Should Black Americans Migrate To The South To Consolidate Political Power?

Should Black Americans Migrate To The South To Consolidate Political Power?

  • Yes- I live in the south and support the idea

  • Yes- I live outside the south and would move

  • Yes but I live outside the south and don't actually see myself moving

  • No (south)

  • No (outside south)


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Rembrandt Brown

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We Need a Second Great Migration
Georgia illuminates the path to Black power. It lies in the South. Follow me there.
By Charles M. Blow

ATLANTA — A year ago this week, I packed some bags and left New York City for Atlanta.

I’d lived in New York for 26 years. The city made me feel awake and alive — buildings tickling the sky, trains snaking underfoot. There was a seductive muscularity to the city, a feeling of riding the razor between your destiny and your demise.

I had become a New Yorker, a Brooklyn boy. There I had raised my children. There I planned to live out my days.

But the exquisite fierceness of the city, its blur of ambition and ingenuity, didn’t hide the fact that many of my fellow Black New Yorkers were locked in perpetual oppression — geographically, economically and politically isolated. All around the North, Black power, if it existed, was mostly municipal, or confined to regional representation. Black people were not serving as the dominant force in electing governors or senators or securing Electoral College votes.

Bryan Stevenson, the executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative, calls migrants of the Great Migration “refugees and exiles of terror.” By extension, many Black communities in Northern cities, abandoned by the Black elite and spurned by white progressives, have become, functionally, permanent refugee camps.

I had an idea to change that. An idea about Black self-determination. Simply put, my proposition was this: that Black people reverse the Great Migration — the mass migration of millions of African-Americans largely from the rural South to cities primarily in the North and West that spanned from 1916 to 1970. That they return to the states where they had been at or near the majority after the Civil War, and to the states where Black people currently constitute large percentages of the population. In effect, Black people could colonize the states they would have controlled if they had not fled them.

In the first census after the Civil War, three Southern states — South Carolina, Mississippi and Louisiana — were majority Black. In Florida, Blacks were less than two percentage points away from constituting a majority; in Alabama, it was less than three points; in Georgia, just under four.

But the Great Migration hit the South like a bomb, siphoning off many of the youngest, brightest and most ambitious. In South Carolina, the Black share of the population declined from 55 percent to about 30 percent. Over six decades, six million people left the South.

Reversing that tide would create dense Black communities, and that density would translate into statewide political power.

Generally speaking, mass movements are largely for the young and unencumbered. Moving is expensive and psychologically taxing, displacing one from home, community and comforts. But I believe those obstacles are outweighed by opportunity. All who are able should consider this journey. That, it became clear, included me.

I chose Atlanta because many of my friends were already there, having moved to the “hot” Southern city after college, and because I saw Georgia as on the cusp of transformational change. Little did I know that this election cycle would be a proof of concept for my proposal.

In November, Georgia voted blue for the first time since Bill Clinton won the state in 1992. A majority of those who voted for Joe Biden were Black. This week, Georgia elected its first Black senator in state history — indeed the first popularly elected Democratic Black senator from the whole South: Raphael Warnock, a pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where Martin Luther King Jr. once preached. Georgia also elected its first Jewish senator — only the second from the South since the 1880s: Jon Ossoff.

Perhaps most striking, the Warnock win was the first time in American history that a Black senator was popularly elected by a majority-Black coalition. It was a momentous flex of Black power.

It was jarring to see that news almost immediately overshadowed by the vision of white rioters marauding through the Capitol on Wednesday. It was an affront, an attack. We must remember that while modern wails of white power may be expressed by a man in face paint and furs shouting from a purloined podium, Black power must materialize the way it did in Georgia.

The success of the Democratic Party’s gains there were in part due to a massive voter enfranchisement effort led by Stacey Abrams, the former candidate for governor, whose group Fair Fight helped register 800,000 new voters in the state in just two years. But it was also attributable to a rise in the state’s Black population.

In the early 1990s, Black people constituted a little over a quarter of the population; now they constitute about a third of it. The Atlanta metro area saw an increase of 251,000 Black people between 2010 and 2016. In 2018, The Atlantic magazine described this area as the “epicenter of what demographers are calling the ‘reverse Great Migration’” of Black people to the South.

Biden carried the state by only around 12,000 votes. With this election, Georgia became the model for how Black people can experience true power in this country and alter the political landscape.

