an HBCU alumnus and employing HBCU graduates as project managers, analysts, and development specialists—decides to develop a mixed-use building in Richmond. The firm uses Braden Real Estate Group to acquire the land. They secure financing from an African American bank like OneUnited Bank or Liberty Bank, supplemented by an investment syndicate of African American investors. The construction is handled by an African American-owned construction company like H.J. Russell & Company. When the transaction closes, it’s processed through Answer Title & Escrow LLC, the Black-owned title company founded by University of the District of Columbia alumna Donna Shuler. The property management contract goes to another Black-owned firm. The legal work is handled by Black attorneys. The accounting is done by a Black-owned firm.

This is what institutional circulation actually looks like. In this single development project, wealth circulates through multiple Black-owned institutions at every stage of the transaction. The bank earns interest income that it can then lend to other Black businesses and homeowners. The title company generates revenue that allows it to hire more staff and take on larger projects. The construction company builds its portfolio and capacity to compete for even bigger developments. The real estate investment firm creates returns for its Black investors and proves the viability of Black-owned development companies. The project managers and analysts gain experience that prepares them to start their own firms. Every single point in the transaction keeps wealth circulating within the African American economic ecosystem, building institutional capacity, creating jobs, generating returns, and proving that Black-owned institutions can handle sophisticated, large-scale projects.

Now contrast that with what happens when VUU partners with Keller Williams. Students may get training and even jobs as real estate agents, but the institutional wealth flows to Keller Williams—a non-Black company. The commissions generated by VUU-affiliated agents enrich Keller Williams’ franchise system. The brand association benefits Keller Williams’ reputation. The networking opportunities primarily connect students to Keller Williams’ existing (predominantly non-Black) networks. And when these students eventually facilitate property transactions, the ancillary services—financing, title work, legal services—typically flow to whatever institutions Keller Williams recommends, which are unlikely to be Black-owned.

The VUU-Keller Williams partnership might help individual Black students enter the real estate industry, but it does absolutely nothing to build the Black-owned institutional infrastructure necessary for true wealth building. In fact, it actively undermines that infrastructure by directing institutional resources and opportunities away from Black-owned firms. VUU essentially takes Black talent, students who could be building careers with Black-owned firms, and channels them into a non-Black institution, teaching them that Black institutions aren’t capable of providing the same opportunities.

This is the critical insight that HBCUs continue to miss: institutional circulation of capital is what builds lasting economic power. When individual Black consumers support Black businesses, they create important but limited impact. One person shopping at a Black-owned grocery store or banking with a Black-owned bank makes a difference, but a small one. When Black institutions support Black businesses, they create transformative, generational impact. An HBCU that partners with Black-owned banks, construction companies, real estate firms, technology providers, and service companies doesn’t just create individual transactions it builds an entire ecosystem of mutually reinforcing institutions that grow stronger together. This institutional ecosystem then has the power to compete with non-Black institutions, create opportunities at scale, and genuinely close wealth gaps.

Think about what would happen if every HBCU made a commitment to work exclusively with Black-owned institutions whenever viable alternatives exist. Imagine if all 101 HBCUs banked with Black-owned banks, used Black-owned construction companies for campus buildings, partnered with Black-owned real estate firms for student housing and community development, contracted with Black-owned technology companies for IT services, and hired Black-owned firms for legal, accounting, and consulting work. The combined institutional spending power of HBCUs would transform the Black business landscape. Black-owned banks would have hundreds of millions in deposits, allowing them to make larger loans and compete for more business. Black-owned construction companies would have steady revenue streams that would allow them to invest in equipment, hire skilled workers, and bid on larger projects. Black-owned real estate firms would have the institutional backing to compete for major developments. Black-owned technology companies would have the resources to innovate and scale.

But beyond the immediate economic impact, this institutional circulation would create something even more valuable: proof of concept. When Alabama State University chooses a Black-owned bank to handle a $125 million transaction, it proves that Black-owned financial institutions can handle sophisticated, large-scale deals. When VUU partners with a Black-owned real estate firm to create a campus-based real estate hub, it proves that Black-owned companies can deliver the same quality and scale as non-Black competitors. When HBCUs consistently work with Black-owned construction companies, law firms, accounting firms, and consulting companies, they build a track record of success that these firms can point to when competing for other major contracts. This institutional validation is precisely what Black-owned businesses need to break through the barriers that have historically excluded them from large-scale opportunities.

