Editorial

If We Don’t, Who Will? The Moral Responsibility of HBCU Alumni to Protect and Improve Black Childhood

The legacy of HBCUs is not just in the halls of academia—it lives in the neighborhoods, school districts, and communities where Black children are too often born into disadvantage. Yet, what if the solution to our children’s crisis isn’t a distant government agency or a disconnected billionaire foundation, but the very graduates who once walked across a commencement stage under the banner of Black excellence?

Across the country, alumni of HBCUs hold untapped influence in city halls, nonprofits, school boards, and statehouses. But the power of a degree must now become the power of direct action. Our Homecomings must be matched by our hometowns. Our loyalty must extend beyond fundraising galas to building food programs, mental health clinics, and policy pipelines that protect Black children before they ever become HBCU-bound.

In the South—where HBCUs are thickest and child well-being is weakest—alumni cannot just look back at their institutions with pride. They must look forward with purpose. We are not simply graduates of history; we are the guardians of our future. Continue reading

Editorial

No Consequences, No Conscience: Why Charlie Kirk’s Dangerous Rhetoric Demands Religious and Civic Accountability

Charlie Kirk’s June 22nd tweet, cloaked in nationalism and evangelical language, was not a warning—it was a provocation. His calls to “stay armed” and “pray” under the guise of patriotism dangerously border on stochastic terrorism, inciting fear and potentially violence without accountability. In a nation still reeling from January 6th and numerous hate-driven attacks, religious leaders cannot afford to remain silent. This is not theological speech—it is the political weaponization of faith. And if social media companies continue to platform voices like his unchecked, they become complicit in undermining the very democracy their platforms claim to protect. Continue reading

Diaspora & Foreign Policy

You Have No Friends: Wakanda Forever’s Unspoken Warning to the African Diaspora

In a world obsessed with symbolism, the African Diaspora often mistakes proximity for partnership and visibility for victory. But as Black Panther: Wakanda Forever quietly reveals, even a nation as powerful and secretive as Wakanda is not immune to betrayal — especially from those who wear the cloak of shared struggle. When Namor demands Wakanda’s allegiance under threat of annihilation, the message is clear: common oppression does not equal common cause.

Dr. John Henrik Clarke’s timeless words — “You have no friends” — are not a call to despair, but a call to clarity. The African Diaspora is not only competing with former colonial powers, but also with post-colonial peers for relevance, resources, and rule-setting power. Wakanda’s fictional caution is the Diaspora’s real-world dilemma: survival depends not on who smiles at you, but on who stands with you when your sovereignty is inconvenient. Continue reading

Politicians

Donald Trump’s Second Administration Is George Wallace, Bull Connor, and David Duke’s Wildest Dreams Come True

Donald Trump’s second term isn’t about governance—it’s about vengeance. Where George Wallace wielded segregationist rhetoric to preserve Jim Crow, Trump promises a federalized assault on Black progress under the guise of law and order, anti-wokeness, and bureaucratic “efficiency.” For African American institutions, especially HBCUs, the stakes are existential. With the courts packed, the civil service purged, and public policy weaponized, Trump’s administration would not merely defund or ignore Black America—it would criminalize its aspirations. This is not just history repeating itself. This is history reloading. Continue reading