Lifestyle

The Illusion of Progress: Gen X and the Racial Gap That Never Closed

Generation X grew up believing that they were witnessing the closing of America’s racial divide. They were the children of desegregation, the MTV generation that danced to the same music and quoted the same sitcoms, certain that friendship and cultural crossover were the evidence of progress. But as African American Gen Xers entered adulthood, the promise of that era unraveled. The gap they thought was narrowing—socially, economically, politically—was, in fact, widening beneath their feet.

The illusion of progress was sustained by proximity, not equality. African American Gen Xers shared classrooms and workplaces with White peers but inherited none of the institutional wealth or security those peers took for granted. The generation that came of age watching The Cosby Show now lives in a reality where the racial wealth gap remains as wide as it was in 1983, African American homeownership has stagnated, and the number of Black-owned banks and hospitals has collapsed. What looked like inclusion was often absorption without empowerment.

For African American Gen Xers, the realization has been sobering: cultural visibility without institutional ownership does not create equality. Their friendships across color lines did not prevent their neighborhoods from being redlined, their schools from being defunded, or their communities from losing the very institutions—banks, hospitals, and media outlets—that once secured collective advancement. The “post-racial” dream of their youth has given way to the recognition that representation is not power, and proximity is not protection.

Now entering the height of their careers and influence, Gen X African Americans carry the weight of that truth. They are the first generation to see the bridge of progress collapse beneath them and the canyon of inequality still unspanned. Their story is not one of failure, but of awakening—a generation that mistook shared culture for shared destiny and now knows that progress without power is only illusion. Continue reading

Lifestyle

When the Public Library Closes Its Doors, the HBCU Library Must Open Its Own

In an era when truth itself feels negotiable, HBCU libraries have become the quiet battlegrounds of a larger war over knowledge and power. As public libraries face censorship, defunding, and political interference, these institutions—long the custodians of African America’s intellectual heritage—may be the last line of defense between ignorance and empowerment. Private HBCU libraries, with the right public support, could emerge as fortified centers for civic resistance and collective education, while public HBCU libraries must prepare to defend their autonomy and archives from political intrusion. The fight is no longer just about books or budgets—it is about who gets to define reality. In that fight, every preserved manuscript, every digitized archive, and every open reading room becomes an act of survival. Continue reading

Lifestyle

Surviving the Noise: African America, MAGA, and the Politics of Protecting Our Mental Health

The Trump era and the rise of MAGA have left African American households caught between vigilance and exhaustion. Every headline about voter suppression, police violence, or judicial rollbacks feels personal, yet constant doomscrolling does not create safety—it corrodes it. Staying informed is essential, but drowning in outrage leaves us too drained to act.

The solution is not disengagement but discipline. African American households must create structures that allow them to absorb political information without being consumed by it. This means designating news windows, turning off alerts, discussing politics as a family rather than suffering in silence, and pairing political awareness with cultural nourishment. Protecting mental health is not a retreat—it is a strategy. In times when chaos is weaponized, resilience itself becomes resistance. Continue reading

Lifestyle

The Death of Expertise in America: Why Loud and Wrong Now Trumps Quiet and Learned

America has entered a cultural moment where opinion outweighs evidence, and loudness overshadows learning. Expertise, once a cornerstone of democracy, is now ridiculed and sidelined in favor of uninformed conviction. For African American institutions, the stakes are especially dire: HBCU scholars and policy experts are drowned out in a society that prizes noise over nuance. Loud and wrong has become the new standard, while quiet and learned is treated as elitist. If America continues to dismiss expertise, African American institutions must hold even tighter to it, weaponizing knowledge as a form of power and protection in a world where freedom itself depends on truth. Continue reading