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		<title>Black Community: We Need Accountability Without Stereotypes.</title>
		<link>https://thyblackman.com/2026/01/26/black-community-we-need-accountability-without-stereotypes/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Christian Starr]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Jan 2026 01:57:39 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Accountability is essential for growth in families communities and churches. This article explores how stereotypes hypocrisy and lack of self reflection undermine real accountability and harm relationships across generations.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(<strong>ThyBlackMan.com</strong>) Accountability in every relationship and individually is very important. There can be no growth without it, and in its absence relationships fall apart. There is strife in this country, within ethnicities, in our communities, in our churches, and in our families due to a lack of accountability. Everyone wants to call out the next person without taking any heed to themselves. We say we have forgiven but hold grudges, we say others should work hard but aren’t honest about situations, and we pick and choose who gets grace and who does not. All of this works against accountability, and instead of aiding one in growth it can give one outs because the person talking is unaccountable and a hypocrite.</p>
<p>Stereotypes exist in every space and they are damaging. It is difficult to see our people stereotype each other knowing that we face it on a larger scale from others. Stereotypes ought not be used to hold someone accountable because it speaks against the character of the person trying to hold one to account. This is difficult to digest for some because they won’t like that they can’t just call someone a thug, or fast, or angry, or violent or ungodly as a way to hold them accountable in areas where growth is needed. All of those things have an origin and none of that addresses the issue. We need to take a long look in the mirror regarding how we hold people in our life accountable.</p>
<p><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-54550" src="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/blackfamily-2015.jpg" alt="Black Community: We Need Accountability Without Stereotypes." width="575" height="383" srcset="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/blackfamily-2015.jpg 640w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/blackfamily-2015-300x200.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 575px) 100vw, 575px" /></p>
<p>The first thing one should do is look at themselves honestly. If you know you battle with anger, unforgiveness, or have been given help to get on your feet then you must take these things into consideration before you come for another. Far too often, especially with young people, they are stereotyped and labeled by others who should be willing to help them. Yes, I’m talking about families that look down on their members that don’t have it together. Being condescending and labeling these loved ones is not holding them accountable. It’s not teaching them how to own themselves, and their situations so that growth can begin. Far too often we are not willing to be honest about what happened to these family members. In the attempt to protect the “favorites” in the family we won’t hold them accountable for what they have done to those we demand to be accountable. This is a touchy topic for too many so there is no accountability across the board. Those spiraling are unwilling to hear because they know how they are seen, and they begin to recognize they are alone.</p>
<p>Family elders must stop stereotyping their younger family members. Too many elders need a come to Jesus with themselves, and because they can better hide their lack of accountability, they think it’s unseen. Too many lean on deference and respect feeling that no one should speak to them a certain way. The truth is if you are honest with an elder in a respectful tone, they will then deem you disrespectful simply because the truth is told. Far too often this turns into a shouting match, and the younger member is given more negative labels and ungodly might be one of them. These family members can be lost because they will understand there is a lack of accountability, and hypocrisy. They may choose to come around less or not at all. Unfortunately, there are times whereby this is also the troubled family member. They could end up losing their life because of how they were seen so they were never loved properly. And we all know the funeral is going to be a re-writing of history about how they were so loved. It’s tragic.</p>
<p>The younger generations must be mindful of this very same thing. Too many of us give no grace but demand it. The elders of the family are human beings and imperfect. If they humble themselves and teach the lessons through transparency that is a blessing. We ought not to label them and use that information to tear them down, or as a reason not to heed their warning. Many of them have seen things they pray we never do, blowing them off with labels that are not justified to avoid accountability doesn’t help us grow and become better.</p>
<p>The bottom line is labels and stereotypes have no place in the discussion of accountability nor responsibility. When this happens relationships and communities shatter as hypocrisy surfaces in an ugly way. We must see accountability, and address it, though the lens of love, care, and honesty. More of our loved ones would be saved if we just took the time to check self then address others with healing as the goal.</p>
<p>Staff Writer; <strong>Christian Starr</strong></p>
<p>May connect with <strong>this sister</strong> over at <em>Facebook</em>; <strong><a href="https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100084500602888">C. Starr</a> </strong>and also <em>Twitter</em>; <strong><a href="https://twitter.com/prolificwriter5?t=V72CLIGYuxEA-GV4vQe30A&amp;s=09">MrzZeta</a></strong>.</p>
<p>Also via email at; <strong><a href="mailto:CStarr@ThyBlackMan.com">CStarr@ThyBlackMan.com</a></strong>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>How to Braid Your Own Hair Step by Step A Black Hairstylist Guide.</title>
		<link>https://thyblackman.com/2026/01/02/how-to-braid-your-own-hair-step-by-step/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Staff]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 Jan 2026 02:27:40 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thyblackman.com/?p=137707</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[A Black female hairstylist explains how to braid your own hair step by step using old school techniques. Learn proper preparation, sectioning, tension control, and braid care for healthy natural hair.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(<strong>ThyBlackMan.com</strong>) Come here for a minute. Sit down. Take a breath.</p>
<p data-start="227" data-end="634">Before there were salons on every corner, before YouTube tutorials, before booking apps and price lists, Black women learned how to braid hair the old way. We learned by watching. By listening. By sitting on the floor between somebody’s knees while hands moved with purpose and patience. Braiding was never rushed. It was never casual. It was care. It was conversation. It was love passed from hand to head.</p>
<p data-start="636" data-end="1000">Learning how to braid your own hair is not just about saving money or convenience. It is about independence. It is about knowing how to tend to yourself when nobody else is around. When you braid your own hair, you slow down. You pay attention. You learn how your scalp feels, how your strands move, where your hair needs gentleness and where it can take strength.</p>
<p data-start="1002" data-end="1332">I am writing this as a Black woman hairstylist who learned by doing, by messing up, by redoing parts, by taking breaks when my arms burned, and by refusing to give up. There is nothing fancy about this guide. This is old school teaching. Step by step. No rushing. No shortcuts. Just real hands on knowledge meant to stay with you.</p>
<p data-start="1002" data-end="1332"><img decoding="async" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-137708" src="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/How-to-Braid-Your-Own-Hair-Step-by-Step-A-Black-Hairstylist-Guide.jpg" alt="How to Braid Your Own Hair Step by Step A Black Hairstylist Guide." width="612" height="408" srcset="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/How-to-Braid-Your-Own-Hair-Step-by-Step-A-Black-Hairstylist-Guide.jpg 612w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/How-to-Braid-Your-Own-Hair-Step-by-Step-A-Black-Hairstylist-Guide-300x200.jpg 300w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/How-to-Braid-Your-Own-Hair-Step-by-Step-A-Black-Hairstylist-Guide-450x300.jpg 450w" sizes="(max-width: 612px) 100vw, 612px" /></p>
<p data-start="416" data-end="774"><strong data-start="416" data-end="459">Step 1 &#8211; Prepare Your Mind and Your Space</strong><br data-start="459" data-end="462" />Before you touch one strand, you need to understand something. Braiding is work. It is hand work. It is eye work. It is patience work. The reason people get frustrated is because they start braiding like they are trying to hurry and get somewhere. But braiding your own hair is the destination. It is the ritual.</p>
<p data-start="776" data-end="1032">Start by choosing your spot. A dining room chair is better than the bed, because you need your back straight and your elbows supported. If you are hunched over for two hours, your hands will cramp and your parts will start looking like a map after a storm.</p>
<p data-start="1034" data-end="1242">Lighting matters. Old school salons had bright bulbs for a reason. If you cannot see your scalp clearly, your parts will be crooked and you will be guessing. Put a lamp close, or sit near a window in daytime.</p>
<p data-start="1244" data-end="1528">Mirrors are your best friend. If you have only one mirror, you will end up twisting like a pretzel trying to see the back. The classic setup is one mirror in front of you and a second mirror behind you, or a handheld mirror you can lift. That way you can check the back without panic.</p>
<p data-start="1530" data-end="1781">Then do one more thing people forget. Clear your area. Lay out your combs, clips, hair ties, gel, spray bottle, and oil. When your hair is sectioned and you stop to hunt for a comb, that is when parts puff up, strands tangle, and you lose your rhythm.</p>
<p data-start="1783" data-end="2041"><strong data-start="1783" data-end="1815">Step 2 &#8211; Start With Clean Hair</strong><br data-start="1815" data-end="1818" />Clean hair is obedient hair. Dirty hair is rebellious hair. I’m not even trying to be funny. Product buildup, sweat, lint, and old gel create friction and tangles. That makes braiding harder and makes your scalp itch later.</p>
<p data-start="2043" data-end="2316">Wash your hair with purpose. Do not just rub shampoo on top and call it a day. Part your hair into sections even in the shower if you need to. Use the pads of your fingers and scrub your scalp gently. Think of it like washing your face. You want circulation, not scratches.</p>
<p data-start="2318" data-end="2610">Rinse thoroughly. If shampoo stays in your hair, it will dry it out. Then follow with conditioner. When you put conditioner in, detangle right there. Start at the ends. Work up slowly. That is old school rule number one. If you rip through your hair from the roots, you are inviting breakage.</p>
<p data-start="2612" data-end="2803">When you finish, squeeze water out gently. Do not rough towel your hair like it is a rag. Use a t shirt or microfiber towel if you have it. The goal is less frizz, less tangles, more control.</p>
<p data-start="2805" data-end="2933"><strong data-start="2805" data-end="2845">Step 3 &#8211; Deep Condition and Moisturize</strong><br data-start="2845" data-end="2848" />This is where you decide if your braids will feel soft and healthy, or dry and stiff.</p>
<p data-start="2935" data-end="3146">If your hair tends to feel dry, do a deep conditioner for at least 15 to 30 minutes. Put on a plastic cap. If you want to go old school, wrap a warm towel around your head. Heat helps the conditioner do its job.</p>
<p data-start="3148" data-end="3286">After you rinse, you need moisture that stays. That means leave in conditioner first. Work it through with your fingers, then comb gently.</p>
<p data-start="3288" data-end="3439">Then you seal. A little oil or butter on the ends helps lock moisture in. Not heavy, not greasy. Just enough to keep your hair from feeling like straw.</p>
<p data-start="3441" data-end="3590">And listen. Moisturizing is not about making hair wet. It is about making hair flexible. Braids last longer when your hair can bend without snapping.</p>
<p data-start="3592" data-end="3827"><strong data-start="3592" data-end="3627">Step 4 &#8211; Stretch Your Hair Gently</strong><br data-start="3627" data-end="3630" />Stretching is not about making your hair straight to please somebody. Stretching is about making it easier for your hands to manage your hair so your parts can be clean and your braids can be even.</p>
<p data-start="3829" data-end="4002">If you braid on very shrunken hair, your sections will look small at first and then puff up, and your braid may get tight as it dries. That can lead to tension on the scalp.</p>
<p data-start="4004" data-end="4021">You have options.</p>
<p data-start="4023" data-end="4149">You can blow dry on low heat with a comb attachment. Use heat protectant. Move slowly. Do not cook your hair. Just stretch it.</p>
<p data-start="4151" data-end="4306">You can band your hair. That means you section your hair and put hair ties down the length to stretch it as it dries. This method is gentle and old school.</p>
<p data-start="4308" data-end="4440">Or you can do chunky braids or twists and let your hair dry overnight. When you take them down, your hair is stretched without heat.</p>
<p data-start="4442" data-end="4535">The best stretching method is the one that keeps your hair healthy and makes it easy for you.</p>
<p data-start="4537" data-end="4643"><strong data-start="4537" data-end="4565">Step 5 &#8211; Gather Your Tools</strong><br data-start="4565" data-end="4568" />Tools do not make you a stylist, but the right tools make the job smoother.</p>
<p data-start="4645" data-end="4769">Rat tail comb. This is your parting weapon. A wide tooth comb is not going to give you straight lines. A rat tail comb will.</p>
