Real Talk-Politic copertina

Real Talk-Politic

Real Talk-Politic

Di: H.E.G.earl
Ascolta gratuitamente

A proposito di questo titolo

In this podcast, we’re going to talk straight about some hard truths, but more importantly, we’ll explore how Unity of Purpose and building infrastructure we control can help us create a better future for African Americans — and all those committed to justice and equality.The rise of state-backed racism, like ICE raids, demands urgent action from the Black community to build our infrastructure — or be broken by a system that was never built for us.” It's my intention to add my voice in order to awaken our community.H.E.G.earl Scienze sociali
  • Labor vs. Wealth meets The Black Infrastructure Trust Model
    Sep 22 2025

    Labor vs. Wealth

    meets

    The Black Infrastructure Trust Model


    In all my articles, I give my readers "The Problem" facing the Black community. I do this because I was saddened by all of the posts that highlighted racism, white supremacy, and targeted oppression of our community without any attempt whatsoever to provide a solution. Any solution.

    I firmly believe that openly speaking about the harm America has done and continues to do is important. For too many years, we have listened to and were even forced to learned the Mythology of white supremacy in silence. We endured having horrible atrocities done to our ancestors and to us, and being told to " just get over it" or " why make everything about race," or told that our history is not American history. Something separate from what America is. Therefore, I believe that to change, a clear "Solution" should always be included with our lament. Here is the problem.

    There are only three ways people gain possibilities in this country:

    Education – what you know.

    The Economy – what you do.

    Elections – who’s in charge.

    These lanes should be our path to freedom. But for us, they have always been blocked, narrowed, or stolen.

    Education is defunded. The economy is consolidated. Our labor is exploited. Elections are manipulated. Protections we fought for are stripped away.

    From the start, these systems were never built for us. They were built for a few. Who set the rules of knowledge, wealth, and power—and decided who could even vote. When we opened the doors, they pushed back. Always contested. Always threatened.

    And it’s not just laws—they even attack our culture. They attack our language. They take our words, twist them, and then tell us they’re wrong. Why? Because if they can make our words feel wrong, they can make us feel wrong. If we believe we’ve already lost, we give up before the fight even begins.

    Look at D-E-I. Diversity, Equity, Inclusion. Words meant to signal fairness. Words meant to signal justice.

    Diversity means we exist. They call it a threat.

    Equity means fair access. They call it favoritism.

    Inclusion means belonging. They call it weakness.

    And then there is woke. Once our word of vigilance. Once our signal to stay awake during Legal Segregation was called Jim Crow. Once our shield against oppression. Now? They stole it, turned it into a joke, an insult. They fear the awake, because an awake people are dangerous to their power.

    This is the pattern. Every word that could empower us is first tolerated, then mocked, then weaponized. They want us to abandon our language. But we will not. These words are our truth. They are our survival. They are our claim to wholeness.


    "How valuable is your time on earth? Time is the only thing we truly own. The only resource that can't be replaced. Don’t keep trading your life for crumbs. "

    Labor, Wealth, and the Stripped Promise

    Labor is an effort of the body. Wealth is the command of vision. Hard work alone does not build freedom. Money obeys thought, not time.

    One man digs the hole. Another sells the shovel. Who builds generational wealth?



    Showing up every day is not enough. Ownership goes to the one who builds leverage—systems that work long after the shift ends.

    For generations, Black people have been forced to sell our hours( our Lives) for another man’s empire, never realizing the law of freedom: money obeys thought, not time.

    A man can work his entire life in toil and still be passed by the one who dares to build a system. One man digs a hole, the other owns the company that sells the shovel. Who do you think builds generational wealth?

    Our people have been trained to value effort and say, "I worked hard. I showed up every day." But hard labor alone has never built freedom. The reward goes to those who create leverage—the capacity to multiply effort through organization, ownership, and systems.


    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    5 min
  • From 500 Years of Theft to 500 Years of Wealth
    Sep 21 2025

    From Ama Ata Aidoo enters The Black Infrastructure Trust

    In a searing 1987 interview, Ghanaian writer Ama Ata Aidoo looked squarely into the camera and said:

    “Since we met you people 500 years ago, look at us, we’ve given everything, and you are still taking. Where would the whole Western world be without Africa — our cocoa, our timber, our gold, our diamonds, our platinum, our whatever. Everything you are is us. And in return for all of this, what have we got? Nothing. Nothing.”

    Her words strip away the polite lies of history. For five centuries, Africa and her children have fueled the engines of the West:

    • The Middle Passage carried millions into slavery, generating trillions in stolen labor.
    • Colonialism and extraction stripped the continent of natural resources, enriching Europe and America.
    • Postcolonial systems of debt, trade imbalance, and cultural domination ensured the theft continued.

    And what did we receive in return? Not development. Not respect. Not repair. Instead: indoctrination against ourselves, infectious diseases brought across oceans, and a literature that declared us less than human.

    Ama Ata Aidoo did not exaggerate. She simply named the truth.

    For generations, we have spoken the truth about our oppression. We have pointed to the theft, to the lies, to the violence of white supremacy. Yet often, that’s where the conversation ends — at lament.

    The problem is that naming the wound does not heal the wound. Naming the theft does not stop the theft. If all we do is recite our suffering, the world nods and moves on.

    Ama Ata Aidoo gave us the foundation: the problem, in all its brutal clarity. But the question before us is — what comes next?

