Author: blackusarising_6gsjdl

The future is here — artificial intelligence, automation, and digital technology are rewriting the job market. Yet too many of our children are still being trained for an economy that no longer exists. If Black America does not get serious about preparing the next generation for STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math), we risk being locked out of the future before it fully arrives. The Coming Shift By 2030, millions of jobs will be lost to automation and AI. At the same time, the fastest-growing and highest-paying fields are in technology, healthcare, and skilled trades. The gap is clear: the…

Read More

Black America commands over $1.6 trillion in annual spending power. On paper, that would make us one of the largest economies in the world. Yet in reality, our communities remain poor, underdeveloped, and dependent. Why? Because the Black dollar leaves our neighborhoods within hours of being earned, enriching everyone but us. The Black Dollar in Numbers Studies show that a dollar circulates for nearly a month in Asian communities, close to 20 days in Jewish communities, and about 17 days in white communities. In Black America, that same dollar often leaves in less than 6 hours. That means the money…

Read More

The foundation of every strong nation is the family. For Black America, that foundation has been under attack for decades. The decline of marriage, the rise of single-parent households, and cultural confusion about gender roles have left deep scars across generations. Until we rebuild the family, no economic plan, no political strategy, and no social movement will truly succeed. The Numbers Behind the Crisis In the 1960s, nearly 80% of Black children were raised in two-parent households. Today, that number has dropped to less than 40%. More than 70% of Black children are born outside of marriage. These are not…

Read More

For decades, Black America has been told that government programs are the answer to poverty and inequality. Welfare, housing vouchers, food stamps, bail reform, education initiatives — all marketed as lifelines. But after generations of dependency, the question must be asked: have these programs truly developed our people, or have they kept us trapped in survival mode? The Promise of Policy vs. The Reality When the War on Poverty was launched in the 1960s, politicians promised opportunity and uplift. Instead, the Black family collapsed, urban neighborhoods deteriorated, and dependency became normalized. Social policy has too often been less about empowerment…

Read More

When leadership fails, communities don’t just fall behind — they unravel. Nowhere is that more visible than in the education of Black boys. Year after year, report after report, the numbers show the same grim reality: Black boys rank at the bottom of nearly every key academic measure. Reading, math, graduation rates, discipline — across the board, the system is not failing them by accident. It is functioning exactly as designed. The Numbers Don’t Lie According to federal data, less than 15% of Black boys are proficient in reading by eighth grade. Dropout rates remain disproportionately high, and suspensions and…

Read More

Donald Trump promised America First, but his record tells a different story. Billions of U.S. tax dollars are flowing to Israel while Black communities in America suffer from crumbling schools, failing infrastructure, and no serious investment. And this isn’t just Trump — Biden, Harris, Clinton, even Obama empowered pro-Israel lobbyists while Black America got speeches, symbolism, and silence. Why are our leaders afraid to speak up? Why are Black voices bought off or silenced when it comes to foreign aid, while reparations and economic development for our people are ignored? This video breaks down the truth about AIPAC, the trade-offs,…

Read More