<p data-start="4771" data-end="4905">Clips or clamps. You need something that can hold thick hair without slipping. Those little baby clips will not cut it on a full head.</p>
<p data-start="4907" data-end="5050">Spray bottle. Even if you stretched your hair, sections can dry out while you work. A light mist helps you control the hair without soaking it.</p>
<p data-start="5052" data-end="5190">Braiding gel or edge control. This is for smoothing. Not for turning your hair into cement. Look for something that does not flake easily.</p>
<p data-start="5192" data-end="5308">Hair ties. Choose ones that do not snag. Old school trick is to rub a little oil on the band so it slides off later.</p>
<p data-start="5310" data-end="5423">Oil for scalp and finishing. Light oil is better than heavy grease for most people, but do what your scalp likes.</p>
<p data-start="5425" data-end="5565">And one more tool. A towel or cape around your shoulders. Gel, oil, and loose hair will end up on your shirt if you do not protect yourself.</p>
<p data-start="5567" data-end="5660"><strong data-start="5567" data-end="5604">Step 6 &#8211; Section Your Hair Properly</strong><br data-start="5604" data-end="5607" />Sectioning is where beginners get lazy, and it shows.</p>
<p data-start="5662" data-end="5793">Start by dividing your hair into four big parts like a cross. From forehead to nape, and ear to ear. Clip each section away neatly.</p>
<p data-start="5795" data-end="5923">Now work one quadrant at a time. Do not open the whole head at once. That is how hair tangles and you start feeling overwhelmed.</p>
<p data-start="5925" data-end="6063">Decide your braid size. If you want medium braids, your parts need to match that. If you want big chunky braids, your parts can be bigger.</p>
<p data-start="6065" data-end="6246">Old school rule. Your parts should be clean, and your sections should be controlled. If hair from another section is creeping in, clip it away. A clean base gives you clean results.</p>
<p data-start="6248" data-end="6406">If you are doing simple braids without extensions, you can do fewer, larger sections. If you are trying smaller braids, you need more time and more precision.</p>
<p data-start="6408" data-end="6549"><strong data-start="6408" data-end="6445">Step 7 &#8211; Apply Product at the Roots</strong><br data-start="6445" data-end="6448" />This is not the step where you drown your hair in gel. This is the step where you smooth and prepare.</p>
<p data-start="6551" data-end="6743">Take a small amount of gel or edge control on your fingertip. Rub it between your fingers first so it spreads easily. Then apply it at the root of your section. Use the comb to smooth it down.</p>
<p data-start="6745" data-end="6870">The purpose is to lay flyaways and help your braid look neat. The product should not be so thick that your hair feels sticky.</p>
<p data-start="6872" data-end="6996">If you notice flaking later, it usually means you used too much product or mixed products that do not agree. Keep it simple.</p>
<p data-start="6998" data-end="7106"><strong data-start="6998" data-end="7049">Step 8 &#8211; Divide the Hair Into Three Equal Strands</strong><br data-start="7049" data-end="7052" />This is where braids either look balanced or lopsided.</p>
<p data-start="7108" data-end="7245">Split the section into three strands as evenly as possible. If one piece is thicker than the others, the braid will lean and look uneven.</p>
<p data-start="7247" data-end="7336">Use your fingers like a measuring tool. Feel the thickness. Look at it. Adjust if needed.</p>
<p data-start="7338" data-end="7544">Now find your grip. I teach clients to hold the braid close to the scalp with the thumb and index finger, while the other fingers manage the strands. But everybody’s hands are different. The key is control.</p>
<p data-start="7546" data-end="7633">Do not let the strands tangle together. Keep them separated like three lanes on a road.</p>
<p data-start="7635" data-end="7728"><strong data-start="7635" data-end="7675">Step 9 &#8211; Begin the Braid Motion Slowly</strong><br data-start="7675" data-end="7678" />Old school teaching says start slow, finish clean.</p>
<p data-start="7730" data-end="7809">Cross right strand over middle.<br data-start="7761" data-end="7764" />Then cross left strand over middle.<br data-start="7799" data-end="7802" />Repeat.</p>
<p data-start="7811" data-end="7934">The biggest mistake is rushing and losing track of which strand is which. When you go slow, your fingers learn the pattern.</p>
<p data-start="7936" data-end="8111">If you keep getting confused, pause. Reset the strands in your fingers. There is no shame in stopping. Better to stop than to braid wrong for three inches and have to unravel.</p>
<p data-start="8113" data-end="8219">Also, keep your hands close to your scalp at the start. That helps you anchor the braid and keeps it neat.</p>
<p data-start="8221" data-end="8341"><strong data-start="8221" data-end="8254">Step 10 &#8211; Maintain Even Tension</strong><br data-start="8254" data-end="8257" />Tension is a skill. Too loose and the braid slips. Too tight and your scalp screams.</p>
<p data-start="8343" data-end="8438">You want firm enough that the braid holds, but gentle enough that your scalp feels comfortable.</p>
<p data-start="8440" data-end="8597">Old school test. After you start braiding, lightly touch the base. If it feels sore immediately, loosen up. If it feels like it might slip, tighten slightly.</p>
<p data-start="8599" data-end="8782">Another tip. When you braid your own hair, you tend to pull harder because you cannot feel the tension the way you would on someone else. So always remind yourself to relax your grip.</p>
<p data-start="8784" data-end="8852">Your edges are not meant to be pulled into submission. Protect them.</p>
<p data-start="8854" data-end="8945"><strong data-start="8854" data-end="8899">Step 11 &#8211; Braid Down the Length of the Hair</strong><br data-start="8899" data-end="8902" />Once you have the base, the rest is rhythm.</p>
<p data-start="8947" data-end="9062">As you braid, keep the strands smooth. If a strand starts to fray or tangle, pause and smooth it with your fingers.</p>
<p data-start="9064" data-end="9197">Try to keep the braid consistent. Do not start tight and then go loose. That makes the braid look uneven and can cause it to unravel.</p>
<p data-start="9199" data-end="9327">If your hands get tired, stop and shake them out. Old school stylists took breaks too. They just did it when nobody was looking.</p>
<p data-start="9329" data-end="9409"><strong data-start="9329" data-end="9356">Step 12 &#8211; Secure the Ends</strong><br data-start="9356" data-end="9359" />Ends are fragile. Treat them like delicate fabric.</p>
<p data-start="9411" data-end="9536">If your hair naturally coils at the end, you may be able to braid down and twist the ends with a little product so they stay.</p>
<p data-start="9538" data-end="9665">If you use a hair tie or band, do not wrap it ten times. That creates a tight knot that can break your ends when you remove it.</p>
<p data-start="9667" data-end="9695">Wrap it just enough to hold.</p>
<p data-start="9697" data-end="9928">If you are braiding with extensions, you would usually dip the ends in hot water to seal, but since we are talking about braiding your own hair in general, securing the ends depends on whether it is natural hair only or added hair.</p>
<p data-start="9930" data-end="10007"><strong data-start="9930" data-end="9965">Step 13 &#8211; Repeat Across Your Head</strong><br data-start="9965" data-end="9968" />This step is where discipline comes in.</p>
<p data-start="10009" data-end="10129">Work section by section. Finish one quadrant, then move to the next. Do not jump around the head unless you have a plan.</p>
<p data-start="10131" data-end="10276">Keep checking your mirror. The back of your head is where people get sloppy because they cannot see. That is why you set your mirrors up earlier.</p>
<p data-start="10278" data-end="10369">If a part looks crooked, redo it. The old school way is to fix it now, not regret it later.</p>
<p data-start="10371" data-end="10475"><strong data-start="10371" data-end="10406">Step 14 &#8211; Take Breaks When Needed</strong><br data-start="10406" data-end="10409" />Braiding your own hair is a workout. Your arms will tell you that.</p>
<p data-start="10477" data-end="10588">Take breaks every few braids if you need to. Stretch your neck. Roll your shoulders. Open and close your hands.</p>
<p data-start="10590" data-end="10678">Drink water. Yes, water. You cannot do detailed work when your body is running on fumes.</p>
<p data-start="10680" data-end="10816">If you feel frustration rising, pause. Braiding while irritated leads to tight braids and rough handling. We are not punishing our hair.</p>
<p data-start="10818" data-end="10934"><strong data-start="10818" data-end="10855">Step 15 &#8211; Finish and Seal the Style</strong><br data-start="10855" data-end="10858" />When the braids are done, do not just throw a bonnet on and forget about it.</p>
<p data-start="10936" data-end="11025">Lightly oil your scalp. Massage gently. That wakes up circulation and keeps dryness away.</p>
<p data-start="11027" data-end="11151">If you like mousse, you can apply a little to reduce frizz. Wrap your hair down with a scarf for 10 to 15 minutes to set it.</p>
<p data-start="11153" data-end="11275">Then check the whole style. Look at the front. Look at the sides. Look at the back. Fix anything that is obviously uneven.</p>
<p data-start="11277" data-end="11347">Old school stylists always did a final inspection, even on themselves.</p>
<p data-start="11349" data-end="11426"><strong data-start="11349" data-end="11381">Step 16 &#8211; Care for Your Braids</strong><br data-start="11381" data-end="11384" />A style is only as good as the care after.</p>
<p data-start="11428" data-end="11514">Moisturize your scalp every few days. Use a light spray, then seal with oil if needed.</p>
<p data-start="11516" data-end="11590">Sleep with satin every night. Cotton steals moisture and creates friction.</p>
<p data-start="11592" data-end="11736">Do not keep braids in so long that your hair starts matting at the roots. When you see a lot of shed hair trapped, that is your sign it is time.</p>
<p data-start="11738" data-end="11876">And when you take braids down, be gentle. Detangle patiently. Cleanse your scalp. Deep condition again. That is the cycle of healthy hair.</p>
<p data-start="1364" data-end="1742">When the last braid is done and your hands finally rest, take a moment. Look at your head. Not for perfection, but for effort. For patience. For care. Braiding your own hair teaches you more than technique. It teaches you discipline. It teaches you respect for your body. It teaches you that you are capable of tending to yourself with the same love you would give someone else.</p>
<p data-start="1744" data-end="2016">Some days your braids will be neat and sharp. Other days they will be a little uneven. That is alright. Hair, like life, is learned through repetition. Every time you sit down to braid, your hands remember more. Your confidence grows. Your connection to your hair deepens.</p>
<p data-start="2018" data-end="2278">Old school women understood this. They knew hair was not just something to style. It was something to honor. When you braid your own hair, you are continuing that tradition. You are choosing care over rush. Knowledge over dependency. Patience over frustration.</p>
<p data-start="2280" data-end="2483">Take pride in that. Wrap your hair at night. Moisturize your scalp. Listen to your strands. And when you sit down again to braid, know that you are not just styling hair. You are practicing self respect.</p>
<p data-start="2280" data-end="2483">Staff Writer; <strong>Jada Moore</strong></p>
<p data-start="2280" data-end="2483">This sister is a talented hairstylist dedicated to helping Black women understand, care for, and confidently style their own natural hair.</p>
<p data-start="2280" data-end="2483">She can be contacted at <strong><a href="mailto:JadaM@ThyBlackMan.com">JadaM@ThyBlackMan.com</a></strong>.</p>
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		<title>What Percent of Black Men Marry Black Women? Understanding Black Love Today.</title>
		<link>https://thyblackman.com/2025/12/28/what-percent-of-black-men-marry-black-women/</link>
					<comments>https://thyblackman.com/2025/12/28/what-percent-of-black-men-marry-black-women/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jamar Jackson]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Dec 2025 01:24:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Brother Talk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Relationships]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thyblackman.com/?p=137614</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[
What percent of Black men marry Black women? A Black male relationship perspective on marriage statistics, Black love, commitment, culture, and why Black partnerships still matter today.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(<strong>ThyBlackMan.com</strong>) When people ask what percent of Black men marry Black women, the question almost never exists in isolation. It is rarely just about curiosity or statistics. More often, it carries emotional weight shaped by personal experiences, online debates, cultural narratives, and long standing frustrations between Black men and Black women. As a Black man speaking from a relationship centered point of view, I believe this question deserves an answer rooted in truth, context, and respect for Black love as it actually exists, not as it is often portrayed.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-86347" src="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/black-couple.png" alt="What Percent of Black Men Marry Black Women? Understanding Black Love Today." width="561" height="368" srcset="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/black-couple.png 561w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/black-couple-300x197.png 300w" sizes="(max-width: 561px) 100vw, 561px" /></p>
