Tennis Star Naomi Osaka Sports Trayvon Martin Face Mask at the U.S. Open


Many athletes are voicing support for the protests against racial injustice and against the police killings of unarmed Black men and women.

Professional tennis player Naomi Osaka has continued the trend. Osaka donned a mask bearing the name of Trayvon Martin ahead of her U.S. Open match against Anett Kontaveit over the weekend.

The 22-year-old tennis pro, who beat Kontaveit, has worn a different mask bearing the name of a victim of police violence–Breonna Taylor, Elijah McClain, Ahmaud Arbery, and Martin–to every match at this year’s Open.

Osaka, the highest-paid female athlete ever, recently made headlines when she dropped out of the semifinals for the Western & Southern Open in the wake of the shooting of Jacob Blake by law enforcement officials in Wisconsin.

“Before I am an athlete, I am a Black woman. And as a Black woman I feel as though there are much more important matters at hand that need immediate attention, rather than watching me play tennis,” Osaka said.

“I don’t expect anything drastic to happen with me not playing, but if I can get a conversation started in a majority White sport I consider that a step in the right direction,” she continued, while also calling out what she called the “continued genocide of Black people at the hand of the police.”

Colin Kaepernick Has Been Nominated for the NFL Hall of Fame


After leading the San Francisco 49ers to the Super Bowl in 2013, some football fans say that former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick belongs in the NFL Hall of Fame.

According to USA Today, one particular fan feels Kaepernick should be in there, but not for his playing abilities. Football fan Bob Birkett discovered that anyone, even someone who is a retiree from Vermont with no connections to the NFL, can nominate someone for the Hall of Fame. As a result, Birkett sent a letter to the Hall in late June requesting that Kaepernick be inducted as a contributor based on the former quarterback’s efforts to call attention to police violence against Black and brown people.

“It is my pleasure, privilege, and responsibility as a supporter of racial equality to nominate Mr. Colin Kaepernick,” reads the letter Birkett wrote to the committee. “Mr. Kaepernick has shown exceptional courage in highlighting the damaging effects of racial injustice on Black people and on our society as a whole. His respectful kneeling posture has created a powerful symbol for those who are oppressed by our society.”

Birkett discussed his intentions with USA Today.

“He’s gotten a raw deal for so long,” Birkett told USA TODAY Sports. “It’s a little bit like (Muhammad Ali refusing to serve in Vietnam). The initial reaction was, ‘Holy cow what a horrible thing.’ Then a little while later, it’s like, ‘Man, that guy had some guts.’ “

“You think, ‘What can I do?’ ” Birkett continued. “I can’t force an owner to hire the guy. But darn it! I can put him in the Hall of Fame.”

The Contributor category for the Football Hall of Fame is for those who have made “outstanding career contributions to pro football in capacities other than playing or coaching.”

Birkett feels that is the case with Kaepernick taking a knee for racial injustice.

“Racists are putting all of this time and energy and effort into putting Black people down,” Birkett said. “The time has come and gone to let that go. I hope it can happen. I hope we make progress.

“I just hope,” he added, “that something good can happen.”

Meet The Twin Sisters Who Came Together To Create Their Own Wine


The wine industry has been known for being notoriously white but there are many examples of Black entrepreneurs who have not only been able to enter the market but also find ways to thrive. These twin sisters have found a way to integrate culture with their love of rosé wine to create a new brand.

Nichelle and Nicole Nichols are the founders of Guilty Grape, a newly launched wine brand of rosé packaged in the micro-vineyards in Napa Valley at an affordable price. “As Black women and wine lovers, we became increasingly frustrated with the lack of Black representation and inclusion within the wine industry,” said the sisters in an email interview with BLACK ENTERPRISE.

“From marketing efforts to the type of wines being offered to our community (typically sweet wines), we noticed that the African American market was an afterthought in wine. Our culture deserves more, so we decided to join the other small groups of Black industry disruptors by starting The Guilty Grape to include those overlooked consumers.”

Coming from an entertainment background, the sisters wanted to create a brand that offered representation for other Black women who like to indulge in wine with their own business aspirations. “There is no easy access point into the wine industry, but it was abundantly clear that our mere presence was disruptive to the norm,” they added.”Between being young, Black, female, finding the right resources, and building the right relationships —there were many hurdles.”

The brand plans on expanding its collection to include Chardonnay and Cabernet options at a later date.

 

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Trump Says He Will Withhold Federal Funds From Schools That Teach The 1619 Project

Trump Says He Will Withhold Federal Funds From Schools That Teach The 1619 Project


President Trump has threatened to pull federal funds from schools that teach The New York Times’ 1619 Project.

The 1619 project is a series of articles arguing that 1619, the date the first slave ship arrived in the American colonies, is the true date of America’s founding rather than 1776.

