Black Culture Discussion Thread

Black income is half that of white households in the US—just like it was in the 1950s
https://qz.com/1368251/black-income-is-half-that-of-white-households-just-like-it-was-in-the-1950s/

In 1953, Don Barksdale became the first African-American named to the National Basketball Association All-Star team. That same year, Leontyne Price’s performance of “Summertime” at a Metropolitan Opera gala made her the first African-American to sing with the famed New York company. It was also the year that James Baldwin published Go Tell It on the Mountain.

But while progress was underway, African-Americans’ opportunities for economic and professional mobility were extremely limited. That reality was reflected in the vast wealth disparity between black and white households. In 1953, the net worth of the typical black household was just 20% of that of the typical white household, according to a recent working paper by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis that offers an unusually long-term look at the evolution of America’s racial gap in household finances.

Today, there are many more high-profile examples of African-Americans receiving widespread acclaim in politics, the arts, business, sports, and beyond. But the success of those individuals isn’t representative of the economic status of African-Americans as a whole. By 2013, the wealth of the median black family in the US had fallen to a mere 10% that of its white counterpart. Put another way, in 1953, four-fifths of white families made more than the typical black household. Now, closer to nine-tenths do.

The trend is similar, though less striking, for income, note the paper’s authors, economists Moritz, Kuhn, Moritz Schularick, and Ulrike I. Steins of the University of Bonn. The typical black household in 1953 was making just more than half of the income earned by the typical white household. As of 2013, that earning gap had barely closed: The median black household still made only 58% of what the median white household did.

What’s behind the vast racial wealth gap? One contributing factor, according to the authors, involves the long-lasting effects of the 2007 housing market collapse.

Of course, the housing market crash and the 2008 financial crisis that followed hit many Americans hard, regardless of their race—and for most, those effects have lingered. The economists found that only the top 10% wealthiest households in the US have more wealth now than they did before the 2008 financial crisis. Poorer people, on the other hand, are far worse off. In 2016, the average household in the bottom 50% had around half the wealth they did in 2007, as Quartz’s Dan Kopf recently wrote in a story about the Minneapolis Fed paper’s broader findings.

This is largely because, unlike rich Americans, families at the lower end of the socioeconomic spectrum tend to hold most their wealth in homes, and not stocks. As a result, the surging US housing market of the early 2000s boosted their wealth, masking stagnating growth in income and savings. But when home prices collapsed starting in 2007, middle-class households not only lost wealth, but continued to have a huge share of their future earnings drained away in mortgage payments.

These class dynamics seem closely to parallel racial ones. The University of Bonn economists found that the financial crisis dealt a disproportionately big blow to black households’ finances, undoing the slight closing of the gap in the preceding years.

Though the paper’s authors are researching why black families were unusually exposed to the housing market compared with whites, they declined to speculate on the reasons why the financial crisis had such a big impact. However, economist Edward Wolff points to two factors in a 2017 paper (pdf) distributed by the National Bureau for Economic Research. First, black families were likelier to have borrowed more, relative to home value, to finance home purchases. Housing also tended to be a bigger share of black families’ wealth, as Quartz’s Eshe Nelson explored in a recent story. So when home prices tanked in 2007, black homeowners suffered larger losses in home equity relative to whites—dragging their net worth down as well.

The goods news from Wolff’s research is that, by 2016, black household wealth had undergone what he calls a “remarkable recovery.” Not enough to close the wealth gap, though. By 2016, the average wealth of white households had blown past its 2007 peak. That’s a milestone ordinary black households are still waiting to hit.

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How the black vote carried Andrew Gillum to victory
Where more Democrats are black, more Democrats picked Gillum
https://www.tampabay.com/florida-po...-black-vote-carried-andrew-gillum-to-victory/
CQEG5TIKLFBCZNYEX23JER57U4.png


Andrew Gillum’s campaign always said to count on black voters.

On Tuesday, the Tallahassee mayor’s upset win proved him right.

Gillum’s friend-turned competitor former U.S. Rep. Gwen Graham won the vast majority of counties across Florida in the state’s Democratic primary for governor. But Gillum was able to win where it mattered — which also happens to be where more Democrats are black.

The map below shows Gillum did best in huge counties like Duval and Broward, while Graham won small and medium counties across the state and dominated the vaunted Interstate-4 corridor.

Vote margins, Democratic primary for governor
Circles show Andrew Gillum's, Gwen Graham's or Philip Levine's lead in each county.

The few big counties Gillum took - especially Duval, Broward, Miami-Dade and Orange - were enough to push him to more than a third of the statewide vote, giving him a three-point win over the (considered) frontrunner.