I realize that I am proposing nothing short of the most audacious power play by Black America in the history of the country. This may seem an odd turn for me. I am not an activist. I am a newspaperman. I interpret. I bear witness.

The moment that I realized that I could be more than an observer came in 2013. I was at the Ford Foundation for a series of lectures on civil rights when Harry Belafonte addressed the room. He spoke in a low-but-sure raspy voice, diminished by age, but deepened in solemnity. He was erudite and searing, and I was mesmerized. He posed a question: “Where are the radical thinkers?”

That question kept replaying in my head, and it occurred to me that I had been thinking too small, all my life, about my approach to being in the world. I realized that a big idea could change the course of history.

This proposition is my big idea.

Many of the issues that have driven racial justice activists to organize and resist over the last few years — criminal justice, mass incarceration, voting rights and education and health policies — are controlled at the state level. The vast majority of people incarcerated in America, for example, are in state prisons: 1.3 million. Only about a sixth as many are in federal prisons. States have natural resources and indigenous industries. Someone has to control who is granted the right to exploit, and profit from, those resources. Why not Black people?

Of course questions — and doubts — abound about such a proposal. Questions like: Isn’t the proposal racist on its face?

No. The point here is not to impose a new racial hierarchy, but to remove an existing one. Race, as we have come to understand it, is a fiction; but, racism, as we have come to live it, is a fact. After centuries of waiting for white majorities to overturn white supremacy, it has fallen to Black people to do it themselves.

I am unapologetically pro-Black, not because I believe in Black supremacy, which is as false and reckless a notion as white supremacy, but rather because I insist upon Black equity and equality. In a society and system in which white supremacy is ubiquitous and inveterate, Black people need fierce advocates to help restore the balance — or more precisely, to establish that balance in the first place.

My call for Black power through Black majorities isn’t intended to exclude white people. Black majority doesn’t mean Black only. Even in the three states that once held Black majorities after the Civil War — South Carolina, Mississippi and Louisiana — those majorities were far from overwhelming, peaking at 61 percent, 59 percent and 52 percent.

Nor does a majority-Black population mean a Blacks-only power structure. There are cities in the Northeast and Midwest, like Detroit, Philadelphia and Saint Louis, that have a Black majority or plurality and yet have white mayors. The point is not to create racial devotion, but rather race-conscious accountability.

Others have objected: Isn’t the North just better for Black people than the South?

Many Black people are leery of the South, if not afraid of it. They still have in their minds a retrograde South: dirty and dusty, overgrown and underdeveloped, a third-world region in a first-world country. They see a region that is unenlightened and repressive, overrun by religious zealots and open racists. The caricatures have calcified: hillbillies and banjos, Confederate flags and the Ku Klux Klan.

To be sure, all of that is here. But racism is more evenly distributed across the country than we are willing to admit.

It is true that in surveys, people in the North express support for fewer racially biased ideas than those in the South, but such surveys reveal only which biases people confess to, not the ones they subconsciously possess. So I asked the researchers at Project Implicit to run an analysis of their massive data set to see if there were regional differences in pro-white or anti-Black prejudice. The result, which one of the researchers described as “slightly surprising,” was that there was almost no difference in the level of bias between white people in the South and those in the Northeast or Midwest. (The bias of white people in the West was slightly lower.)

White people outside the South are more likely to say the right words, but many possess the same bigotry. Racism is everywhere. And if that’s the case, wouldn’t you rather have some real political power to address that racism? And a yard!

For decades Northern liberals have maintained the illusion of their moral superiority to justify their lack of progress in terms of racial equality. The North’s arrogant insistence that it had no race problem, or at least a minimal one, allowed a racialized police militarism to take root. It allowed housing and education segregation to flourish in supposedly “diverse” cities. It allowed for the rise of Black ghettos and concentrated poverty as well as white flight and urban disinvestment.

The supposed egalitarianism of Northern cities is a flimsy disguise for a white supremacy that diverges from its Southern counterpart only in style, not substance.

And, while the North has been stuck in its self-righteous stasis, the savagery of the South has in some ways softened, or morphed. I am careful not to position this progress as fully redemptive or restorative. White supremacy clearly still exists here, corrupting everything from criminal justice to electoral access. The “New South” — with its thriving Black middle class and increasing political power — is still more aspiration than reality.

But the wishful idealizing of a New South is no more naïve than a willful blindness to the transgressions of the Now North. As the author Jesmyn Ward wrote in 2018 in Time about her decision to leave Stanford and move back to Mississippi, American racism is an “infinite room”: “It is the bedrock beneath the soil. Racial violence and subjugation happen on the streets of St. Louis, on the sidewalks of New York City and in the BART stations of Oakland.”