VUU’s partnership is not an isolated incident, it’s part of a troubling pattern. As HBCU Money has documented, only two HBCUs are believed to bank with Black-owned banks, meaning well over 90 percent of HBCUs do not bank with African American-owned financial institutions. This mirrors the broader pattern where over 90 percent of African Americans who attend college choose non-HBCUs, and in both cases, neither Black-owned banks nor HBCUs are able to fulfill their potential without the patronage and investment of those they were built to serve. Alabama State University’s $125 million decision to partner with a non-Black financial institution exemplifies what can be called “Island Mentality”—the failure of HBCUs to connect with and support the African American private sector. When Alabama State University had the opportunity to work with Black-owned banks and financial institutions, they chose to look elsewhere. Consider the irony: Howard University, African America’s flagship HBCU, partnered with PNC Bank, a Pittsburgh-based institution with over $550 billion in assets, more than 100 times the combined assets of all remaining Black-owned banks to create a $3.4 million annual entrepreneurship center. Meanwhile, Industrial Bank, a Black-owned institution with $723 million in assets, operates right in Howard’s backyard. PNC Bank’s executive team commanded $81 million in compensation in 2022 alone, while only one Black-owned bank in America has assets exceeding $1 billion. These decisions, like VUU’s partnership with Keller Williams, send a devastating message: even historically Black institutions don’t believe Black-owned businesses are worthy of their partnership.

The impact extends beyond symbolism. Every time an HBCU chooses a non-Black partner when Black alternatives exist, it represents lost revenue for Black-owned businesses that could have grown stronger, hired HBCU graduates, and created more opportunities. It represents missed networking opportunities for students who could have built relationships with Black business leaders. It represents weakened community ties that could have been strengthened through institutional support. It represents reduced political capital for the Black business community, which needs institutional backing to compete for larger contracts. And it perpetuates stereotypes about the capability and reliability of Black-owned businesses.

Let’s be clear about what “closing the wealth gap” actually requires. According to the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances, the median wealth of white families is approximately ten times greater than that of Black families. This gap didn’t emerge overnight, and it won’t close through symbolic gestures or partnerships that funnel Black talent and capital into non-Black institutions. Closing the wealth gap requires wealth creation within the Black community through business ownership and entrepreneurship. It requires wealth circulation that keeps dollars moving through Black-owned businesses before leaving the community. It requires wealth accumulation through strategic investments in Black-owned assets. And it requires wealth transfer across generations through education, mentorship, and institutional support.

When VUU partners with Keller Williams instead of a Black-owned real estate company, it fails on every single one of these requirements. The wealth created by student success in real estate will flow to Keller Williams and its predominantly non-Black agents. The circulation of capital will happen outside the Black community. The accumulation will benefit non-Black wealth holders. And the transfer of knowledge and opportunity will lack the cultural competency and community commitment that comes from working with Black-owned institutions. Most critically, VUU misses the opportunity to demonstrate to its students how institutional circulation of capital works, teaching them instead that even Black institutions should look outside their community for partnerships when it matters most.

The example of what institutional circulation could look like in real estate development isn’t theoretical it’s entirely possible right now with existing Black-owned institutions. When Donna Shuler founded Answer Title & Escrow LLC as a University of the District of Columbia alumna, she created exactly the kind of institutional capacity that makes the full-circle Black real estate ecosystem viable. As she explained in her interview with HBCU Money, title companies play a crucial role in every real estate transaction—they ensure clear ownership, coordinate closings, prepare legal documents, collect funds, and issue title insurance. Having a Black-owned title company means that millions of dollars in fees and service charges stay within the Black community rather than flowing out. Combined with Black-owned banks providing financing, Black-owned real estate firms handling acquisitions, Black-owned construction companies building the projects, and Black-owned development firms managing the entire process, you create a complete ecosystem where institutional wealth circulates multiple times before leaving the community.

This is what VUU could have created with its real estate initiative but chose not to. Instead of building an ecosystem where Black institutions strengthen each other, VUU created a pipeline that extracts Black talent and channels it into a non-Black institution. Students will learn real estate from Keller Williams, make connections through Keller Williams networks, and likely facilitate transactions that benefit Keller Williams and its associated service providers. The institutional wealth created by VUU’s endorsement and student pipeline flows entirely out of the Black community.