What’s more striking is how clearly Gillum benefited from black Democrats.

Imagine this: line up every county in Florida by how many of its registered Democrats (at the time of the primary bookclosing) are black. Divide the line into thirds.

  1. The first, least-black third includes counties like Pasco and Sarasota, where most Democrats are white, as well as Osceola, where most are Hispanic. In those counties, Graham beat Gillum by 17 points.
  2. The middle counties, like Brevard, Pinellas and Palm Beach, have a moderate share of black Democrats. There, Graham still won, by nine points.
  3. But in the blackest third of counties, it was a different story. Those counties, where black voters make up more than a quarter of registered Democrats, went overwhelmingly for Gillum. He won by 15 points. And those counties include heavyweights like Hillsborough, Miami-Dade, Broward and Duval. Of the 18 counties Gillum won, 16 were in this group.
These graphs show how close the relationship was. The more to the right a circle is, the more black people there are among its Democrats. The higher it is, the better each candidate performed there on Tuesday. Gillum’s is nearly a straight line.
 
Controversial 'Abortion is Self-Care' Billboard Asks Dallas to Trust Black Women


Staff Photographer
Another roadside abortion message is stirring up controversy in North Texas.


https://www.dallasnews.com/news/dal...-care-billboard-asks-dallas-trust-black-women

A billboard put up by the Dallas-based Afiya Center proclaims "abortion is self-care" and includes the hashtag #TrustBlackWomen.

Posted at Interstate 35E and Illinois Avenue in Oak Cliff, the billboard follows another recent abortion message, the Black Pro Life Coalition's assertion that "abortion is not healthcare."


A billboard put up by the Dallas-based Afiya Center proclaims "abortion is self-care" and includes the hashtag #TrustBlackWome on Interstate 35E near the Illinois Avenue exit in Oak Cliff, the billboard follows another recent abortion message, the Black Pro Life Coalition's assertion that "abortion is not healthcare."

(Irwin Thompson/Staff Photographer)


The Afiya Center promotes abortion access, along with HIV programming and maternal mortality research, focusing on black women and girls in Texas.

"We are unapologetic in our approach and fight hard to change the harmful reproductive health and abortion policies that directly impact the lives of Black women," the group's website says.



But abortion opponents and people of color have criticized Afiya's message as racist.

"Here is a billboard campaign to glamorize the killing of black babies," activist and author Obianuju Ekeocha tweeted. "Dear sisters, wake up & walk away."

The center responded to the backlash in a Facebook post, saying that it wants black women to have access to a full spectrum of reproductive health care services.

"Who taught y'all that the only way to engage with other women was to tear them down?" the group wrote.

The billboard company used by Afiya, Outfront Media, removed First Baptist Dallas' controversial "America is a Christian nation" billboard in June following backlash.
 
U know
Folks said the us didn’t help bring drugs in
From Latin America
But that proves a lie
So why is it so unbelievable that they would off bob Marley
Remember Russia killed somebody by poking them with something hidden in the tip of an umbrella and various other ways
I don’t doubt the us did this similar sort of thing to marley
Can’t believe folks even have trust in the government
All the illegal and immoral **** they did to us black folks
Y’all seem to forget the Tuskegee experiment
I wouldn’t put anything past our government
 
U know
Folks said the us didn’t help bring drugs in
From Latin America
But that proves a lie
So why is it so unbelievable that they would off bob Marley
Remember Russia killed somebody by poking them with something hidden in the tip of an umbrella and various other ways
I don’t doubt the us did this similar sort of thing to marley
Can’t believe folks even have trust in the government
All the illegal and immoral **** they did to us black folks
Y’all seem to forget the Tuskegee experiment
I wouldn’t put anything past our government
If they wanted to kill him they would have. You don't give someone cancer you want dead
 
If they wanted to kill him they would have. You don't give someone cancer you want dead
bet u think eazy e
just happened to die of aids
die of aids within weeks
even though neither his wife or kids have it
or anyone else that came out
and said that he gave it to them
again
plenty of russians
have been killed covertly as an example
 
I don't think it's a stretch to believe eazy e died of aids
 
bet u think eazy e
just happened to die of aids
die of aids within weeks
even though neither his wife or kids have it
or anyone else that came out
and said that he gave it to them
again
plenty of russians
have been killed covertly as an example
I'd think they'd use something more quicker like saryn or slipping them car coolant over a period of time since back then it would've been untraceable
 
A nice breakdown of a couple of Denzel interviews speaking on culture and "color"

 
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