Black people have traversed this country in search of a place where the hand of oppression was lightest and the spirit of prosperity was greatest, but have had to learn a bitter lesson: Racism is everywhere.

Finally: Won’t this idea encounter powerful opposition, even from liberals?

Well, when has revolution ever been easy? When has a ruling class humbly handed over power or an insurgent class comfortably acquired it? Revolution, even a peaceful one, is frightening, and dangerous, because those with power will view any attempt at divestiture as an act of war.

The opposition will most likely manifest in many ways. There will no doubt be opposition from the Black Establishment in the North, and those in the political class whose offices will be in jeopardy if the Black populations in their cities shrink.

This is a very real concern. There may be some fluctuation in Black political representation during the course of a reverse migration, and, in the beginning, positions added in the South may not balance out those lost in the North. This is a function of how political machines operate, the way regions are gerrymandered, the way parties horse-trade, the way the establishment grooms ascendant stars, and the way voter suppression is inflicted. But, in the end, the benefit and abundance of Black political power would be to the good.

Even some white liberals, those who call themselves allies, may shrink from the notion of Black power, drawing a false equivalence to the concept of racial superiority espoused by the white power movement. They recoil from the very mention of Black power even as they live out their lives in a world designed by and for white power, not only the hooded and hailing, but also the robed and badged.

Others may simply mourn the notion of a path to Black equality that doesn’t feature a starring role for white liberal guilt, one that doesn’t center on their capacity for growth and evolution, but skips over them altogether.

Still others may simply hesitate because it sounds like I’m throwing in the towel on the grand experiment of multiculturalism. I sought for months to put this proposal to Bill Clinton, someone I thought had deftly navigated the racial minefields in the South. I got my chance in the wee hours of a summer night on Martha’s Vineyard in 2019. He responded with curiosity but not endorsement. The lack of approval was not deflating, because it had not been requested. Black people need no permission to seek their own liberation.

The idea received a more enthusiastic reception from the Rev. William Barber, the father of the Moral Monday civil rights protests, who in 2018 reactivated the Poor People’s Campaign, the multiracial project Martin Luther King was organizing when he was assassinated. Barber, a staunch believer in what he calls “fusion coalition” and cross-racial alliance, pointed out that most of the people who marched with him in the Moral Monday protests were white. And yet he was open to the concept of reverse migration.

“From state up is the only way,” he told me. “If you change the South, you change the entire nation.” This is not surprising coming from Barber, whose own parents were reverse migrants who moved back South to fight racism.

All these objections are to say nothing of the backlash to come from conservatives, of course. One lesson that history teaches is that the system reacts forcefully, often violently, when whiteness faces the threat of a diminution of its power. And that’s exactly what we saw in this week’s storming of the Capitol by supporters of the white power president Donald J. Trump, in concert with his efforts to overturn the election.

For 150 years, Black Americans have been hoping and waiting. We have marched and resisted. Many of our most prominent leaders have appeased and kowtowed. We have seen our hard-earned gains eroded by an evolving white supremacy, while at the same time we have been told that true and full equality was imminent. But, there is no more guarantee of that today than there was a century ago.

I say to Black people: Return to the South, cast down your anchor and create an environment in which racial oppression has no place.

As Frederick Douglass once wrote about escaping slavery, “I prayed for 20 years but received no answer until I prayed with my legs.”

Black people must once again pray with their legs.

 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
Good article and thanks for posting since I’m locked out of the NYT.

Unfortunately, this isn’t a well-thought out strategy. First of all, are the numbers even there to tip the demographic scales?
Nearly 60 percent of the black population now lives in just 10 states, six being in the South, with the black population in Florida, Georgia, Texas, and North Carolina growing by more than 20 percent in the past decade. Overall, between 2000 and 2010, the percentage of the nation’s black population living in the South grew (from 53.6 percent to 55 percent),* while the percentage living in the Northeast and Midwest shrank (to 17 percent and 18 percent, respectively). The number living in the West remained about the same (8.8 percent).

The only states I can see us becoming a majority of the population are Mississippi, Georgia, and South Carolina.

Second of all, this reverse migration would be meaningless without a comprehensive political agenda to accompany it. I know the article talks about state-level power, but there are plenty of cities where the population was majority-Black with Black mayors and city councils, but the policy agendas didn’t necessarily benefit the overall Black population. Look at Bmore, DC, Richmond, Jackson (MS), and even Atlanta as examples.