HBCUs often justify these partnerships by arguing that non-Black firms offer broader networks, more resources, or greater reach. This argument is both self-fulfilling and self-defeating. It’s self-fulfilling because when HBCUs consistently choose non-Black partners, they ensure that Black-owned businesses never gain the institutional backing needed to compete at scale. How can Black-owned real estate companies build the same networks as Keller Williams when HBCUs, the institutions that should be their natural partners, consistently choose their competitors? It’s self-defeating because it undermines the very purpose of HBCUs. These institutions were created because the existing educational ecosystem excluded Black Americans. They thrived by building their own networks, creating their own opportunities, and supporting each other. The suggestion that HBCUs now need to partner with non-Black institutions to succeed represents a fundamental abandonment of the HBCU mission and the institutional circulation principle that should guide their operations.

Imagine if VUU had instead announced a partnership with a coalition of Black-owned real estate companies. The announcement might have read: “Virginia Union University is proud to announce a groundbreaking partnership with Black-owned real estate firms across Virginia marking the creation of the first Black Real Estate Hub on an HBCU campus. This collaboration goes beyond sponsorship to create career readiness, economic mobility, and wealth-building opportunities for VUU students, alumni, and the Richmond community through real estate education, entrepreneurship, and professional pathways led by successful Black business owners including HBCU alumni. Students will learn not just how to sell houses, but how to build generational wealth through development, investment, and institutional deal-making within the Black business ecosystem. They will receive training from firms like United Real Estate Richmond, Braden Real Estate Group, and other Black-owned companies, with pathways to internships and employment that keep talent and capital circulating within the African American community. The initiative will explicitly connect students with Black-owned banks for financing education, Black-owned title companies for transaction processing, and Black-owned development firms for career opportunities in the full spectrum of real estate activities.”

Such a partnership would demonstrate commitment to the Black business community, create mentorship pipelines between Black students and Black business leaders, build economic power by concentrating resources in Black-owned institutions, establish replicable models for other HBCUs to follow, and generate authentic wealth-building that actually closes gaps rather than widening them. It would teach students the most important lesson about wealth building: that institutional circulation of capital within your community is what creates lasting prosperity, not individual success stories that extract value from the community.

Beyond economics, these partnership decisions carry enormous social and political implications. When HBCUs choose non-Black partners, they signal to their students, alumni, and communities that Black-owned businesses are insufficient, unreliable, or less capable. This message has devastating ripple effects. Students at HBCUs should graduate believing they can build successful businesses that serve their communities and compete at the highest levels. They should see their institutions modeling the behavior they’re encouraged to adopt. Instead, they witness their own universities choosing non-Black partners, learning an implicit lesson about the supposed superiority of non-Black institutions. They learn that while individual Black consumers should support Black businesses, institutions don’t have to follow the same principle. This creates a fundamental contradiction that undermines the economic empowerment message entirely.

Consider the message VUU sends with its Keller Williams partnership: “We’ll teach you to be real estate professionals, but we don’t believe Black-owned real estate companies are good enough to partner with us.” What are students supposed to take from that? That they should aspire to work for Black-owned firms, or that they should aim for the “real” opportunities at non-Black companies? That Black businesses can compete at the highest levels, or that even Black institutions don’t really believe that? The implicit message is devastating, and it’s reinforced every time an HBCU makes a major partnership announcement with a non-Black firm when Black alternatives exist.

This dynamic also weakens the political capital of the Black business community. When even HBCUs won’t support Black-owned businesses, it becomes nearly impossible for these firms to argue they deserve a seat at the table for major contracts, government partnerships, or policy decisions. If historically Black institutions don’t believe Black businesses are capable of handling significant partnerships, why would predominantly white institutions, corporations, or government agencies think differently? HBCUs, by failing to partner with Black-owned institutions, actively undermine the credibility and viability of the very businesses that could drive wealth creation in African American communities.

The solution isn’t complicated, though it requires courage and commitment. HBCUs must conduct systematic audits of all major partnerships and vendor relationships to identify where Black-owned alternatives exist. They must establish procurement policies that prioritize Black-owned businesses when quality and capability are equivalent. They should create development programs to help emerging Black-owned businesses build the capacity to serve as HBCU partners. They need to build collaborative networks connecting HBCUs with Black-owned banks, real estate firms, construction companies, technology providers, and other businesses. They must measure and report on the percentage of institutional spending directed to Black-owned businesses, creating transparency and accountability. And they need to educate all stakeholders—boards, administrators, faculty, students, and alumni—about why these partnerships matter for wealth gap closure and why institutional circulation of capital is the key to building lasting economic power.