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<p data-start="592" data-end="1167">The statistical reality is far more grounded than the popular narrative suggests. Long term demographic data consistently shows that approximately eighty five to ninety percent of married Black men in the United States are married to Black women. This pattern has remained stable for decades and is supported by records from the <span class="hover:entity-accent entity-underline inline cursor-pointer align-baseline"><span class="whitespace-normal">United States Census Bureau</span></span> and reinforced by academic research. Despite what social media, podcasts, or selective celebrity examples may imply, the overwhelming majority of Black men who marry choose Black women as their life partners.</p>
<p data-start="1169" data-end="1781">That fact alone challenges one of the loudest myths surrounding Black relationships. There is a persistent belief that Black men are abandoning Black women or that marrying outside the race has become the norm. This belief is driven less by reality and more by visibility. Interracial relationships involving Black men are often amplified and framed as symbols of success or progress, while everyday Black marriages receive little attention. Stability does not trend. Quiet commitment does not go viral. As a result, millions of Black couples building lives together remain largely invisible in public discourse.</p>
<p data-start="1783" data-end="2430">Another important distinction that often gets lost is the difference between marriage rates and marriage preferences. Black Americans marry at lower rates than some other groups, but this is not evidence of a lack of desire for marriage or commitment. Structural factors play a major role. Economic instability, housing costs, student loan debt, lack of generational wealth, and the long term effects of mass incarceration all influence when and whether marriage feels attainable. Many Black couples form deeply committed relationships for years without formal marriage because financial security and survival take priority over legal recognition.</p>
<p data-start="2432" data-end="2732">This reality is often misinterpreted as avoidance or disinterest. In truth, it reflects pragmatism. When Black men do choose marriage, their preference for Black women demonstrates that the foundation of Black love has not eroded. It has simply been shaped by circumstances beyond individual control.</p>
<p data-start="2734" data-end="3246">Black love has never existed without pressure. Historically, Black relationships were denied protection and repeatedly disrupted. During slavery, families were separated by force and marriage had no legal standing. After emancipation, discriminatory laws, racial violence, and economic exclusion continued to destabilize Black households. Even today, systemic inequality places disproportionate stress on Black relationships. Yet through every era, Black men and Black women have continued to choose one another.</p>
<p data-start="3248" data-end="3671">That history matters because it informs present day relationships whether consciously acknowledged or not. Black couples often carry generational memory of survival, cooperation, and mutual dependence. Love, in this context, has never been purely romantic. It has always been practical, resilient, and deeply rooted in shared struggle. This shared history creates a depth of understanding that numbers alone cannot capture.</p>
<p data-start="3673" data-end="4081">A Black man does not need to explain to a Black woman what it feels like to navigate the world under constant scrutiny. He does not need to justify why certain situations feel threatening or exhausting. Black women understand this instinctively because they experience their own version of racialized pressure every day. That shared awareness creates empathy, and empathy strengthens relationships over time.</p>
<p data-start="4083" data-end="4464">Black women, in turn, often carry burdens that go unseen. They are expected to be strong without complaint, nurturing without rest, and resilient without recognition. Many Black men who marry Black women do so because they value a partner who understands their humanity while also having her own fully acknowledged. That mutual recognition builds trust and deepens emotional bonds.</p>
<p data-start="4466" data-end="4906">Culture also plays a critical role in why Black men marry Black women. Culture extends far beyond music or food. It shapes how families gather, how elders are respected, how grief is processed, how humor is used to survive hardship, and how faith or spirituality is practiced. Black couples often share these cultural rhythms naturally. They do not need to explain why certain traditions matter or why community remains central to identity.</p>
<p data-start="4908" data-end="5188">This shared cultural grounding often reduces friction in long term relationships. It allows couples to focus on growth rather than constant negotiation of background or values. Emotional safety becomes easier to maintain when both partners feel understood at a foundational level.</p>
<p data-start="5190" data-end="5568">Despite these realities, media narratives frequently distort the picture. Conflict sells. Gender based arguments generate clicks and engagement. Healthy Black relationships are rarely highlighted because they do not provoke outrage. Over time, this imbalance creates the illusion that dysfunction defines Black love, when in reality stability is far more common than it appears.</p>
<p data-start="5570" data-end="5943">This distortion has consequences. It fuels mistrust between Black men and Black women. It encourages defensiveness instead of dialogue. Younger generations absorb these messages and begin to question whether long term commitment within the community is realistic or desirable. These doubts are not born from lived experience, but from repeated exposure to negative framing.</p>
<p data-start="5945" data-end="6411">It would be dishonest to deny that tension exists between Black men and Black women today. There are real conversations to be had about accountability, emotional availability, trauma, and expectations. Both sides carry pain shaped by personal and collective history. However, tension does not equal rejection. Disagreement does not erase love. The marriage statistics themselves show that despite challenges, Black men and Black women continue to choose one another.</p>
<p data-start="6413" data-end="6749">From a Black male perspective, commitment is often misunderstood. Commitment is not weakness, submission, or loss of autonomy. It is intention. It is choosing partnership over ego. Loving a Black woman deeply requires presence, honesty, and emotional maturity. It requires listening without defensiveness and supporting without control.</p>
<p data-start="6751" data-end="7020">Many Black men choose Black women because they want partners who see them fully rather than through stereotypes. They want relationships where vulnerability is not punished and strength is not mistaken for emotional absence. That desire reflects growth, not regression.</p>
<p data-start="7022" data-end="7410">Black love also matters because of what it models for the future. Children raised in homes where healthy Black relationships are visible learn that love does not require self erasure. They learn that stability is possible even in an unstable world. In a society that often portrays Black families through a lens of dysfunction, these everyday examples quietly challenge those assumptions.</p>
<p data-start="7412" data-end="7718">Marriage is not the sole measure of love or success, but committed relationships remain a powerful stabilizing force. When Black men and Black women build together, they pool emotional resources, wisdom, and resilience. They create homes that buffer against external hostility and offer spaces for healing.</p>
<p data-start="7720" data-end="8077">What often goes unspoken is how intentional Black love must be today. Black men and Black women are not loving in a vacuum. They are navigating economic uncertainty, racial stress, mental health challenges, and constant commentary about what their relationships should look like. Choosing one another under these conditions is not passive. It is deliberate.</p>
<p data-start="8079" data-end="8474">Many Black men who marry Black women do so after witnessing the sacrifices Black women have made for families and communities. They have seen Black women advocate for children, hold households together, and show up emotionally even when depleted. That awareness creates respect, and respect deepens love. Marriage, in that context, becomes less about status and more about shared responsibility.</p>
<p data-start="8476" data-end="8866">Black women, in turn, often choose Black men because they understand the unseen weight Black men carry. They recognize the pressure to perform strength, suppress vulnerability, and absorb societal suspicion without complaint. Loving a Black man means creating space where he can be human, not just resilient. That mutual care strengthens bonds in ways that are rarely acknowledged publicly.</p>
<p data-start="8868" data-end="9171">When Black men and Black women choose each other, they are often choosing familiarity over fantasy. They are choosing shared language over constant explanation. They are choosing growth over illusion. This choice may not always look glamorous, but it is grounded in trust, reality, and long term vision.</p>
<p data-start="9173" data-end="9500">Black love has always been an act of resistance. Loving each other in a society that profits from division is powerful. Choosing partnership in a system that has historically undermined Black families is courageous. Every healthy Black marriage quietly pushes back against harmful narratives without needing to announce itself.</p>
<p data-start="9502" data-end="9764">So when the question is asked what percent of Black men marry Black women, the answer is clear and grounded. The vast majority do. Roughly nine out of ten Black men who marry choose Black women. That reality reflects loyalty, shared culture, and emotional truth.</p>
<p data-start="9766" data-end="10085">Black love today is not perfect, but it is persistent. It is evolving while remaining rooted in shared history. It is shaped by modern challenges, yet sustained by recognition and respect. As a Black man, I say this plainly. Loving Black women is not a trend or a statistic. It is partnership. It is legacy. It is home.</p>
<p data-start="10087" data-end="10550" data-is-last-node="" data-is-only-node="">At the end of the day, the question of who Black men marry is really a question of who they trust with their lives, their future, and their legacy. The numbers confirm what lived experience already shows. Black men who marry overwhelmingly choose Black women. Not out of obligation, but out of understanding. Not out of habit, but out of connection. Black love continues because it is chosen with intention, nurtured through adversity, and rooted in shared truth.</p>
<p>Staff Writer; <strong>Jamar Jackson</strong></p>
<p class="adgrid-ad-target">This brother has a passion for<strong> </strong><em><strong>sports</strong>, <strong>poetry</strong></em> and <strong><em>music</em></strong>. One may contact him at; <strong><a href="mailto:JJackson@ThyBlackMan.com">JJackson@ThyBlackMan.com</a></strong>.</p>
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		<title>Target Cuts 1,800 Corporate Jobs Amid Stagnant Sales and Leadership Change.</title>
		<link>https://thyblackman.com/2025/10/23/target-cuts-1800-corporate-jobs-economic-analysis/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[L.L. McKenna]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Oct 2025 03:56:36 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Money]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thyblackman.com/?p=136658</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Target is cutting 1,800 corporate jobs—its first major layoffs in a decade—as the company struggles with stagnant sales, shifting consumer behavior, and leadership transition. Incoming CEO Michael Fiddelke says the move will simplify operations and restore growth, but the cuts highlight deep economic challenges in America’s retail sector.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(<strong>ThyBlackMan.com</strong>) Target Corporation’s decision to cut <em><a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/23/business/target-job-cuts.html">1,800 corporate jobs</a></em>—its largest reduction in a decade—represents far more than a belt-tightening maneuver by a Fortune 100 retailer. It’s a statement about the state of American consumerism, corporate adaptation, and the pressures facing even the most iconic brands as the post-pandemic economy shifts beneath their feet. The Minneapolis-based company, long hailed as the retailer that balanced affordability with style, is now grappling with four years of stagnant sales, shrinking profit margins, and a changing consumer base that’s moving away from discretionary spending. In an internal memo sent to employees, incoming CEO Michael Fiddelke framed the layoffs as a step toward simplicity, agility, and growth. But politically and economically, the move signals a deeper reckoning for U.S. corporations navigating inflation, shifting labor expectations, and the new cost structures of doing business in the 2020s.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-136659" src="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Target-Cuts-1800-Corporate-Jobs-Amid-Stagnant-Sales-and-Leadership-Change.png" alt="Target Cuts 1,800 Corporate Jobs Amid Stagnant Sales and Leadership Change." width="682" height="395" srcset="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Target-Cuts-1800-Corporate-Jobs-Amid-Stagnant-Sales-and-Leadership-Change.png 950w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Target-Cuts-1800-Corporate-Jobs-Amid-Stagnant-Sales-and-Leadership-Change-300x174.png 300w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Target-Cuts-1800-Corporate-Jobs-Amid-Stagnant-Sales-and-Leadership-Change-768x445.png 768w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Target-Cuts-1800-Corporate-Jobs-Amid-Stagnant-Sales-and-Leadership-Change-450x261.png 450w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Target-Cuts-1800-Corporate-Jobs-Amid-Stagnant-Sales-and-Leadership-Change-780x452.png 780w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 682px) 100vw, 682px" /></p>