Still, good article.
 

Dark08

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Yeah I saw an interview him I think he has a book coming out which covers this. It's interesting... the hurt in between would be a problem but as he describes it that is the nature of the political beast but the cost in other states... I don't know... like the black population has a lot to due with Pennsylvania's assistance in the last election.

The South will change over time as it has been there may be more states overtime that has this type of increase in a slow manner. Not sure if it ever gets to the levels he talking about but only time will tell....
 

Black A. Camus

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I didnt read any of that, but the Electoral College doesnt work that way. Also, we'd have a limited number opportunities for representation in Congress. Nationwide diversity is in our interest (without it we would have lost Pennsylvania--i.e., Philly, and trump would still be President) So no.
 
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godofwine

Supreme Porn Poster - Ret
BGOL Investor
I didnt read any of that, but the Electoral College doesnt work that way. Also, we'd have a limited number opportunities for representation in Congress. Nationwide diversity is in our interest (without it we would have lost Pennsylvania--i.e., Philly, and trump would still be President) So no.
You've got a point. Without us most of the damn country is red and Trump is still president
 

rude_dog

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I didnt read any of that, but the Electoral College doesnt work that way. Also, we'd have a limited number opportunities for representation in Congress. Nationwide diversity is in our interest (without it we would have lost Pennsylvania--i.e., Philly, and trump would still be President) So no.
I read the book. It's an interesting concept. If black people returned to the south and controlled the vote there, it would have 1 more electoral vote than New York and California combined, but the big kicker is we would now control 16 Senators instead of the 4 from Cali and NY. I don't know the actual numbers but he claimed that NY and Cali would be Democratic without the black vote.

A big part of the book is about the loss of community because of the Great Migration. Immediately after the Civil War, Blacks were the majority in most of the deep south states. I think he makes a lot of valid points. I'm not sure if I agree with it but it's an interesting argument. A major point is a lot of politics is local and if we increased our vote in those states, we would have more actual control of our daily lives.

Off the top of my head, he specifically suggests moving to Atlanta, Columbia, SC, Charlotte, NC, Jackson, MS and Birmingham Alabama.
 

largebillsonlyplease

Large
BGOL Legend
Most black people live in the south lol
Can't consolidate shit until we consolidate laws that keep voter suppression as a major factor
they just passed a new round
we need new grassroots situations in all the states down south
Georgia is no different from any of the other southern states they just luckily had abrams working hard to make sure they poured millions of dollars into black votes
if the dems overall did that then there would be a huge different in each election
instead of wondering what chip in ohio is doing
 

Nzinga

Lover of Africa
BGOL Investor
It would not take much. Many of these states have small populations;
1 million more black Americans, and it is done. The problem is that
the states where those black came from could become Republican as
as a result. You look at WI, MI and PA. If you subtract Milwaukee, Detroit,
East Lansing, Grand Rapids, Pittsburgh and Philly, those 3 states look
like Indiana all of a sudden

The only way it could be done would be to move black people from
LA and SF since California is solidly blue, and would remain so even
most of the black people there left.

Another solution would be to move all the black people out of MO,
KS, OK to MS and AL. This would leave the former states even more
red but could convert the latter from red to blue
 
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VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
I read the book. It's an interesting concept. If black people returned to the south and controlled the vote there, it would have 1 more electoral vote than New York and California combined, but the big kicker is we would now control 16 Senators instead of the 4 from Cali and NY. I don't know the actual numbers but he claimed that NY and Cali would be Democratic without the black vote.

A big part of the book is about the loss of community because of the Great Migration. Immediately after the Civil War, Blacks were the majority in most of the deep south states. I think he makes a lot of valid points. I'm not sure if I agree with it but it's an interesting argument. A major point is a lot of politics is local and if we increased our vote in those states, we would have more actual control of our daily lives.

Off the top of my head, he specifically suggests moving to Atlanta, Columbia, SC, Charlotte, NC, Jackson, MS and Birmingham Alabama.

:cool:
 

Rembrandt Brown

Slider
Registered
I don't like the concept of cash reparations or checks. I think the impact would be too fleeting in too many cases. Certainly not generational, as is the damage reparations would be meant to repair. I would make it land along with targeted investment in Black neighborhoods, schools and institutions.