President Trump retweeted a statement Sunday that the state of California has implemented the 1619 project into the public schools adding “Department of Education is looking at this. If so, they will not be funded!”

The 1619 project received praise for challenging ideas and exposing a part of America’s history that is largely hidden in history books. However, the project was also criticized as poorly written and reasoned.

Many have been quick to point out President Trump does not have the authority to withhold federal funds from schools that teach the project. The federal courts have repeatedly slapped down Trump, and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’s, efforts to impose their will on schools without congressional approval.

According to CNN, Arkansas Sen. and Republican, Tom Cotton has introduced legislation preventing American schools from teaching the curriculum. The legislation, titled the “Saving American History Act of 2020,” would prohibit the use of federal funds to teach the 1619 Project by K-12 schools or school districts. Schools that teach the 1619 Project would also be ineligible for federal professional-development grants.”

The legislation appears unlikely to gain any significant traction in the Senate.

President Trump has chosen to stoke the anger of racism as part of his re-election campaign. Since the Black Lives Matter movement re-emerged this summer amid the police killings of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd, Trump has called the movement “a symbol of hate,” threatened to withhold funding from cities in blue stats dealing with protests and Attorney General Bill Barr said he believes systemic racism doesn’t exist.

Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris rebuked Trump and Barr’s comments regarding systemic racism in the US, saying they are “spending full time in a different reality.”
“We do have two systems of justice” for Black and White Americans, Harris told CNN’s Dana Bash on Sunday.
Trump Touts Using $300 Billion In Coronavirus Relief Aid For Second Stimulus Check

Trump Touts Using $300 Billion In Coronavirus Relief Aid For Second Stimulus Check


President Trump is pushing Congress to approve a second round of $1,200 stimulus checks by reallocating $300 billion in unused coronavirus relief funds.

“We have $300 billion in an account that we didn’t use. I would be willing to release it, subject to Congress, and use that as stimulus money and it would go right to the American people,” Trump said Friday during a White House press briefing, according to FOX Business.

Trump said he considered redirecting the funds unilaterally, but was told he needs Congress’ approval. Trump also did not say specifically where the money would be coming from but the funds may come from unused business loan funds approved by Congress at the end of March as part of the $2.2 trillion CARES Act.

Under the CARES Act, Congress appropriated $500 billion to the Treasury, with $454 billion allocated to cover losses on Federal Reserve lending programs. Wall Street Journal Correspondent Nick Timiraos said on Twitter $259 billion of that funding remains uncommitted.

“It’s money that we have — money that we built up and money that we haven’t spent, and I would love to give it to the American people as a very powerful stimulus,” Trump told reporters Friday.

“I think there is a theory that I could do it without having to go back, but I think it would be appropriate to go back, and I would ask Congress to approve it. It’s a very simple approval. It’s — literally, it’s a one-sentence approval, and the Democrats should do that. The Republicans will do that. They would be glad to do that.”


An estimate by the Economic Policy Institute showed the first set of coronavirus stimulus checks totaled about $300 billion. Both Democrats and Republicans support another round of stimulus checks, but there have been no relief negotiations since the first week of August.

Democrats said they were willing to come down from the roughly $3 trillion HEROES Act the House passed in May by $1 trillion. Republicans, however, want to keep any stimulus relief package around $1 trillion amid growing concerns over the nation’s ballooning deficit.

Another issue lawmakers are fighting over is how much federal aid unemployed Americans should receive. Democrats have said the $600-a-week benefit needs to be extended through the end of the year. Republicans, meanwhile, have argued it discourages Americans from returning to jobs that pay less, a notion many economists have disputed.

Akon Breaks Ground on the Construction of a $6 Billion ‘Wakanda’ In Senegal

Akon Breaks Ground on the Construction of a $6 Billion ‘Wakanda’ In Senegal


Previously, BLACK ENTERPRISE reported on entertainment mogul Akon’s plans to create a Wakanda-like city in his home country of Senegal. This week, he announced that his company has begun to break ground on the construction of the $6 billion development project. He took to social media to unveil the first 3-D rendering of his Akon City.

 

“We are looking at Akon city to become the beginning of Africa’s future,” said the rapper at the special ceremony to celebrate the start of construction of the city, according to CNN. “Our idea is to build a futuristic city that incorporates all the latest technologies, cryptocurrencies, and also the future of how African society should become in the future.”

Numerous government officials attended the ceremony celebrating the new project, including the minister of tourism, Alioune Sarr, who praised the entrepreneur for making such an investment during the novel coronavirus pandemic. “At a time, in a context where national and international private investment is rare,” he said, according to CNN. “Akon, you have chosen to come to Senegal and invest $6 billion in the coming years.”