<p data-start="1311" data-end="2302">Target’s decision arrives at an inflection point for both the company and the American economy. Inflation has cooled from its 2022 highs but remains persistent enough to pinch the purchasing power of middle-income households—the very demographic that forms the backbone of Target’s customer base. While discount retailers like Walmart have leaned heavily into groceries and essentials, Target’s product mix—roughly half discretionary goods like home décor, apparel, and electronics—makes it more vulnerable to consumer hesitation. When shoppers tighten their belts, the first things they cut are not the necessities but the extras that make Target’s aisles appealing: the new throw pillow, the seasonal décor, or the impulse beauty product picked up during a Saturday run. Those subtle shifts in spending behavior cascade into multi-billion-dollar consequences. For a company that has spent the past decade emphasizing “affordable aspiration,” the current economy challenges that very model.</p>
<p data-start="2304" data-end="3069">The 1,800 job eliminations—comprising 1,000 layoffs and 800 unfilled positions that will be permanently removed—represent approximately eight percent of Target’s corporate workforce. Though the company emphasized that no store or supply-chain roles will be affected, the symbolic weight of these cuts cannot be understated. It marks the first significant reduction since the early 2010s, when Target was still recovering from its failed expansion into Canada. This time, however, the culprit isn’t international overreach but domestic stagnation. The layoffs are a direct consequence of a company caught between competing forces: the need to invest in technology and logistics while appeasing investors demanding profitability and growth in a tight consumer market.</p>
<p data-start="3071" data-end="3739">The internal memo from Fiddelke is textbook corporate restructuring language—strategic but sober, acknowledging “the complexity we’ve created over time” and promising to “simplify how we work.” Yet beneath that polished phrasing lies an unspoken truth about the modern retail economy. Complexity, in Target’s case, isn’t just bureaucratic layering; it’s the byproduct of an American corporation trying to be everything at once: a discount retailer, a digital innovator, a fashion-forward lifestyle brand, and a socially conscious employer. When those ambitions collide with slower growth and investor impatience, the result is often a contraction dressed in euphemism.</p>
<p data-start="3741" data-end="4691">From a political-economic perspective, Target’s layoffs mirror a broader recalibration occurring across corporate America. After a pandemic-fueled hiring surge and record profits during the 2020-2021 retail boom, many companies are now adjusting to normalized demand. The Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest-rate hikes have cooled borrowing and spending, and middle-class consumers—the engine of retail—are carrying record levels of credit-card debt. Corporate America’s honeymoon with cheap capital is over. For firms like Target, which invested heavily in e-commerce infrastructure, same-day delivery logistics, and digital operations during the pandemic, the return on those investments has been slower than anticipated. Fiddelke’s “Enterprise Acceleration Office,” launched earlier this year, was designed to find efficiencies and modernize operations. The resulting layoffs are the first tangible sign of that initiative’s cost-cutting muscle.</p>
<p data-start="4693" data-end="5555">Politically, the decision underscores the tension between corporate stewardship and economic optics. Mass layoffs from a household-name company during a time of “stable” employment numbers can undercut the narrative of economic resilience touted by policymakers. Even as unemployment hovers near historic lows, these cuts feed into the perception that the post-pandemic recovery is bifurcated—solid for executives and shareholders, fragile for white-collar employees whose roles are increasingly viewed as redundant in the era of automation and AI integration. Target’s decision to have all U.S. headquarters employees work from home the week layoffs are announced is a subtle but telling choice—a measure to contain internal disruption, but also a reflection of how remote work culture has made corporate downsizing easier to implement and emotionally distance.</p>
<p data-start="5557" data-end="6513">In many ways, Target’s predicament reveals the paradox of success in the modern economy. The company was once celebrated as the anti-Walmart—more stylish, more progressive, more urban-friendly. Yet that identity now poses structural risks. Roughly half of Target’s revenue stems from discretionary spending, compared to 40 percent at Walmart. That 10-point gap, small on paper, represents billions in lost insulation against inflationary trends. When groceries and household goods dominate the market basket, companies enjoy built-in demand stability. Target’s heavier reliance on fashion, furniture, and seasonal items exposes it to volatility tied to consumer confidence. Economists often describe this as the “elastic middle”—the section of the retail market most sensitive to macroeconomic mood swings. Target has built its empire in that middle, and as inflation and interest rates reshape spending priorities, it’s finding that middle harder to hold.</p>
<p data-start="6515" data-end="7475">From a governance standpoint, these layoffs coincide with a major leadership transition. Michael Fiddelke, set to assume the CEO role on February 1, succeeds Brian Cornell, who steered the company through nearly a decade of both expansion and turbulence. Cornell’s tenure brought digital transformation and record revenue years, but also controversies—ranging from supply-chain breakdowns to public backlash over social and cultural issues. Fiddelke, a company insider who has served as both CFO and COO, inherits a brand that remains culturally relevant but operationally burdened. His dual background in finance and operations positions him as a pragmatist rather than a visionary—a leader likely to focus on cost discipline and structural simplification rather than grand reinvention. The layoffs, then, become an early indicator of his management philosophy: a willingness to make unpopular but necessary cuts to restore efficiency and investor confidence.</p>
<p data-start="7477" data-end="8389">Economically, Target’s retrenchment speaks to a larger shift in corporate strategy across industries. After a decade in which growth was prioritized over profit, public markets are once again rewarding fiscal restraint. Target’s shares have fallen 65 percent since their 2021 peak, while Walmart’s have soared 123 percent over the same period. That divergence reflects not only differences in product mix but also investor perception of risk and resilience. Walmart’s grocery-heavy model acts as a hedge against economic downturns, while Target’s emphasis on home goods and lifestyle products ties its fortunes more closely to discretionary income trends. Investors, reading the tea leaves, have shifted capital accordingly. The layoffs may therefore be less about immediate financial necessity and more about signaling to Wall Street that Target is serious about “operational discipline” in an uncertain market.</p>
<p data-start="8391" data-end="9347">Behind the headlines, however, lies the human dimension often missing from corporate press releases. The 1,000 employees being laid off—many of whom likely built their careers at Target’s Minneapolis headquarters—represent not just cost centers on a spreadsheet but the institutional memory and creative fabric of a company known for its culture of design and innovation. Severance packages and pay continuation until January 3 offer temporary relief, but the psychological toll of mass layoffs, especially ahead of the holiday season, reverberates throughout corporate America. Economists have long noted that layoffs among white-collar workers tend to depress local economies more acutely than equivalent losses in lower-wage sectors, because they reduce discretionary spending and weaken community confidence. For Minneapolis, a city still recovering from the social and economic upheavals of the past five years, Target’s cuts land like a fresh bruise.</p>
<p data-start="9349" data-end="10214">The politics of perception surrounding the decision are equally complex. Target has been navigating culture-war crossfire over the past two years, including backlash to its Pride Month merchandise and criticism from both conservative activists and progressive customers. While the company insists these layoffs are purely economic, it’s impossible to separate business from politics in an age when corporate identity has become a proxy battlefield for cultural values. Shareholders demanding better margins are often the same voices urging companies to avoid political controversy. In that context, the layoffs could be seen as an effort to depoliticize operations, streamline messaging, and pivot back to the fundamentals of retail execution. But that too is a political act—one that signals to investors that Target intends to prioritize stability over symbolism.</p>
<p data-start="10216" data-end="11252">For policymakers and economists, the Target case serves as a microcosm of the structural forces reshaping the American labor market. Corporate layoffs are no longer confined to failing industries; they are increasingly a feature of healthy companies seeking to preempt downturns. The rise of automation, cloud computing, and algorithmic analytics has made many mid-level management and data roles redundant. Companies that once relied on human oversight are finding that digital infrastructure can now replicate or outperform large chunks of white-collar work. Fiddelke’s emphasis on accelerating technology “to enable our team and delight our guests” may sound innocuous, but it carries a deeper meaning: human labor is being displaced by efficiency tools, and the modern corporation is learning to do more with fewer people. Economists call this “labor-light productivity”—a model in which growth is achieved not through job creation but through technological substitution. Target’s restructuring is a vivid example of that evolution.</p>
<p data-start="11254" data-end="12250">In broader economic terms, the layoffs also reflect a subtle but significant rebalancing of corporate priorities. During the height of the pandemic, U.S. corporations were flush with cash, aided by low interest rates and surging demand for goods. That era enabled unprecedented wage growth and expanded hiring, particularly in tech and retail. But as the Federal Reserve tightened monetary policy and borrowing costs rose, the calculus changed. Corporate America now faces an environment where capital is expensive, consumers are cautious, and inflationary pressures continue to erode real profits. The political implications of this shift are profound. It challenges the Biden administration’s narrative of “Bidenomics” delivering sustainable middle-class growth. When a company as emblematic as Target announces mass layoffs, it feeds into opposition arguments that the current economic expansion is fragile, uneven, and overly dependent on government stimulus rather than organic productivity.</p>
<p data-start="12252" data-end="13039">From a competitive standpoint, Target’s retrenchment offers a cautionary tale about strategic positioning in the retail sector. The company’s success in the 2010s was built on a unique synthesis of chic branding and mass-market accessibility—a formula that resonated with millennial and Gen-Z shoppers. But as those consumers age and confront inflation, student debt, and housing costs, their loyalty is no longer guaranteed. Younger shoppers increasingly favor thrift stores, online resale markets, and niche direct-to-consumer brands that promise authenticity over corporate polish. Target’s challenge is to reinvent its value proposition without alienating its existing customer base. That’s no small feat in an era when brand identity is scrutinized across social media in real time.</p>
<p data-start="13041" data-end="13782">The layoffs, then, are part of a broader re-engineering of Target’s organizational DNA. Fiddelke’s memo highlights a shift toward “faster execution” and “sharper priorities”—phrases that, in the corporate lexicon, often precede deeper cultural transformation. Streamlining may begin with job cuts, but it rarely ends there. Expect to see further consolidation of departments, increased reliance on automation in logistics and marketing, and a renewed emphasis on core categories such as home essentials, apparel, and digital retail integration. Politically, this repositioning could reestablish Target as a symbol of Midwestern pragmatism rather than progressive experimentation—a return to retail fundamentals after years of brand activism.</p>
<p data-start="13784" data-end="14525">In economic terms, the move also reflects the waning of the “Great Resignation” era and the arrival of what analysts call the “Great Rebalancing.” Between 2020 and 2022, labor shortages gave employees unprecedented leverage. Companies offered remote work, signing bonuses, and flexible policies to attract talent. But as markets cooled, that leverage shifted back toward employers. Target’s layoffs exemplify this reversal. The message to the workforce is clear: the age of corporate excess is over, and adaptability is the new job security. Economists may celebrate this as a natural market correction, but politically, it exposes the fragility of the middle class and the illusion of permanent upward mobility through corporate employment.</p>
<p data-start="14527" data-end="15424">Still, Target’s move is not purely defensive. It’s also a preemptive play to reassert long-term competitiveness. In his memo, Fiddelke outlines three strategic imperatives: leading with merchandising authority, elevating the guest experience, and accelerating technology. Each of these pillars aligns with broader economic trends. The first—merchandising authority—reflects the shift toward vertical integration, where companies rely less on third-party brands and more on proprietary labels to control margins. The second—guest experience—acknowledges the consumer demand for frictionless, personalized retail interactions, a realm increasingly defined by AI-driven analytics. The third—technological acceleration—illustrates the new frontier of digital infrastructure investment. Together, these priorities form the blueprint of a modernized Target: leaner, more automated, and more data-driven.</p>