    The ultra-rich, the very people who sit atop this system of extraction, pass down to their children a simple wealth-building playbook. It rests on three words: Hold. Borrow. Die.

    • Hold. Buy appreciating assets — stocks, real estate, businesses. Never sell. Wealth compounds quietly, untaxed, across decades.
    • Borrow. Need cash? Don’t sell. Borrow against those assets. Loans aren’t taxed. Liquidity without liability.
    • Die. When they pass away, tax law resets the value. Children inherit wealth with minimal tax. Dynasties are born.

    This is not genius. It’s not even secret. It’s simply strategy, repeated generation after generation — and it works because they act collectively within families and financial systems designed to preserve their wealth.

    The Black Infrastructure Trust (BIT) exists to take that same playbook and adapt it for us — not as individuals scrambling for survival, but as a people committed to liberation.

    Here is how BIT flips “Hold, Borrow, Die” into a collective pathway:

    • Hold Together. BIT acquires land, housing, businesses, and investments on behalf of its members. Instead of wealth slipping through our hands, it is held in trust, appreciating in value, untouched by extraction.
    • Borrow Together. Instead of selling off assets, BIT leverages its holdings to borrow capital. That capital does not disappear into yachts and vanity projects. It funds childcare centers, affordable housing, schools, and medical clinics — infrastructure that directly serves our people.
    • Pass It On Together. Wealth is not drained into private estates or lost at death. It remains within the Trust, preserved and expanded for future generations. Each child born into our community inherits access to this collective legacy.

    Ama Ata Aidoo told us: “Everything you are is us.” She reminded the West that its modern wealth is built on our backs, our land, our resources.

    The task before us is to take her indictment and turn it into a blueprint. If everything they are is us, then everything we need to be free is also within us.

    The next 500 years cannot look like the last 500. Where our ancestors were forced to give everything and get nothing, we will now hold everything together and build wealth that cannot be stolen.

    This is the work of the Black Infrastructure Trust.


    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    5 min
  • The Erosion of Civil Rights: Free Speech Under Attack
    Sep 18 2025

    The Erosion of Civil Rights: Free Speech Under Attack

    Framing the Problem:

    Hypocrisy: The same people who spew hate call their words “free speech.” But when we speak the truth, it’s labeled “hate speech.” The rules bend depending on who holds power.

    AG Bondi’s statement on “hate speech”

    After the murder of Charlie Kirk, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said her administration will “absolutely target” people using hate speech. Critics responded that the laws, as they stand, do not permit punishing non-threatening speech just because it's hateful.

    • Lies: They twist language itself — freedom becomes control, patriotism becomes exclusion, and dissent becomes dangerous. This is narrative warfare.
    • Exploitation: Our communities are targeted, surveilled, and punished first. Employers, schools, and courts enforce silence by threatening livelihoods. The system profits from our silence and disunity.


    • Violence: When speech isn’t enough, the system escalates — from policy violence (housing, healthcare, policing) to literal violence, whether abroad in the empire or at home in our neighborhoods.

    • Recent adverse actions affecting Black communitiesFrom The Washington Post (2 days ago):

    • The Trump administration has cut or cancelled nearly 22 projects aimed at helping Black communities in the South — environmental justice, sanitation, flood protection, etc. The Washington Post
    • Examples:

    I want to be transparent: I’m not rich, I’m not a politician, and I’m not coming to you with all the answers.

    I’m just like you — retired, on a fixed income, living paycheck to paycheck. I know the feeling of confusion, of worry, of doubt. I experienced Jim Crow firsthand.

    I’ve asked myself the same question you may be asking right now: What power do I have as one person?

    For me, it was writing my solution to the problem.

    The truth is, alone, not much. But together, everything. That’s what the Black Infrastructure Trust is about. If each of us puts in just $1 a week (there are 20 million of us), we transform that doubt into action, that confusion into clarity, and that paycheck-to-paycheck struggle into collective strength.

    I’m not asking you to believe in me. I’m asking you to believe in us. This is our way to liberation.

    In just the past two days, nearly two dozen federal programs meant to protect Black communities from environmental harm — programs fighting pollution, sewage, flooding — have been cancelled or downgraded. Projects in Alabama, Virginia, and Louisiana — some of the most neglected places — are now left exposed.

    This isn’t a small administrative shift. It is violence by omission: when the state removes protection, abandons regulation, erases historic land designations, it is saying: your health, your safety, your dignity — all optional. Yet these are the same communities that have borne the burden of environmental racism for generations.

    And what we see now is the hypocrisy in sharp relief: talk of free markets, free speech, individual liberty — but in practice, government chooses which lives get protected, and which are not worth the trouble.

    I see a way forward. A way that is only “too good to be true” if Black people continue to do nothing but beg and complain. Twenty million Black people giving $1.00 a week each is not a fantasy. It is a concrete, achievable, and powerful act of collective responsibility. This is not about luck or waiting for the benevolence of our oppressors. It is about building our own infrastructure — our own power, our own community, our own future.

    Because the truth is: the time for performative outrage is over, and our window to liberation is closing.

    What I’m here to do is connect with the ones ready to move—ready to think differently, build differently, and live free on our own terms. This is about one thing:

    Liberation under Black management.

    Until the next episode:

    Stay sharp. Stay Building. And stay Black on Purpose.

    Recent adverse actions affecting Black communities

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    5 min
Ancora nessuna recensione