Happy #BlackHistoryMonth !

I'm still not ready to talk about Black history. I want to talk about white US history.

Q: "Why don't Black people build any generational wealth? Newer immigrant groups seem to be doing just fine? Must be a lazy and shiftless people!"

A: Because for most of US history, white folk have *intentionally* destroyed the wealthiest Black neighborhoods in the US and stolen all the wealth.

Greenwood. Allentown. Seneca Village. Rosewood. Freedmen's town.

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#BlackMastodon

*Creating* generational wealth is not hard for Black people. It's happened many times in US history. There have been thriving communities.

*Keeping* generational wealth has proved to be nearly impossible. Between racist pogroms, and eminent domain used to create parks, freeways, reservoirs, and shopping malls, Black folk in the US have consistently had their wealth stolen by white folks.

I still run into New Yorkers that go to Central Park every week, but have never heard of Seneca Village.

We are truly in a golden age of TV shows, because now I don't sound like I'm making stuff up when I talk about Greenwood (thanks Watchmen!). But Black towns were destroyed with fire and water.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=l3D4hSQcWbk

Imagine in the 70s stealing all wealth from white Dallas residents(oil), and in the 80s from all Manhattan residents (finance), and 2000s all Atherton, SF, and Medina residents(tech)

and then asking why white folk can't seem to build wealth, from your yacht on "Lake Menlo Park."

Why do white Americans learn about the dozens of wealthy Black towns that were destroyed by racism, from:
* Fictional TV shows made by HBO
* Black women comedians (Amber Ruffin)
* Random Black dudes that post on the internet šŸ™‹šŸæā€ā™‚ļø

Instead of from their history text books?

Again folks will ask "Why was I not taught this in school?" And again, I will say, "You know why." Look at what DeSantis is doing. Look at what the Texas Board of Education has always done.

This is the Forbidden Knowledge(tm)! 🤫

For my friends with MBAs, here are some case studies / interview prep questions.

1) Try and guess the 5 wealthiest white zip codes in the US. Now imagine all of the wealth in those neighborhoods is just stolen and given to Black people. What does that do to the race wealth gap? Hint: Medina Washington alone has about the same net worth as all Black Americans combined.🤔

2) How much does Manhattan real estate *in central park* sell for per square foot? Estimate the value of just Seneca Village.

We all admire Amsterdam for having the vision to replace car infrastructure with bike infrastructure. We see the positive uplift in small business activity, and livability. šŸ™‚šŸ‘šŸæ

Now imagine doing that in reverse. Replace relatively safely walkable and bikeable infrastructure with car infrastructure. In fact, put in freeways. Demolish entire thriving wealthy neighborhoods with freeways that don't serve the neighborhood.šŸ™ƒ

That's what we did to Black folk. That's how we destroyed Black wealth.

We would never even consider bulldozing the nicest homes and businesses in Beverly Hills to make it easier for Black folk who want to work in Long Beach live in the suburbs of Ventura.

We would never consider knocking down skyscrapers in Manhattan to make it easier for Black folk from Brooklyn to work on Wall Street.

But we do this to Black folk in the US *constantly*

Then when we see people living under the freeways we yell "Bootstraps! Why can't you have a nice neighborhood? Asians did it!"

Once we accept the facts that:

* Civil Asset Forfeiture exceeds all other forms of burglary in the US (Black folk are disproportionately targeted).

* Eminent domain has stolen hundreds of billions of dollars of value. (Black neighborhoods are the most common targets).

* Wage theft is one of the largest categories of theft (Black folk are disproportionately targeted for wage theft).

* Prison labor is the only form of slavery allowed by the US constitution (Black folk are unfairly targeted).

It should become clear why Black folk can't seem to build generational wealth in the United States.

This failure is not something intrinsic in the makeup or behavior of Black people.

This failure is baked into how Black people in the US are treated. In other words, racism.

Black folk cannot just "bootstraps" or "education is the key" or "LLC Twitter" or "Hustle, grind, put in work," their way out of this reality. We need to address the racism head on. And we can't do it alone.

Oh, I realize I was too subtle about one aspect of white folk intentionally stealing the wealth.

Most of the time when US newspapers have talked about "Race riots," what they really meant was that there was a Black town next to a white town, and the Black town grew more prosperous than the white one. This made the white folks mad, so one day the white folk just... took a bunch of guns and walked over to the Black town and killed as many people as they could, and stole the Black folks' stuff.

Some US history books will talk about the "Great migration" when about 6 million Black folk fled the South and headed to the North and West of the US.

It's often framed as "Black folk headed North and West looking for jobs." But if you talk to Black folk with relatives that left the South during this time, they'll tell you that their families were fleeing economic persecution in the South: having their money and stuff stolen through lynching, false imprisonment, straight up theft, etc.

Owning a valuable piece of land should ensure generational wealth. But for many Black families, it spelled doom, as a white family would want that land, and they would get it, with the help of corrupt bankers and land assessors.

https://eji.org/news/one-million-black-families-have-lost-their-farms/

I like the term "lost their farms." It makes it sound like they put it down somewhere, and simply forgot where it is.

@mekkaokereke

Yeah, "lost their farms." Well spotted. Words matter, so much!

Like "pedestrian accident" when we mean to say "run over by an automobile."

["Mean to say" also not adequate by itself. Also can be "avoid surfacing culpability by saying," per OP. ]

@mekkaokereke But you see, saying "had their farms stolen from them by white elites" would be [all together now] "political" (and maybe even "divisive", the horror).

It's always okay to blame disempowered people for the abuse they experience. Apparently.

@mekkaokereke I would have loved to be part of the conversation that decided that was a good title...
Black farmers file lawsuit alleging company sold 'inferior' seeds on purpose

The black farmers claim that the Stine Seed Co. switched certified seeds with inferior ones in part because of "racial animus."

NBC News
@mekkaokereke Still happens via deed fraud in poor neighborhoods here in Philadelphia. :((
@mekkaokereke most black families never owned any land, it belonged to the tribe and the chief, they merely had squatters rights. Even today there are no records of ownership

@mekkaokereke

Warmth of Other Suns helped me see that.

@mekkaokereke that’s how I learned it too … ā€œgreat migrationā€ is such a cruel euphemism
@mekkaokereke sadly, we weren’t terribly better to the North and West and continued to lie, cheat, and steal from Black folk who left the South. I didn’t learn about redlining in school and I didn’t learn that the GI Bill de facto didn’t cover Black GIs from the Navy when they taught us history either.
amazon.com/Color-Law-Forgotten…
@mekkaokereke Reading this, after today’s New York Times report on the amount of black people now picking up and RETURNING to the South as racism, gerrymandering, and civil rights are being legislatively rolled back in those states, and anti-CRT and African-American studies being banned. And that’s the loud stuff. The quiet steps are much worse.
@mekkaokereke Great post. Trouillot 101: Tracking power in the production of history means, among other things, seeing who gets to give names to the facts.