<p data-start="15426" data-end="16309">Critically, the layoffs underscore how corporate America is redefining “efficiency” in the 2020s. In previous decades, efficiency meant outsourcing labor to cheaper markets or cutting supply costs. Today, it means restructuring entire corporate hierarchies around technology and agility. The elimination of 1,800 roles at Target’s headquarters is part of this paradigm shift. It’s not simply about reducing payroll expenses—it’s about redesigning how decisions are made, how data flows, and how quickly innovation can move from concept to execution. Fiddelke’s reference to “too many layers and overlapping work” is a recognition that the bureaucratic sprawl of large corporations, once seen as a symbol of strength, has become a drag on speed and creativity. Streamlining, in this context, is less about austerity and more about survival in a hyper-competitive, tech-driven economy.</p>
<p data-start="16311" data-end="17143">From an investor’s lens, the layoffs could help Target regain credibility. Wall Street has been unforgiving toward companies that miss earnings targets or show sluggish growth. Target’s 41-percent stock decline over the past five years stands in stark contrast to Walmart’s gains. By cutting costs and simplifying operations, Target hopes to send a message that it is serious about restoring shareholder value. Yet this approach carries risk. Layoffs can demoralize remaining employees, disrupt institutional knowledge, and weaken internal cohesion. The short-term boost to the balance sheet may come at the expense of long-term innovation. Economists often refer to this as “efficiency fatigue,” where over-optimization erodes resilience. Target’s challenge will be to strike a balance between fiscal prudence and creative renewal.</p>
<p data-start="17145" data-end="18006">In the political arena, corporate downsizing on this scale invariably sparks debate about the social contract between business and labor. Target, once celebrated for its employee benefits and community engagement, now faces scrutiny over whether its restructuring aligns with its stated values. While the company has promised severance and extended pay, critics argue that mass layoffs contradict the brand’s professed commitment to people-first culture. Progressive economists view such actions as symptomatic of a broader trend in which corporations prioritize shareholder returns over workforce stability. Conservative analysts, on the other hand, may interpret the cuts as a healthy exercise in market discipline. This ideological divide reflects the ongoing debate about capitalism’s moral boundaries—a debate that Target, willingly or not, has re-entered.</p>
<p data-start="18008" data-end="18676">What makes this moment particularly consequential is that Target’s move is likely to influence other retailers. When an industry leader acts, others follow. Competitors like Kohl’s, Macy’s, and even digital giants like Amazon monitor these decisions closely. If Target’s stock rebounds post-layoffs, expect similar “organizational simplifications” elsewhere. In that sense, Target’s decision may mark the beginning of a broader corporate correction across the U.S. retail sector. Such cascading layoffs could, in aggregate, affect consumer confidence, local tax bases, and even municipal politics in cities dependent on corporate headquarters for revenue and identity.</p>
<p data-start="18678" data-end="19272">Ultimately, Target’s layoffs tell a story about the American economy in miniature: a system perpetually balancing growth with contraction, innovation with inequality, and optimism with austerity. The 1,800 eliminated roles are both a symptom and a signal—a symptom of consumer slowdown, and a signal to investors that corporate America is recalibrating for a leaner, less forgiving future. Whether that future delivers stability or merely a new cycle of boom and bust will depend on how companies like Target navigate the delicate equilibrium between human capital and technological efficiency.</p>
<p data-start="19274" data-end="19830">For now, Target’s strategy is clear. Fiddelke’s memo sets a tone of disciplined realism, acknowledging the pain of layoffs while framing them as a necessary evolution. “It will be difficult,” he wrote, “and it’s a necessary step in building the future of Target.” That sentence, stripped of corporate gloss, captures the paradox of modern capitalism: progress built on sacrifice. The question is whether those sacrifices will yield a stronger company—or simply another cautionary tale in the long history of American retail’s rise, fall, and reinvention.</p>
<p>Staff Writer; <strong>L.L. McKenna<br />
</strong></p>
<p>Politics explained through the lens of justice and equity. Offering perspective that informs, challenges, and empowers.</p>
<p>One can contact this brother at; <strong><a href="mailto:LLMcKenna@ThyBlackMan.com">LLMcKenna@ThyBlackMan.com</a></strong>.</p>
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		<title>The Indoctrination and Mind Control Process of Black/African Americans.</title>
		<link>https://thyblackman.com/2025/09/26/the-indoctrination-and-mind-control-process-of-black-african-americans/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[H. Lewis Smith]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Sep 2025 20:23:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thyblackman.com/?p=136202</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Rap musicians were warned if they wanted their music accepted and promoted the n-word...HAD to be included, no if ands or buts. Most disturbing is that in the beginning Black America could have put a stop to rap music...but REFUSED to do so.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(<strong>ThyBlackMan.com</strong>) Unless you have control of your OWN mind, control of your destiny will be in the hands of others. No man is free who is not master of himself. This is why American enslavers made it a point to convert their slaves to Christianity. And the Arabs converted their 800-years slaves to Islam, in both cases, for the sole purpose of mind control. There certainly were no concerns about what happened to their souls after death. The implication that Arabs enslaved Africans for 800-years isn’t a typing error.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-136207" src="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/The-Indoctrination-and-Mind-Control-Process-of-BlackAfrican-Americans.jpg" alt="The Indoctrination and Mind Control Process of Black/African Americans." width="600" height="400" srcset="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/The-Indoctrination-and-Mind-Control-Process-of-BlackAfrican-Americans.jpg 1200w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/The-Indoctrination-and-Mind-Control-Process-of-BlackAfrican-Americans-300x200.jpg 300w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/The-Indoctrination-and-Mind-Control-Process-of-BlackAfrican-Americans-1024x683.jpg 1024w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/The-Indoctrination-and-Mind-Control-Process-of-BlackAfrican-Americans-768x512.jpg 768w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/The-Indoctrination-and-Mind-Control-Process-of-BlackAfrican-Americans-450x300.jpg 450w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/The-Indoctrination-and-Mind-Control-Process-of-BlackAfrican-Americans-780x520.jpg 780w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px" /></p>
<p>The Haitian Revolution 1791-1804. The Haitians may have been physically enslaved but NOT [mentally]. Unlike the American slaves who were both mentally and physically enslaved. Since the Haitians African [<em>Continuity</em>] had remained intact the Haitians were able to dominate and defeat three world superpowers France, England and Spain in battle and became the first Black Republic as a result. Being mentally emancipated made it possible for the Haitians to prevail.</p>
<p>Ancient Black Civilizations at one time ruled the world. They were a Spiritual group of people possessing vast Spiritual powers. Notice I didn’t say religious, I said they were [Spiritual].  No matter how much some of you may disagree…there is a difference…religion is manmade. There’s a video circulating showing a scene where Charlie Kirk is ascending some stairs where an image of Jesus Christ awaits to greet him. Think what you may, but to me the mind games are endless.</p>
<p>When you get a chance, do some research on the Dogon tribe of Africa. Without telescopes the white man has no idea what exists in outer space, yet this tribe talked about a planet which they knew existed almost a hundred years before white America discovered it with telescopes.</p>
<p>MAGA is trying to do all they can to eliminate any traces of Black History from the American education system, and it won’t be the first time it’s been done. Within the Vatican’s secret library lies concealed information about ancient Black Civilizations as well as within the Jewish Kabballah.</p>
<p>Self-knowledge is crucial because it enhances well-being, leads to better decision-making, fosters stronger relationships, and promotes personal growth by providing a deep understanding of our emotions, beliefs, strengths, and weaknesses. The only way to know ourselves is to know our history. It serves as a moral compass. The wealth of man is in his mind, in his consciousness, and for the past 400-years Black America’s consciousness has been deliberately impaired.</p>
<p>Malcolm X, before his untimely death was pursuing unification and mental liberation among Black African Americans. There is strength in numbers…but to this very day… Black Americans [refuse] to unite and see nothing wrong with how they think…as upside down and backwards it often is. Seeing ourselves as the n-word is a prime example.</p>
<p>How can Black people work out their own salvation? It involves a change in belief or mentality to be followed by a corresponding change in behavior…signifying a mental emancipation liberating Black people from the chain of traditional falsehood, which for centuries have incarcerated them in the prison of inferiority complex, world humiliation and insult. Embrace of the anathemas n-word is just one sign of self-hatred and mental imbalance.</p>
<p>China 80 years ago was a third world country, they kicked out the white man and eventually became a superpower, Africa is the exact opposite, Africa is the wealthiest continent on the planet, yet its indigenous people have millions dying from starvation. The white man’s handprints are all over Africa, as they extract the riches from the continent.</p>
<p><strong>UNITY:</strong> The BEST chance for survival belongs to the group that works <strong>TOGETHER </strong>along with the ability to determine their OWN fate and destiny. However, determining one’s own fate and destiny necessitates a [liberated] mind.</p>
<p>The shooting and killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk allows us to place the American society under a microscope. What is it about Kirks death that it commands the American flag to be flown at half-staff? His death wasn’t a national tragedy nor was he a government official. A voice was quiet from bestowing praise and glory upon the white race and belittling the Black race, Jews and LGBTQ, which is why White America is all bent out of shape. Then again having political and economic power allows one to advance their interest, influence policy and exert control.</p>
<p>What’s so disturbing is that if Charlie Kirk was a Black African American and was demeaning White America in the same manner all hell would have broken loose from the white community. It’s the atrocious hypocrisy and double standards of the American society that stinks to high heaven. It’s unfortunate that Kirks life was taken, and even more so unfortunate that people are losing their jobs for daring to express their opinions about his death. So much for freedom of speech, clearly there is no difference between the shooter and employers who fire their employees for speaking their minds about the incidence. Is America trying to replicate Hitler’s Nazi regime? Nevertheless, a society that’s based on lies and deception the truth is always reversed.</p>
<p>What’s the driving force behind Black and White America? We can begin by examining the priorities of both. Black America’s top three priorities are</p>
<p><em><strong>1.</strong></em> Jesus Christ</p>
<p><em><strong>2.</strong> </em>Jesus Christ</p>
<p>and</p>
<p><em><strong>3.</strong></em> Jesus Christ.  Black America is convinced that Jesus Christ is going to reappear and reward them for having been so faithful. Never mind the fact that over the past 2,000 years, Jesus Christ has yet to make his expected return. No ridicule intended, just merely an observation.</p>
<p>White America’s priorities are</p>
<p><em><strong>1.</strong> </em>Money/Power</p>
<p><em><strong>2.</strong></em> Firearms/Power</p>
<p><em><strong>3.</strong> </em>Power/Jesus Christ. Even though Christianity is a white man’s religion he isn’t waiting around for some mythical figure to do for him what he has been blessed with the power to do for himself. The question is what has been the key to his success? Answer: Blood! Behind the success of America lies a trail SOCKED in BLOOD. Between taking someone else’s land and then enslaving others to work the land he has exerted his free will to do as he pleases. Then there is his religion Christianity, which too leaves a trail [soaked in blood]. Christianity is the predominate religion throughout the world with Islam being second who too has a trail…soaked in blood.</p>
<p>It should be noted that all groups around the world have their own religion [except] for the Black race. Christianity and Islam are the two predominate religions within the group who at one time enslaved them, and the enslavers saw to it that they were converted. In Africa the two predominate religions for Blacks are Christianity and Islam.</p>
<p>When Malcolm X and MLK were assassinated, Black America has been leaderless ever since&#8230;by design&#8230;not by chance. The ruling class saw to it that there was nothing left to chance. During the 60s, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, expressed the sentiments of the white ruling class &#8220;that under NO CIRCUMSTANCES is the Negro community to ever be allowed to unite.&#8221;</p>
<p>Since then, the ruling class has surreptitiously controlled the leadership of the Black community, allowing musicians and athletes to step to the forefront. Hip-hop culture, rap music wasn&#8217;t happenstance&#8230;it was all by design. It&#8217;s unrelenting daily assault on the Black psyche is designed to corrupt Black Americans&#8217; sense of racial cohesion, mold the character of self-hatred, engender self-doubt, self-loathing and distrust among our group thus pulverizing Black unity and halting Black upward mobility. Use of the iniquitous n-word in rap music was of particular significance. The ruling class are masters at mind control and mind games. Something that Black America has fallen victim to for the past 400 years.</p>