Some will argue this approach is discriminatory or inefficient. This objection ignores history and reality. HBCUs exist because discrimination created the need for separate Black institutions. Having addressed educational exclusion by building their own colleges, it’s logical and necessary to address economic exclusion by building supportive business ecosystems. The focus on institutional circulation isn’t about excluding others; it’s about finally including Black-owned institutions in the economic opportunities that Black institutions create. It’s about recognizing that the same principle we apply to individual consumer behavior of circulate dollars in your community applies with exponentially greater impact at the institutional level.

The choice facing HBCUs is stark: continue operating as isolated islands that happen to serve Black students, or become integral parts of a thriving African American institutional ecosystem that builds collective power and prosperity. Virginia Union University’s partnership with Keller Williams, like Alabama State University’s financial decisions before it, represents the island mentality. These institutions take Black talent, Black energy, and Black resources, then channel them into non-Black institutions that have no structural commitment to Black community wealth-building. They preach to students about supporting Black businesses while their own institutional dollars flow to non-Black partners.

The real estate development scenario described earlier where an HBCU alumnus-owned development firm works with Braden Real Estate Group, Answer Title, a Black-owned bank, and a Black-owned construction company isn’t a fantasy. All of these institutions exist right now. The only thing preventing this kind of institutional circulation from becoming the norm rather than the exception is the willingness of HBCUs to make it a priority. When HBCUs choose to partner with Black-owned institutions, they don’t just create individual transactions they validate and strengthen an entire ecosystem of Black-owned businesses that can then compete for even larger opportunities.

True wealth gap closure requires HBCUs to fundamentally reimagine their role. They must see themselves not as individual institutions competing for resources and prestige, but as anchor institutions responsible for building and sustaining a broader African American economic ecosystem. This means prioritizing partnerships with Black-owned banks, real estate companies, construction firms, technology providers, and other businesses even when doing so requires more effort, more creativity, or more patience. It means recognizing that institutional circulation of capital is what transforms individual Black success stories into generational Black wealth accumulation. It means understanding that HBCUs have the power to create the very ecosystem they claim doesn’t exist by directing their substantial institutional resources to Black-owned businesses.

The question isn’t whether Black-owned alternatives exist. They do. The question is whether HBCU leaders have the vision, courage, and commitment to build an economic ecosystem that actually closes the wealth gap rather than simply talking about it. Until HBCUs make this fundamental shift, until they recognize that institutional circulation of capital is the key to wealth building and start directing their partnerships, contracts, and spending to Black-owned institutions these announcements about “groundbreaking partnerships” that close the wealth gap will remain what they are today: well-intentioned rhetoric that masks the continued extraction of Black wealth and talent for the benefit of other communities.

Individual African Americans can only do so much with their consumer dollars. The six-hour circulation rate in Black communities is a problem, but it’s a problem that individual behavior alone cannot solve. The real power lies at the institutional level. When an HBCU spends $10 million on a construction project with a Black-owned firm, that’s not the equivalent of 10,000 individual consumers each spending $1,000—it’s exponentially more powerful because institutional spending validates capacity, builds track records, creates jobs at scale, and proves viability in ways that individual transactions never can. But HBCUs, with their millions in institutional spending power, their influence over thousands of students and alumni, and their role as anchor institutions in Black communities, have the power to transform the economic landscape. They just need to recognize that the principle of dollar circulation they teach their students applies with even greater force to their own institutional behavior.

Until HBCUs start practicing institutional circulation of capital, until they recognize that every major partnership, every significant contract, and every spending decision is an opportunity to strengthen Black-owned institutions and build the ecosystem necessary for true wealth creation they will continue to be part of the problem rather than the solution to the wealth gap they claim to want to close. The infrastructure exists. The capable Black-owned businesses exist. The only thing missing is the institutional will to make Black economic ecosystem-building a priority over convenience, familiarity, or the perceived prestige of partnering with established non-Black firms. The choice is clear: HBCUs can continue channeling Black talent and capital out of the community, or they can finally commit to the institutional circulation that makes wealth gap closure actually possible.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

HBCU Money™ Turns 13 Years Old

By William A. Foster, IV

Life is a hard battle anyway. If we laugh and sing a little as we fight the good fight of freedom, it makes it all go easier. I will not allow my life’s light to be determined by the darkness around me. – Sojourner Truth

HBCU Money is officially a teenager. Usually the teenage years are a rough and tumultuous time and it is hard to see that being any differently for us. The current social and political climates that we are about to experience over the next four years will test our patience and fortitude. It is vital that HBCU Money stays a voice of focus, strategy, and guidance in the African American institutional space as it relates to economics, finance, and investment.

