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Where We Are - Where We Need To Be
Looking back at the state of Black America today we can't help but draw
contrasts between where we once were and where we are today. It is almost as if
we have taken a step back in time. When we were "colored" and "Negro" we owned
businesses in Black neighborhoods, and helped each other. In those days our
next door neighbors were positive role models such as, teachers, doctors,
lawyers, ministers, policemen, barbers, etc., etc. Now comes so-called
integration, and we carried our money downtown and willingly handed it over to
white entrepreneurs because we now could socialize with them.
We moved out of "all Black" neighborhoods and into what was formerly "all white"
ones, thus starting the "white flight" to the suburbs. There is this inherent
belief in some whites that when a Black moves next to them the quality of life
for the whites will inevitably go down. But we still wanted to be next to them.
Now what once were viable neighborhoods have degenerated into drug havens,
dotted by crack houses with rampant prostitution, and wanton Black on Black
crime. No one can feel safe in these neighborhoods anymore. The elderly and
disabled had best be inside before dark lest they run the risk of being attacked
and robbed, by predators who run wild in our streets. What once were thriving
businesses in the Black communities are now boarded up, occupied by drifters and
drug addicts or torn down.
Now that we have become Black and African-American look how far backwards we
have moved. Our Black neighborhoods are worse now than they were thirty years
ago. We don't even own a grocery store in some of these neighborhoods, which is
the lifeblood of any community. We have become slaves on the corporate
plantation in every sense of the word. When we attend college our goal is to
finish up, come out and find a "good" job, when instead we should be creating
jobs. Colleges and Universities today are preparing us for the plantation. You
do not learn to grasp independent wealth there. You are taught to be a slave to
a corporation. Since whites own nearly 100% of the corporations the odds are
that you will go to college to become a corporate slave to serve on the
plantation (corporation) to make an already rich white man even richer.
Then there is the penal system................ Laws have been geared to swell
the prisons. This means more hands for free labor. Inmates get paid pennies a
day for doing some of the same work that would require a decent wage on the
outside...more slaves. We are slaves to Visa, Master Charge, Versace, and Tommy
Hilfiger, among others.
We drive expensive cars, spend hundreds on our hair, nails and anything else
that gives the impression that we are successful. When asked about investments,
savings, or retirement plans all you get is a blank stare. This segues right
into my next issue, which is economics. Unless a people is economically strong
then they have no power, especially in a capitalistic society. We need to become
educated to the benefits of developing economic strategies within our
communities. No Black leader in recent history (40 years), with the exception of
Elijah Muhammad, has stressed economic empowerment to the Black masses. We are
still "conspicuous consumers," even as late as 1999.
The New Millennium must be a time of economic change for Black people. Billions
of dollars pass through Black hands annually, without being returned to the
community. We must invest, and reinvest within our communities. We need to
believe that we can do this. The developing of a new consciousness must be at
the top of our agenda in the new century. Our children must be taught to be
entrepreneurs rather than consumers. All we need to do is redirect our energies,
and refocus our efforts, in order to accomplish this. Opportunities exist all
around us daily, but unless we are ready to take advantage of them they will
pass us by. To quote Jim Clingman, in his book, "Economic Empowerment or
Economic Enslavement",
We have a choice, in his reference to a statement made by Harriet Tubman, "I
freed a thousand slaves, and could have freed a thousand more if only they had
known that they were slaves." It is this kind of awareness we need to strive for
in the next century. We need to start developing a new consciousness about who
we are, and where we fit in the grand scheme of things today!
Support Black Business
- Author Unknown
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