Perhaps focused in the South to amplify to effect politically... :cool:
 

The Catcher In The Rye

Rye-sing Star
Registered
:colin: ---> Click the link, there's audio! You don't have to read it!

Dear Black Americans, Please Move to the South​

An argument for consolidating Black political power.​

Aug. 18, 2023
By Charles M. Blow
Produced by Derek Arthur

Charles Blow has a bold proposition for Black Americans: leave the country’s northern cities and move to the South. In this audio essay, Blow argues that becoming a voting majority in states like Georgia and Mississippi could give Black Americans the opportunity to control the levers of state power and influence national politics.

My name is Charles Blow. I’m an op-ed columnist at The New York Times. I write about politics, culture, and inequality. And I believe that if Black people simply returned to the South, they could significantly increase their own political power, which has the potential to not only upend the politics of that region, but also of the country as a whole.

There is no way to truly have power in the country if you do not also have access to state power. And there is right now no state in the country where Black people are a majority, and not one where they are projected to be a majority. And that powerlessness is something that I detest.

At the end of the Civil War, three Southern states were majority Black. Another three were very close to being majority Black. And it had a tremendous impact on the politics of the region and of the country. But millions of Black people during the Great Migration migrate largely from the rural South to primarily cities in the North and West.

There were a lot of amazing things that came out of the Great Migration. But there were some negatives as well — the rise of racialized, chronic ghettos in urban areas, intense concentrated poverty, militarized policing. And over time, many Black people just became disenchanted with these cities. And now it continues to show up in demographic data that Black people are leaving Northern and Western cities for the South.

The case I make for reverse migration, because it’s already happening, is to apply to it or infuse it with a kind of political framing to give it a definition, to give it shape, because right now, it is without that. It’s devoid of that. The Great Migration had it. There were champions of the Great Migration. Black newspapers in the North actively recruited Black people to move North. There is no parallel phenomenon now. And I am hoping to fill that void.

Speaker 1
The New York Times op-ed columnist and author Charles Blow has penned a new book. It’s a roadmap for overturning white supremacy, he says.

Charles Blow
A few years ago, I wrote a book called “The Devil You Know, A Black Power Manifesto.”

Speaker 1
He has moved to Atlanta, Georgia, after living in New York for 25 years. And he’s now proposing that other Black Americans up North do the same


The biggest impact, I believe, of reverse migration happened in Georgia. In 2020, it swung for a Democrat for the first time in decades, and it elected two Democratic senators. The last time that a Democrat had won the state of Georgia was Bill Clinton in 1992.

But the Black population since 1990 doubled in the state of Georgia. It went from 1.7 million Black people to 3.4 million Black people. That meant that their percentages of the electorate went up to about a third. That had a huge impact on that election. And it allowed Black people to be the leading portion of the coalition that swung that state for a Democrat, Joe Biden.


Speaker 2
And then Joe Biden would not be here. He would not have been the Democratic nominee without strong, deep, and wide support from Black voters all across this country. The same very hands that once picked cotton now pick presidents and for the first time in American history, put a Black woman on the ticket as the Vice President-elect of these United States.


That is what to me real power looks like. You can have an impact on the presidency. You can have an impact in the Senate. And you can have an impact on all of the power that states wield, everything from writing the criminal code to education to health care.


People freak out when I say that I believe that some states should be majority Black. But I always ask them this question: Why are you not freaking out that every state but Hawaii is at least a plurality white and that there are seven or eight states where 90-plus percent of the population is majority white?

Why does that not cause you any agita?

And you cannot make the case that is simply the way the country grew, that that is the result of natural migration and settlement, because it is not. Black people were forbidden from settling in some parts of the country, frozen out of state power. The only way they have access to it is if it is granted. I believe that has to change.
 
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The Catcher In The Rye

Rye-sing Star
Registered
"Dems tap Obama for crucial redistricting push"-- Big implications for Alabama, Louisiana and Georgia:

 

Costanza

Rising Star
Registered

Opinion: The Black Los Angeles I grew up with is slipping away​


... Los Angeles has been an incredible disappointment. When my mother’s family came to L.A. at the turn of the 20th century, it was filled with opportunities. Architect Paul R. Williams was not just the first Black person on the Los Angeles Planning Board, he was on the very first Planning Board in 1920. In 1913, W.E.B. Du Bois said of the city, “Nowhere in the United States is the Negro so well and beautifully housed.”

But now, the Black poor in L.A. either must take their Section 8 vouchers and live in the desert, where affordable housing can be found, or fall further into poverty, or leave.