<p>Rap musicians were warned if they wanted their music accepted and promoted the n-word&#8230;HAD to be included, no if ands or buts. Most disturbing is that in the beginning Black America could have put a stop to rap music&#8230;but REFUSED to do so. Black politicians, community leaders all are desensitized. If we as a community are going to overcome [anything], docility and passivity must be eradicated. Too many in the Black community are cerebrally anesthetized. Clarence Thomas, Byron Donalds, Tim Scott, Candace Owens serve as perfect examples.</p>
<p>Back in 1976, there was a young man by the name of Harold Rosenthal who was the Senior Administrative Assistant to the then Senator Jacob Javits of New York. Rosenthal took part in a paid interview exposing certain aspects of the “inner invisible world” of Jewry, revealed the modes and tactics Jews have used in destroying Christian civilization and overtly attaining control over lives and governments. If you want to read the revealing contents about this incredible interview, please click onto the following link<strong>:</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.antichristconspiracy.com/HTML%20Pages/Harold_Wallace_Rosenthal_Interview_1976.htm"><strong>http://www.antichristconspiracy.com/HTML%20Pages/Harold_Wallace_Rosenthal_Interview_1976.htm</strong></a></p>
<p>Unfortunately, for Mr. Rosenthal, though he was paid handsomely for the interview, it cost him his life. Days after the interview he ended up being killed with a bullet hole in his head. I read the interview<strong>;</strong> it’s explosive and little wonder it cost him his life.  However, be forewarned the interview is rather lengthy and isn’t a quick read.</p>
<p>Staff Writer; <strong>H. Lewis Smith</strong></p>
<p>This talented brother is the founder and president of UVCC, the United Voices for a Common Cause, Inc., <a href="http://www.theunitedvoices.com/">http://www.theunitedvoices.com</a> author of Bury that Sucka: A Scandalous Love Affair with the N-Word, and the recently released book Undressing the N-word: Revealing the Naked Truth, Lies, Deceit and Mind Games <a href="https://www.createspace.com/4655015">https://www.createspace.com/4655015</a></p>
<p>Also follow Mr. Smith on Twitter: <strong><a href="http://www.twitter.com/thescoop1">http://www.twitter.com/thescoop1</a>. </strong><em> </em> <b> </b></p>
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		<title>Donald Trump and the Republican Propaganda Playbook: Race and False Narratives.</title>
		<link>https://thyblackman.com/2025/08/27/donald-trump-republican-propaganda-false-narratives/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Al Alatunji]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2025 02:39:26 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Donald Trump and Republicans have perfected political propaganda, from the welfare queen myth to fearmongering about immigrants, crime, and transgender people—echoing the tactics of the Third Reich.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(<strong>ThyBlackMan.com</strong>) Republicans even before Trump have been masters in the messaging war. They have used the playbook of the Third Reich that the bigger the lie, the more often it was stated and the louder it was amplified the more likely people will believe it. Republicans have perfected that approach with the voters. Trump however has taken it to an even higher level.</p>
<p>For years Republicans pushed the narrative of the welfare queen who was beating the system by receiving welfare while riding around in a late model luxury car. The image Republicans stealthily crafted was for voters to envision a Black woman as the welfare queen taking advantage of the system and the taxpayers.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-135531" src="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/image-43.png" alt="Donald Trump and the Republican Propaganda Playbook: Race and False Narratives." width="690" height="233" srcset="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/image-43.png 1239w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/image-43-300x101.png 300w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/image-43-1024x345.png 1024w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/image-43-768x259.png 768w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/image-43-450x152.png 450w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/image-43-780x263.png 780w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 690px) 100vw, 690px" /></p>
<p>Racist yes, false yes, but extremely effective despite the fact the majority of people on welfare were whites. The image Republicans wanted voters to have in mind when they went to the polls to vote was that of the Black welfare queen cheat.</p>
<p>More recently, taking their cue from Trump, immigrants in particular immigrants from Latin America and Haiti were projected as barbarians coming to destroy America and its people. These Brown and Black people, a savage invading army, Blitzkrieg across open borders at the personal direction and encouragement of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris. Trump and Republicans went into overdrive shouting that message to the masses.</p>
<p>Savage invaders bringing guns and fentanyl to cause destruction and death to Americans. Rapists and pedophiles, Trump and Republicans maintained, recruited by Democrats and their billionaire donors to cause havoc in America. Being brought into the country again personally by President Biden and Vice President Harris to steal American jobs while raping woman and children.</p>
<p>It seems a lot of people truly believed it from the polls. Or was it just an excuse to cover and hide their racist and sexist desire not to vote for the Black woman?</p>
<p>A whole lot of American voters, Republicans, Independents and Democrats truly believed this false narrative of open borders and savage Brown and Black people flooding into the country to hurt and harm America and Americans. Trump and Republicans clearly received a grade of A+ for their creativity while receiving a F- with a red circle for honesty.</p>
<p>If that narrative, which was extremely effective, was not enough, Trump and Republicans decided to create the false narrative about transgender people who make up one whole percent of the population taking over schools and bathrooms across the US forcing men to become women and women to become men.</p>
<p>As the propagandists of the Third Reich would be only happy to point out, if you tell a lie often and loudly, the people will believe it. So, Trump and his Republicans allies stated that false narrative often and loudly. A whole lot of people believed it.</p>
<p>Despite Americans still dying of drug use, as if Trump and Republicans really cared about drug use in the US, now there is complete silence from Trump and Republicans about fentanyl and America’s drug problem. Did the issue magically go away or was it just another false narrative to fool the gullible?</p>
<p>It is understandable if there are Americans who are confused about what is really happening regarding America’s drug problem. First and foremost, America has a drug problem. It is part of its mental health problem. A problem the nation refuses to acknowledge.</p>
<p>Perhaps there is too much money to be made from the illicit drug industry. Nonetheless, Americans are some of the unhappiest people on the planet. That too is part of its mental health problem.</p>
<p>Still, it is understandable if Americans are confused. On one hand, Trump and Republicans in their One, Big, Ugly Bill Act eliminated funding for programs aimed at fighting drug and substance abuse.</p>
<p>On the other hand, Trump is threatening to send the US military to invade Mexico to fight the cartels. Maybe his threat was just an attempt to change the narrative away from the Epstein-Trump files?</p>
<p>Which brings me to the subject of the new false narrative. Trump and his Republicans minions are gearing up for the 2026 midterm elections. They need a new false narrative to run on. That new false narrative is that crime is out of control and lawlessness is rampant in various US big cities.</p>
<p>Trump has already deployed National Guard troops to Los Angeles and recently to Washington DC. In Los Angeles, he cited lawlessness during the protest against his regime’s use of masked men to round up and detain people. In DC, his decision to use the National Guard was because of a supposed car jacketing of a federal employee.</p>
<p>The use of troops in big cities is something that Trump has wanted to do. Were agent provocateurs used in Los Angeles to cause trouble as an excuse to use the National Guard? Was there really a carjacking in DC?</p>
<p>When a person lies so much it becomes very difficult for people to believe the person when they are actually telling the truth. At the same time, governments including the US have used false flags to provide the pretense to do what they actually wanted to do.</p>
<p>Trump targeting Los Angeles, Washington DC, Baltimore, New York and Chicago is to be expected. Why? Because each is a city in which a majority of the residents are people of color and is headed by a Black mayor.</p>
<p>Los Angeles and DC in particular have a Black woman as mayor and Trump has a particular dislike of Black women. Probably because they refused to allow him to abuse and mistreat them as he was able to do with other women.</p>
<p>During the run up to the 2024 presidential election, Trump and Republicans flooded the airwaves with political commercials which highlighted an immigrant killing a citizen while driving. However, no mention of the hundreds of drunk driving incidents by Road Rage Nancy and Billy Boy that same day.  For the latter, it was just another day in the USA.</p>
<p>Similar political commercials can be expected highlighting some incident in a big city in which Nancy or Billy Boy somehow end up being a victim, real or fake.</p>
<p>As we inch towards 2026, we can expect the rhetoric to be constant and loud regarding crime and lawlessness in big cities. Although the reports, both local and FBI, indicate that crime in major US cities has seen a significant drop from the covid years that will not stop Trump and Republicans from voicing otherwise.</p>
<p>It will not stop Trump and Republicans from fabricating a false, fake and phony narrative about crime and lawlessness. They know if they say it long enough, often enough and loud enough a significant number of Americans will believe it. Trump and Republicans are counting on it.</p>
<p>Social scientists were very clear once it became known that the US and the world were in a world-wide pandemic what more than likely would occur based on what had happened during the 1919 Spanish Flu pandemic. They pointed out that there would be increase in crime and lawlessness, substance abuse, depression, suicides and inflation.</p>
<p>All those things occurred and were in response to the pandemic. So, crime went up everywhere, not just big cities. However, crime and lawlessness have returned to pre-covid numbers. Nevertheless, that will not stop Trump and his Republican flunkies from blatantly lying to the American people about crime and lawlessness.</p>
<p>At the same time, to be fair, crime and lawlessness have increased significantly in the US since January 2025. It is being directed out of the White House by the biggest criminal to step foot inside the Oval Office. If anyone knows about crime and lawlessness it is the crime master, Donald J. Trump.</p>
<p>Staff Writer; <strong>Al Alatunji</strong></p>
<p class="pf0"><span class="cf0">Question or comment regarding this article? Feel free to send a message to: <strong><a href="mailto:Alatunji@ThyBlackMan.com">Alatunji@ThyBlackMan.com</a></strong>.</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>America’s 250th Anniversary: Defending Liberty Against Modern-Day Redcoats.</title>
		<link>https://thyblackman.com/2025/03/03/americas-250th-anniversary-defending-liberty-against-modern-day-redcoats/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Staff]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Mar 2025 06:12:54 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[We, true Patriots, will never be made subservient and will not surrender our Constitutional right to self-defense and our individual American responsibility to secure our Nation, seeing that you prefer not. Focus on the criminals, illegal and otherwise, which you seem to embrace, but leave us the hell alone. And if any of you modern-day Redcoats have a problem with what I have written, come see me on April 19th in Lexington, Massachusetts; let's play Patriot and Redcoat.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(<strong>ThyBlackMan.com</strong>) Our great Constitutional Republic is about to enter into an incredible historic moment: its 250th anniversary of independence. Now, to many Countries across the globe that is just a drop in the bucket. But when one considers the great strides and achievements that the United States of America has made in 250 years, it is unbelievable. It is also rather unconscionable that the cultural Marxists of the progressive socialist left would disavow the Nation&#8217;s founding and history with such absurdities as the 1619 Project.</p>
<p dir="ltr">I remember America&#8217;s 200th birthday in 1776 when I was just a 15-year-old kid growing up in Atlanta. It was a moment of pride, and as I prepare for the 250th, it is a time of even greater pride. However, before we get to July 4, 1776, American Independence Day, just so you know, the Republican Party of Texas was founded by 150 Black men on American Independence Day, 1867. Just two years after they found out they were free, on June 19, 1865.</p>
<p dir="ltr"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-130222" src="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Americas-250th-Anniversary-Defending-Liberty-Against-Modern-Day-Redcoats.png" alt="America’s 250th Anniversary: Defending Liberty Against Modern-Day Redcoats." width="653" height="343" srcset="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Americas-250th-Anniversary-Defending-Liberty-Against-Modern-Day-Redcoats.png 1200w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Americas-250th-Anniversary-Defending-Liberty-Against-Modern-Day-Redcoats-300x158.png 300w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Americas-250th-Anniversary-Defending-Liberty-Against-Modern-Day-Redcoats-1024x538.png 1024w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Americas-250th-Anniversary-Defending-Liberty-Against-Modern-Day-Redcoats-768x403.png 768w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Americas-250th-Anniversary-Defending-Liberty-Against-Modern-Day-Redcoats-450x236.png 450w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Americas-250th-Anniversary-Defending-Liberty-Against-Modern-Day-Redcoats-780x410.png 780w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 653px) 100vw, 653px" /></p>