Akon’s hopes the city will bring new opportunities for the people of Senegal while also making a destination where African Americans can travel and be free from the discrimination they face in the United States.

“I wanted to build a city or a project like this that would give [African Americans] the motivation to know that there is a home back home… The system back [home in the US] treats them unfairly in so many different ways that you can never imagine and they only go through it because they feel like there is no other way,” he added.
“As you are coming from America or Europe, anywhere in the diaspora and you feel that you want to visit Africa, we want Senegal to be your first stop.”

 

 

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How To Make Black Economics Matter


Originally Posted Sep. 8, 2020.

It has been over 150 years since slavery was legally abolished; 55 years since the Civil Rights Act was passed, yet our economic state has changed very little, if at all. Once we get past the façades of movements and causes, we must realize that we are and have always been in an economic war. Slavery was an economic war; the Civil Rights movement was an economic war; and today we’re in an economic war. Remember, we were allowed to ride at the front of the bus in Birmingham, Alabama, due to the economic effect of a Rosa Parks-inspired bus boycott—not a newfound sympathy for Black people.

While the Black community has many important causes to fight for, the state of the Black economy is the most important. All issues affecting our community, from healthcare to police brutality to voter suppression and beyond, revolve around economics. To help deal with these issues we must make our economy a priority. Here are four ways we can make Black economics matter:

Buy Black

According to the CNBC, people of African descent “spent over $1.4 trillion in 2019 and is projected to grow to $1.8 trillion by 2024”. That’s more than the gross national product of Mexico. Yet, historically, we spend less than 5% of that money in our community. This must change if we are to build anything for our people.

“To make Black economics matter we must strengthen our relationships in our own community and rebuild our trade zone and wherever possible practice the principle of buying Black,” says Phil Andrews, president of the Long Island African American Chamber of Commerce.

 Own Black.

Buying Black and why we should buy Black are only the beginning. Recycling dollars in our community increases with owning businesses in our community. According to Black Men In America, a dollar circulates for 30 days in the Asian community, 20 days in the Jewish community and 17 days in the White community but only six hours in the Black community. To change this we must not only buy from Black-owned businesses. We must own distribution points, manufacturing plants and supply chains. This is how strong communities are built.

Sell Yourself.

We’re so used to working for others that we don’t know how to promote ourselves. “If you won’t promote you why should anyone else? It’s been my experience that some of the most talented people of color I know are afraid to promote themselves. No one will recognize our value unless we show it to them,” says Daron K. Roberts, Founding Director, Center for Sports Leadership & Innovation, University of Texas-Austin. People buy you before they buy your product or service, especially when you’re just starting your business. Also, we must stop running our businesses as if we’re working for someone else. We must know our value for ourselves.

Save For The Next Generation.

We have to reinvent the wheel every generation because we don’t build for the next generation. As a result, we have a tough time building wealth which hinders our ability to pay it forward. “The real test of all the new Black economic consciousness advocates will be the ability to remain consistent and disciplined. We must find a way to maintain the commitment to invest, elevate, support and remain intentional about collectively building Black wealth both online and by brick-and-mortar,” says Daniella Bien-aime, lead online content developer for Bien-Aime Post.

Making Black economics matter can’t be a fad. It must be a mission. While money isn’t everything, it’s an important part of the structure of communities. We must collectively invest in our communities so we can build wealth and pay it forward. I respect those, like Earl Graves, who built and held onto their thriving businesses and passed them on to their children. We need more of them.

When you take the first letter of each point you spell BOSS. Whether it’s a full-time grind or a part-time hustle, we must take control of our economic future before someone else does. Yes, Black lives should matter. But if we’re going to truly rebuild our communities, we must make sure that Black economics matter.


The ideas and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author’s and not necessarily the opinion of Black Enterprise. 

Benedict College Boosts Women Entrepreneurs With 2nd HBCU Women’s Business Center


Last week Benedict College opened a new Women’s Business Center funded by the Small Business Administration to help women entrepreneurs start and grow businesses, reopen or recover from COVID-19, and create jobs for their local economies.

It’s only the second Women’s Business Center that is affiliated with the SBA at a historically Black college or university (HBCU).

“Benedict College is the perfect location for the new WBC,” Allen Gutierrez, the SBA Associate Administrator for the Office of Entrepreneurial Development, said in a press release when the center was announced in June. “Founded in 1870 by an African American woman, Bathsheba A. Benedict, this WBC will strive to prepare men and women to be a ‘power of good in society,’ just as Ms. Benedict had intended so many years ago.”

The center’s mandate is to help women entrepreneurs across the state of South Carolina succeed in business. “We will work hard to remove those barriers that have stopped them from pursuing their dreams,” center director Cheryl Salley said at a virtual launch event last week.