Some say that there is no tragedy in the slipping away of Black Los Angeles. It isn’t just happening here. In many major U.S. cities, the Black working poor are being moved to the hinterlands. And the Black working and middle class have been given the message to just move back to the South, where we were once enslaved.

The choice of living in the exurbs of Los Angeles or the South for L.A.’s Black population harms the cultural richness of the city. Its leaders must work to preserve the working class. This requires more careful urban planning and policies that improve people’s material well-being. Los Angeles needs a targeted increase in housing density, making it more affordable for people with less money. The county should pass a job guarantee program that includes professional and service tracks with an eye toward eradicating anti-Black bias in Los Angeles employment. Expanding and making permanent L.A.’s universal basic income program would complement California’s earned income tax credit.

Only policies like these can stem the tide of gentrification that is pushing African Americans and other members of the working class out of Los Angeles’ Metro area. Only then will L.A. be the example of progress it once was for people like my parents. Only then can the kind of childhood I grew up with exist again.

L. Lo Sontag is an urbanist and economics fellow at the New School for Social Research in New York.

 

Pack Rat

Imperturbable
BGOL Investor
Soon, Mexicans will make up the second-largest voting group. If the Republicans can convince them to vote with them, then everything will be resolved regardless of what we do.:itsawrap:
 

dasmybikepunk

Wait for it.....
OG Investor
facepalm-chris-tucker.gif
what-in-the-hell-stare.gif

oh-hell-no.gif
 

durham

Rising Star
Platinum Member
If you already live in the South emphatically YES. Pick two or three, and mass migrate to 51%. That's six senators, and three Governors. Folks would have to fight everyday (meaning vote), to overcome the gaza level extermination plan that would be put into place. I doubt you could ever counter the mass gerrymandering to control the congressional seats for about 10 years and a lot of death.

Its still a better option to the shit folks live through now.

My vote would South Carolina (most of us came through SC), Mississippi (we have the largest current existing population) and Alabama (Africatown, beautiful cities and ports) would be my vote.
 

Big Tex

Earth is round..gravity is real
BGOL Investor
As someone who grew up in the South then moved away, there is no way in hell I would ever move back.

Also Charles Blow didn't move to Atlanta for Blackness...
 

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Got to be careful and make sure the black people you vote will be about the people.

DC has had black mayors and after the Great Marion Barry, they all sold the city out and still is.
I read the book. It's an interesting concept. If black people returned to the south and controlled the vote there, it would have 1 more electoral vote than New York and California combined, but the big kicker is we would now control 16 Senators instead of the 4 from Cali and NY. I don't know the actual numbers but he claimed that NY and Cali would be Democratic without the black vote.

A big part of the book is about the loss of community because of the Great Migration. Immediately after the Civil War, Blacks were the majority in most of the deep south states. I think he makes a lot of valid points. I'm not sure if I agree with it but it's an interesting argument. A major point is a lot of politics is local and if we increased our vote in those states, we would have more actual control of our daily lives.

Off the top of my head, he specifically suggests moving to Atlanta, Columbia, SC, Charlotte, NC, Jackson, MS and Birmingham Alabama.
As someone born and raised in Columbia, SC and lived in DC the last 20 years, I can see why he said Columbia.

Black city. Peers that moved to DC were always in amazement of all the professional black folks. I’ve been like damn this is columbia 2.0 I never interacted with any other race until after college.

Black schools, black teachers, and all my doctors growing up were black. That’s all I know
 

ORIGINAL NATION

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Not political power but Nation building power. As the original owners of the earth we know they did not take it from us by being honest or anything. They build a reality based on taking from God (black people). Unless we rebuild the true garden of eden and become our natural self again we do not stand a chance. We are building on foundations of our enemies. Israel should be a wake up call of white power.
354227939-10223136502225847-9054891541826599946-n.jpg
 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
Got to be careful and make sure the black people you vote will be about the people.

DC has had black mayors and after the Great Marion Barry, they all sold the city out and still is.

As someone born and raised in Columbia, SC and lived in DC the last 20 years, I can see why he said Columbia.

Black city. Peers that moved to DC were always in amazement of all the professional black folks. I’ve been like damn this is columbia 2.0 I never interacted with any other race until after college.

Black schools, black teachers, and all my doctors growing up were black. That’s all I know

But much of that is due to the federal work force and hiring policies, which were and are a product of political pressure.
 
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