<p dir="ltr"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">But, an even more important 250th anniversary is approaching within two months</span></strong>. It is the 250th anniversary of the Battle of Lexington and Concord, where our American Revolution began. As part of my growth as an American Patriot, I will be in Lexington on Saturday, 19 April, to be a part of the remembrance. I am especially looking forward to running the 111th Annual Lexington Five Miler, part of the celebration of &#8220;the shot fired heard &#8217;round the world.&#8221; Imagine that the kid born in the inner city of Atlanta, Georgia, in a segregated, Blacks-only hospital, will be running a five-mile race on the day 250 years ago, almost to the exact time when men stood against the greatest military power the world knew at that time.</p>
<p dir="ltr">It is a special day to remember and honor because on that day, April 19, 1775, there was no United States of America. Heck, there was no Army, Navy, or Marine Corps and certainly no Air Force or Space Force. So, who was it? What was the driving determination that brought those men out of their homes and taverns, as well as their sense of comfort? It was the called upon militia, ordinary men who believed in a simple ideal—individual Liberty. And so it goes, they had a name based upon that concept—the Sons of Liberty.</p>
<p dir="ltr">However, if the Sons of Liberty were alive today, would they understand what just happened in the State of Colorado? Colorado just voted in their State House and Senate, by way of leftist majorities, to ban specified semi-automatic pistols, rifles, and shotguns. Of course, the left would refer to these weapons as &#8220;assault weapons.&#8221; Then again, anything used to enact bodily harm against another is an assault weapon. The Sons of Liberty would identify these members of the Colorado State Legislature who voted for this measure, which Governor Jared Polis will certainly sign, as modern-day Redcoats.</p>
<p dir="ltr">On April 19, 1775, the mission of the British troops marching inland from Boston was to find and destroy a weapons and armaments factory that was supplying the Sons of Liberty. The Redcoats then, as the modern Redcoats now, understood that you could only subjugate a population that was unarmed. The British, like the progressive socialists, want subjects. Then as now, they comprehend that armed individuals have a greater chance to resist and be citizens. As a matter of fact, it was Thomas Paine who asserted, &#8220;the duty of a true Patriot is to protect his Country from its government.&#8221; So, why would these leftist Colorado legislators pass legislation banning weapons that have a detachable magazine?</p>
<p dir="ltr">Perhaps we should review the words of the Second Amendment, a Constitutional right. &#8220;A well regulated (regulated means training in the language of the Founding Fathers, not ATF) militia (that means all of us, or as we say down south all y&#8217;all, legal law-abiding citizens) being necessary to the security of a Free State (it is the responsibility of each of us to not just provide for our self-defense, but also the security of our State/Nation-State. Remember, on April 19, 1775, there was no Army, Navy, or Marine Corps), therefore the RIGHT of the people to KEEP and BEAR arms SHALL NOT BE INFRINGED.&#8221; Pretty easy to understand language unless you are a modern-day Redcoat seeking to undermine individual liberty.</p>
<p dir="ltr">For clarity, the Second Amendment is the &#8220;law of the land&#8221; and has withstood Supreme Court tests such as Heller v. DC and McDonald v. Chicago. Funny, leftists believe that their ideological agenda should be codified as a right&#8230; same-sex marriage. Yet that which is in the Constitution contradictory to their agenda is not. Lest we forget, Joe Biden telling us that &#8220;no amendment to the Constitution is absolute.&#8221;</p>
<p dir="ltr">This recent unconstitutional action and violation of the Second Amendment comes from Colorado, where we still remember the video showing criminal armed illegal immigrants going about an apartment complex. These are the same criminal illegal immigrant Tren de Aragua gang members that leftists want to protect. But, for some odd reason, leftists, modern-day Redcoats, want to disarm legal, law-abiding Americans, making them more susceptible to assault and attack by these dangerous individuals, along with terrorists, they have allowed freely into our Country.</p>
<p dir="ltr">These progressive socialists always ramble on about women&#8217;s rights, which they associate with dismembering babies in the womb. What about a woman&#8217;s right to self-defense? Why target and punish women, Americans, all for a diabolical, tyrannical intent? And it is not just in Colorado, but consider the unconstitutional gun laws in Massachusetts, where they fired the shot that started the American Revolution. The modern-day Redcoats in Massachusetts have done what the original Redcoats intended.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Scottish political philosopher Alexander Fraser Tytler reminded us of the life cycle of a Republic, a representative Democracy. He said, &#8220;A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship. The average age of the world&#8217;s greatest civilizations has been 200 years. These nations have progressed through this sequence: From bondage to spiritual faith, From spiritual faith to great courage, From courage to liberty, From liberty to abundance, From abundance to selfishness, From selfishness to apathy, From apathy to dependence, From dependence back into bondage.”</p>
<p dir="ltr">On April 19, 1775, one of the leaders was Jonas Clark, the Lexington Minister representing spiritual faith. That spiritual faith gave birth to courage, and from that courage came liberty. Where would you say America is in its life cycle? And I know that progressive socialists love to rant about Donald Trump being a dictator. Still, the recipe for a dictatorship comes from loose fiscal policy, massive debt, economic enslavement and dependency, and, of course, disarmament of the population. That has been evidenced over and over again.</p>
<p dir="ltr">The Democrat legislators in Colorado, sorry, the modern-day Redcoats, should be ashamed. Back in the day, when our Country was beginning, they would have been tarred and feathered and referred to as traitors. I do not consent to the former, but they are certainly the latter&#8230;as with all leftists and Marxists who wish to violate the Second Amendment and make subjects out of citizens.</p>
<p dir="ltr">My response to the delusional leftists in Colorado, Massachusetts, and all across our Country is two words, &#8220;Foxtrot Oscar.&#8221; We, true Patriots, will never be made subservient and will not surrender our Constitutional right to self-defense and our individual American responsibility to secure our Nation, seeing that you prefer not. Focus on the criminals, illegal and otherwise, which you seem to embrace, but leave us the hell alone. And if any of you modern-day Redcoats have a problem with what I have written, come see me on April 19th in Lexington, Massachusetts; let&#8217;s play Patriot and Redcoat.</p>
<p dir="ltr">To the brave Patriots in Colorado, do not bow the knee. Remember that Frederick Douglass, a former slave and American Patriot, once said, &#8220;A man&#8217;s rights rest in three boxes: the ballot box, jury box, and cartridge box.&#8221;</p>
<p dir="ltr">I guess that is why deranged leftists tore down Douglass&#8217; statue in Rochester, New York.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Steadfast and Loyal.</p>
<p>Written by <strong>Allen West</strong></p>
<p><em>Official website</em>;<a href="https://x.com/AllenWest"> https://x.com/AllenWest</a></p>
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		<title>The Cost of Convenience: How Corporate Rollbacks and Trump&#8217;s Retribution Impact Women and Minorities.</title>
		<link>https://thyblackman.com/2025/02/05/the-cost-of-convenience-how-corporate-rollbacks-and-trumps-retribution-impact-women-and-minorities/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Staff]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Feb 2025 19:39:16 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[So much for progress! As a Costco shareholder, I will be shopping at Costco and I hope you will too.  They didn’t join this insulting group of companies cutting DEI. WAKE UP AND STAY WOKE!  Everybody who seeks your business is not your friend!]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(<strong>ThyBlackMan.com</strong>) Often people shop where it’s convenient without thinking about the fact that the money they spend may be detrimental to them. Obviously you are free to do that, but we’re currently being asked to take a close look at everything that impacts us because so many things being done by the Trump Administration prove they are seeking retribution!</p>
<p>So many scary things have already begun.  Take for instance Trump and his party have always claimed to be totally in support of the police no matter what they did.  Their union even endorsed Trump, but now they feel betrayed!  Some of their colleagues were killed by the very people he pardoned.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-129136" src="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/The-Cost-of-Convenience-How-Corporate-Rollbacks-and-Trumps-Retribution-Impact-Women-and-Minorities.png" alt="The Cost of Convenience: How Corporate Rollbacks and Trump's Retribution Impact Women and Minorities." width="501" height="331" srcset="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/The-Cost-of-Convenience-How-Corporate-Rollbacks-and-Trumps-Retribution-Impact-Women-and-Minorities.png 1742w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/The-Cost-of-Convenience-How-Corporate-Rollbacks-and-Trumps-Retribution-Impact-Women-and-Minorities-300x198.png 300w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/The-Cost-of-Convenience-How-Corporate-Rollbacks-and-Trumps-Retribution-Impact-Women-and-Minorities-1024x676.png 1024w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/The-Cost-of-Convenience-How-Corporate-Rollbacks-and-Trumps-Retribution-Impact-Women-and-Minorities-768x507.png 768w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/The-Cost-of-Convenience-How-Corporate-Rollbacks-and-Trumps-Retribution-Impact-Women-and-Minorities-1536x1014.png 1536w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/The-Cost-of-Convenience-How-Corporate-Rollbacks-and-Trumps-Retribution-Impact-Women-and-Minorities-450x297.png 450w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/The-Cost-of-Convenience-How-Corporate-Rollbacks-and-Trumps-Retribution-Impact-Women-and-Minorities-780x515.png 780w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/The-Cost-of-Convenience-How-Corporate-Rollbacks-and-Trumps-Retribution-Impact-Women-and-Minorities-1600x1056.png 1600w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 501px) 100vw, 501px" /></p>
<p>The whole world knew what happened January 6<sup>th, </sup>so Trump had to know.  It didn’t matter to him.  It was a part of his retribution plan and caused  companies to roll back Diversity Equity and Inclusion—referred to as DEI. This is a racist and sexist move. The only reason the programs existed was how women and minorities historically were shut out of certain jobs and other opportunities enjoyed by white men.  I couldn’t help but wonder how white women and minorities feel about what’s happened to their future opportunities. Black women have always had to be better than the rest to enjoy many of the opportunities others have always had—and we still meet the challenges!</p>
<p>Companies like Target, McDonalds and Walmart where so many women and minorities are known to shop and take their children! McDonalds depends on children. Will people continue to take their children there?</p>
<p>As for Target, they have the gall to roll back Target’s DEI programs. They’ve already sent a memo to their employees, telling them it will end its three-year DEI goals, rolling back diversity, equity and inclusion programs — including some they admit aim to make its workforce and merchandise better reflect its customers. They are stopping reports to external groups like the Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equality Index and end a program focused on carrying more products from Black- or minority-owned businesses! In prior years, Target officials said the murder of George Floyd in the company’s hometown of Minneapolis motivated it to strengthen its DEI programs!  Now this!</p>
<p>Most of us have never heard of Meta, so I can’t tell you about why they would roll back their DEI program! I know no one who works there, but look them up, as well as other companies that jumped immediately to help Trump succeed with his 2025 threats especially meant for women and minorities.</p>
<p>Look at Social Security—a federal program to help people in their old age, survivors and people with disabilities.  These recipients have worked—a lot for many years.  Lots of them are relatives of the very Members of Congress supporting Trump on taking the benefits away! Can you imagine one of these supporters of taking social security away and walking into a home saying “Grandma or Grandpa, we’re supporting Trump cutting your check next month”—something some of them have as their only income to just get by!  This is a cruel decision and all of us should withdraw our support from anyone who supports this decision.</p>
<p>This guy has shut us down from involvement in the World Health Organization and cut off the ability of scientists to receive critically needed grants for research.</p>
<p>These decisions follow Trump’s orders immediately after his Inauguration, to end government DEI programs and put federal officials overseeing them on leave!</p>