Launching the center at the college’s Tyrone A. Burroughs School of Business and Entrepreneurship took more than 18 months of work and a $420,000 federal grant under the CARES Act for pandemic relief, Benedict College President Roslyn Clark Artis said.

The SBA’s Women’s Business Center program was established in 1988 to “encourage women’s entrepreneurship in communities through one-on-one counseling, lender referrals, and loan preparation assistance, seminars, and networking, among other services,” according to SC Biz News.

According to the invitation for the virtual launch,

The BCWBC seeks to initiate the leveraging required to support our small business community. Aligning with Benedict College’s mission as a catalyst for economic development, the BCWBC serves as the first gender-focused statewide entrepreneurial initiative for socially and economically disadvantaged small and minority-owned businesses throughout the state of South Carolina. While providing assistance to all businesses, our efforts primarily focus on women, particularly minority women that historically experience more social and economic disparities than their counterparts.

Located in the heart of our state’s capital, the BCWBC will provide:

      • Customized business one-on-one counseling.
      • Lender referrals and loan package preparation assistance.
      • Seminars and classes (web-based), focused on key business topics.
      • Review and feedback on written business plans.
      • Networking opportunities to find mutual support, access to resources, and business referrals.
      • Certification assistance and review.
      • Local and global business development.

The timing of the center’s launch could be fortunate, as many Black-owned businesses struggle with the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. Columbia Mayor Stephen K. Benjamin said such efforts are needed “so that the backbone of the American economy is able to weather through this storm,” according to The State.

SBA Administrator Jovita Carranza agreed: “We see many opportunities for up-and-coming women entrepreneurs as their businesses and employees battle back from the damage done to this country by the invisible enemy, COVID-19.”

BE Mental Health Week: Listen To These Wellness Podcasts For Your Self-Care Routine

BE Mental Health Week: Listen To These Wellness Podcasts For Your Self-Care Routine


For Mental Health Awareness week, BLACK ENTERPRISE is compiling useful guides and resources for those struggling with mental health issues within the Black community. Self-care is important to implement into your daily routine and can involve different activities that can reduce your stress level.

One of those activities? Listening to podcasts. Here are some that are centered around conversations on mental health within the Black community

Black Girl In Om

Lauren Ash is the founder of Black Girl in Om, a collective that centers Black women in wellness and resources for those looking to implement a healthy self-care routine.

Affirm

Hosted by former therapist Davia Roberts, the Affirm podcast fosters conversations on mental health and seeking wholeness in your self-care routine.

Therapy for Black Girls Podcast

Inspired by her directory of the same name, Therapy for Black Girls is hosted by Dr. Joy Harden Bradford, who discusses different topics related to Black women dealing with mental health-related issues.

The Bodyful Black Girl

Created by holistic nutritionist and creative arts therapy candidate, Jennifer Sterling, this podcast centers around discussions with women of color struggling with depression, anxiety, and recovering from trauma while offering useful tips on how BIPOC women can thrive.

Between Sessions

Eliza Boquin and Eboni Harris, two licensed therapists, created the show through their Melanin & Mental Health, a service for individuals to connect with local licensed therapists specializing in mental health illness within the Black and Latinx communities.

Fireflies Unite Podcast

This weekly podcast hosted by T-Kea Blackman, a suicide survivor and the founder of Fireflies Unite, a media and communications company focused on mental health-related issues. The show shares stories from different individuals of color who are learning to cope with mental health illness while encouraging those to seek treatment and break the stigma around conversations on mental health.

Black-Owned Line of Bulletproof Vests For Adults and Children Sees 400% Increase in Sales


Thyk Skynn, a Black-owned line of fashionable bulletproof vests for men, women, and children, has seen a nearly 400 percent increase in sales over the past few weeks as Americans continue to grow concerned about their protection from police shootings and other random acts of violence.

Mike Tyree, the founder and CEO of Thyk Skynn, was a police officer in the city of Atlanta for 9 years. He says he left his career and decided to start the business to give innocent people a safe way to peacefully protect themselves.

Thyk Skynn vests have the same function as others bulletproof vests but are more fashionable and can even be disguised as normal attire. There are several designs available in various colors and sizes, and each vest has a ballistic armor panel carrier where ballistic material can be placed inside. The vests, however, are not cheap. They range from $325 to upwards of $500.

According to TMZ, the increase in sales apparently began following a continuous increase of senseless shootings of African Americans by police officers such as the case of Jacob Blake who was shot in the back 7 times by a white police officer in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

For more information about Thyk Skynn, visit www.thykskynn.com or follow the brand on Instagram @ThykSkynn


This article was originally written by BlackBusiness.com.

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