It is inherent that we continue to strengthen and build our African American institutional ecosystem. It is also vital that that ecosystem build bridges of connection with the African Diaspora institutional ecosystem. We must throw off the shackles of isolationism and island mentality that plagues us so deeply. Before we make decisions we must ask ourselves is there an African American institution that exist that serves that need or want. If it is not there, then we must discuss building it. Where is the HBCU that has an African American MBA that teaches us how to build and run businesses from our interest? Where is the HBCU that has a law school focused on African American agriculture and real estate? Where is the African American bank focused on export-import for African American businesses? Are we using our talents to enhance ourselves individually or are we using our talents to enhance our institutions that enhance the collective? These are just a few of the vital things we are missing in our financial infrastructure.

There is not much that needs to be said, but plenty that needs to be done.

Editorial Rerun – In Memoriam: 95th Anniversary Of The Black Wall Street Massacre

First published on June 1, 2012 for the 91st anniversary of the Black Wall Street Massacre and a foreword from an article done by the Atlanta Black Star.

“The dollar circulated 36 to 100 times in this tight-knit community, according to sfbayview.com. A single dollar might have stayed in Tulsa for almost a year before leaving the Black community. Comparatively in modern times, a dollar can circulate in Asian communities for a month, Jewish communities for 20 days and white communities for 17, but it leaves the modern-day Black community in six hours, according to reports from the NAACP.”

By William A. Foster, IV

Remember that life is neither pain nor pleasure; it is serious business, to be entered upon with courage and in a spirit of self-sacrifice. – Alexis de Tocqueville

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This is the first year I’ve had a chance to remember Black Wall Street on the very day that in a 12 hour battle a model community of American aspiration would be destroyed. It has always been at the heart of my economic and institutional development beliefs. I once railed on twitter that I wish Spike Lee would make the movie of Black Wall Street. Although, I dare say he’d run into even more problems than he did with Malcolm X. The threat of social and economic power coming to African America is much more frightful than one man.  I’ve even griped that my issues with Dr. Cornel West and his ilk  who want to speak “truth to power” is they ignore the model of the greatest moment in African America’s social and economic history as well as the very basis of how capitalism works. Our own fault for listening to a theology professor instead of our own economist. I always say there is “No Country for African American Economist” in the African American community. We’d rather speak to power than build our own. The story of Black Wall Street in Tulsa, OK is one of those moments where if we’d learn from history it would be worth repeating it. Instead, we’ll ignore our history to our own peril.

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Many of us have a hard time imagining a place where African Americans owned and controlled as Mike House documents in his research “twenty-one restaurants, thirty grocery stores and two movie theaters, plus a hospital, a bank, a post office, libraries, schools, law offices, a half dozen private airplanes and even a bus system”. Just this economic power alone in one centralized place makes one realize how far we have fallen. Many of us simply see nominal gains in income and assume we have progressed. Not realizing that capitalism’s power and reward ultimately rest in the institutions you own and control.

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I have tired of the marches. I have tired of the “leaders”. I have tired of the speeches. I have even tired of my own writings. I am tired of telling us we are poorer today than we were in 1921. I have tired of our dependency on liberal ideology that says wait for a government to do the right thing by us. The government does the right thing by those who have the economic means to grease it. We simply need to build communities that we control and own. We need to build institutions that we control and own in those communities. We need to build social, economic, and political partnerships with Africa just like every other group in this country has with its ancestral homeland which creates a global power. We then need to use that social and economic capital to influence the political system to protect our social and economic interest. This is what made Black Wall Street so powerful and why it ultimately had to be destroyed. They were on the verge of leveraging their influence into the political system which would have allowed them to control Oklahoma. Can you imagine that?

We have HBCU communities that already are built to become Black Wall Street reinvented. Over 100 of them. Less talking. More building.

For the entirety of the events of June 1, 1921 just click the date.