<p>So much for progress! As a Costco shareholder, I will be shopping at Costco and I hope you will too.  They didn’t join this insulting group of companies cutting DEI. WAKE UP AND STAY WOKE!  Everybody who seeks your business is not your friend!</p>
<p>Written By <strong>Dr. E. Faye Williams</strong></p>
<p><em>Official website; </em><a href="http://www.efayewilliams.com/">http://www.efayewilliams.com/</a></p>
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		<title>The Struggle of Brilliant Black Women: Kamala Harris and America&#8217;s Double Standards.</title>
		<link>https://thyblackman.com/2024/12/17/the-struggle-of-brilliant-black-women-kamala-harris-and-americas-double-standards/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Dec 2024 17:52:30 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[We must continue our unity to help as many as we can to get our people across the finish line despite unfair criticism or treatment of a woman who worked miracles in a very short time. Vice-President Kamala Harris won our hearts—and it’s not clear how the election ended showing just one name on so many ballots leaving hers off. Now, he wants to take away Obama Care and all he can offer is a CONCEPT of a plan. People can’t be healed on that, but I don’t think he understands that or cares.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(<strong>ThyBlackMan.com</strong>) Let’s face it. There are some people who are jealous and can’t stand the idea of so many brilliant Black women! I admit, there are a lot and it might be a bit overwhelming. Just look at history and look around you now. No matter what many Black women do, we have a rough row to hoe!  If you didn’t grow up on a farm you may not know what I mean!</p>
<p>Black people can’t talk about others eating dogs and cats and be lying or be drunkards and rapists and still become <em>leaders</em> of our nation. None can take non-consensual sexual liberties and still get high level appointments such as being on track for becoming Secretary of Defense and verbalize not wanting women to be in combat to defend our country! One can’t be Director of the FBI so he can carry out his list he’s already prepared for retribution. One can’t be Secretary of Education just to shut down the Department of Education. Another can’t be Director of Intelligence while we’re concerned about exposing our Intelligence to enemies of our nation.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-127901" src="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/The-Struggle-of-Brilliant-Black-Women-2024-Kamala-Harris-and-Americas-Double-Standards.jpg" alt="The Struggle of Brilliant Black Women: Kamala Harris and America's Double Standards." width="521" height="347" srcset="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/The-Struggle-of-Brilliant-Black-Women-2024-Kamala-Harris-and-Americas-Double-Standards.jpg 612w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/The-Struggle-of-Brilliant-Black-Women-2024-Kamala-Harris-and-Americas-Double-Standards-300x200.jpg 300w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/The-Struggle-of-Brilliant-Black-Women-2024-Kamala-Harris-and-Americas-Double-Standards-450x300.jpg 450w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 521px) 100vw, 521px" /></p>
<p>We’re expected to deal with a person who does not believe in many of the health procedures we’ve come to know. We’re asked to believe a person who doesn’t care about us, or someone who doesn’t believe in environmental protections! We can’t crown numerous unqualified family members to important positions. Lord, what are we in for with the next administration!</p>
<p>It seems that everything we must get ready for deals with the opposite of what we thought was the correct thing to do. Is a history of alcohol abuse, disrespecting women, cozying up to authoritarian leaders, knowing how to lie to the point that the majority of Americans believe them—is that okay?  It seems to be preferred that they not be guilty of just one crime but more is better! It seems to help if they have a few potential convictions waiting ahead. All they have to do is get postponements—one after another. They’re not required to tell the truth, nor to return important documents. Just keeping them in a bathroom or any other unsecured place is okay!</p>
<p>It’s okay if they want to attack America’s sacred institutions, kill police, injure others, ransack offices, crash windows and doors and leave behind a lot of destruction. They’ll be called patriots and pardoned for those acts.  They are then told by the man in charge he loves them and he promises to pardon them!</p>
<p>Shortly afterward, he’ll be able to pardon himself! He has Presidential Immunity so he can do whatever pleases him.</p>
<p>It’s strange that a brilliant woman ran a noble campaign against the guy and lost? There was no gloom and doom—just joy in her campaign!  She never disrespected anyone. She never promised retribution. She’s so much smarter than he is. She’s a brilliant woman–but that’s true for so many Black women. The Administration she now works with is handing over a better economy to the guy coming in– just as President Obama handed one over to the guy who always gets breaks people like him don’t deserve. That’s just the way America has always been.</p>
<p>We must continue our unity to help as many as we can to get our people across the finish line despite unfair criticism or treatment of a woman who worked miracles in a very short time. <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Vice-President Kamala Harris</strong></span> won our hearts—and it’s not clear how the election ended showing just one name on so many ballots leaving hers off. Now, he wants to take away Obama Care and all he can offer is a CONCEPT of a plan. People can’t be healed on that, but I don’t think he understands that or cares.</p>
<p>Written By <strong>Dr. E. Faye Williams</strong></p>
<p><em>Official website; </em><a href="http://www.efayewilliams.com/">http://www.efayewilliams.com/</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Is Watts Facing a Water Crisis Like Flint? The Fight for Safe Drinking Water in Underserved Communities.</title>
		<link>https://thyblackman.com/2024/11/25/is-watts-facing-a-water-crisis-like-flint-the-fight-for-safe-drinking-water-in-underserved-communities/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:30:16 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[That’s a question that was repeatedly asked in Flint, Jackson, and dozens of other poor communities that must drink unsafe water. It’s a question that now must be asked by Watts residents who face the same potential danger. Los Angeles city officials have a duty and obligation to give them the same answer they would give residents on L. A’s Westside and other upscale areas in L.A. that never have to worry about disease or a life-threatening hazard from tainted water.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(<strong>ThyBlackMan.com</strong>) Is Watts the new Flint, Michigan? This is not an academic, or hyperbole question. It’s potentially a deadly serious issue to thousands of Watts residents and especially those in the sprawling Nickerson Gardens Housing project.</p>
<p>Put simply, test after test by L.A. city officials have shown that the lethal lead content in the resident’s water potentially reaches serious health hazard levels. The worst part is that city health officials still say they need to conduct yet another round of testing. So, it’s no exaggeration to utter the name Flint and the situation that plagued that city’s residents with their chemically contaminated water in the same breath as Watts.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-127244" src="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Is-Watts-Facing-a-Water-Crisis-Like-Flint-The-Fight-for-Safe-Drinking-Water-in-Underserved-Communities.jpg" alt="Is Watts Facing a Water Crisis Like Flint? The Fight for Safe Drinking Water in Underserved Communities." width="569" height="320" srcset="https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Is-Watts-Facing-a-Water-Crisis-Like-Flint-The-Fight-for-Safe-Drinking-Water-in-Underserved-Communities.jpg 1280w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Is-Watts-Facing-a-Water-Crisis-Like-Flint-The-Fight-for-Safe-Drinking-Water-in-Underserved-Communities-300x169.jpg 300w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Is-Watts-Facing-a-Water-Crisis-Like-Flint-The-Fight-for-Safe-Drinking-Water-in-Underserved-Communities-1024x576.jpg 1024w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Is-Watts-Facing-a-Water-Crisis-Like-Flint-The-Fight-for-Safe-Drinking-Water-in-Underserved-Communities-768x432.jpg 768w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Is-Watts-Facing-a-Water-Crisis-Like-Flint-The-Fight-for-Safe-Drinking-Water-in-Underserved-Communities-450x253.jpg 450w, https://thyblackman.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Is-Watts-Facing-a-Water-Crisis-Like-Flint-The-Fight-for-Safe-Drinking-Water-in-Underserved-Communities-780x439.jpg 780w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 569px) 100vw, 569px" /></p>
<p>A decade ago, millions of Americans were shocked at the appalling water contamination that the mostly poor Black residents of Flint, Michigan faced. They suffered the prospect of deadly risk of disease and death from unsafe drinking water.</p>
<p>The double shock was that city, state and even federal officials knew about the deadly drinking water crisis but dithered, delayed, made excuses, and pointed fingers. Meanwhile the residents got sicker and sicker from the tainted water.</p>
<p>The grim reality that is confirmed in countless studies by local health departments and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is that there is a gaping disparity in safe water in homes and neighborhoods. The reason is race. The EPA has repeatedly found that poor, impoverished Black and Hispanics are far more likely to drink chemically contaminated water than middle class, upscale whites. One particularly damning report by an environmental research group is entitled <em>Watered Down Justice</em>. The group examined EPA data on safe water in communities for a three-year period from 2016 to 2019. It found that many local agencies for years blatantly violated the EPA’s Safe Drinking Water Act. This mandates safe drinking water in communities of color.</p>
<p>Worse, when the violations were pointed out local officials often dragged their feet for months even years before fully implementing safe water standards in these communities. The report noted that unsafe drinking water and a lack of standard enforcement affected more than 0ne hundred and thirty million Americans. Again, the disproportionate number of those were Black, Hispanic, and Native Americans both in the cities and in rural areas.</p>
<p>The foot dragging by officials has lethal consequences. Chemically tainted water is consistently linked directly to the increased risk of cancer, compromised fertility, developmental effects, serious infections, and many more health maladies. The damaging effect of unsafe water poses the greatest peril to children, the physically and health challenged, and older persons.</p>
<p>“There is no question that Black and brown communities disproportionately suffer from a lack of access to clean safe water, more so than white communities,” EPA Assistant Administrator Radhika Fox, who runs the agency’s water office, noted, “There are a lot of factors that have led to this, but underinvestment is a huge problem.”</p>
<p>The Biden administration took due note of the danger. In 2022, it allocated more than fifty billion dollars for water infrastructure improvement. The problem though was getting the money for safe water improvement to the neighborhoods that were most affected, namely Black, and Hispanic neighborhoods.</p>
<p>The money had to go through a cumbersome and time-consuming process before release. The states had to apply on behalf of the targeted cities. Approval of the funding would take even more time. In the meantime, the water faucets in the homes of residents in impoverished communities continued to spew chemically contaminated water and the health hazards that this posed continued to mount.</p>
<p>The lead danger in the water in the taps of Watts residents directly parallels that of Flint and Jackson, Mississippi. Officials, after acknowledging the potential crisis, took months to act. They issued flowery statements expressing concern, promised that funds would be allocated for water system upgrade and installing filtration systems, and as in Watts assured that there would be more tests run to determine how unsafe the lead levels in the water were,</p>
<p>Again, while all this posturing and maneuvering for public effect happened as expected the residents continued to be exposed to the perilous water.</p>
<p>There was yet another cautionary note in the potential similarity between the unsafe water crisis in Flint and Watts. Many residents bemoaned their initial lack of action in demanding that local and state officials take real proactive action to fix the problem. As one Flint resident noted, “Clean water is a basic human right, and we shouldn’t have to argue about it. The earth couldn’t survive without water, how much more so can a human being survive without water?”</p>
<p>That’s a question that was repeatedly asked in Flint, Jackson, and dozens of other poor communities that must drink unsafe water. It’s a question that now must be asked by Watts residents who face the same potential danger. Los Angeles city officials have a duty and obligation to give them the same answer they would give residents on L. A’s Westside and other upscale areas in L.A. that never have to worry about disease or a life-threatening hazard from tainted water.</p>
<p>Written By <strong>Earl Ofari Hutchinson</strong></p>
<p>One can find more info about Mr. Hutchinson over at the following site; <strong><a href="http://thehutchinsonreport.net/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">TheHutchinson Report</a></strong>.</p>
<p>Also feel free to connect with him through twitter; <a href="http://twitter.com/earlhutchinson" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">http://twitter.com/earlhutchins</a></p>
<p class="adgrid-ad-target">He is also an associate editor of New America Media. His forthcoming book is <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0692370714" target="_hplink" rel="noopener noreferrer">From King to Obama: Witness to a Turbulent History</a></em> (Middle Passage Press).</p>
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