Editorial

The Tiger’s Mouth: Why African America’s Quest for Fairness and Justice Misses the Power Game

Winston Churchill’s metaphor about reasoning with tigers captures a truth that much of Black America and the African Diaspora have yet to fully internalize: power doesn’t negotiate with those it has already consumed. Walk through any major American city and observe the divergent approaches to group advancement—in African American neighborhoods, the conversation centers on protest, representation, and recognition, while in Koreatown, Little India, Chinese enclaves, and Arab business districts, the conversation is about capital formation, business networks, and political leverage through economic power. The contrast is not about culture or capability—African Americans built this country with enslaved labor that generated the capital for American industrialization—it’s about strategy. We’ve been sold a vision of progress that depends on the oppressor’s recognition rather than our own autonomous power-building, still trying to reason with the tiger instead of building the strength to force open its jaws. Continue reading

Histolitics

HBCU Politics™ Profile – From Central State to Meharry Medical College, How America’s Black Colleges Shaped Malawi’s First President

Before he was the Father of Malawi, Hastings Kamuzu Banda was a young African scholar crossing the red clay paths of Central State University in Ohio and later walking the white-pillared corridors of Meharry Medical College in Tennessee. It was in those Black institutions—far from colonial Nyasaland—that he found the intellectual courage and cultural clarity to imagine an independent African state governed by its own people. Banda didn’t just earn degrees at HBCUs; he absorbed a vision. A vision where Black institutions were sovereign, where education was a weapon, and where leadership was forged in community, not conquest. His presidency in Malawi would later reflect both the power and pitfalls of that vision. Continue reading