African American History Month Has Become A Problem….

“Whoever controls the images, controls your self-esteem, self-respect, and self-development. Whoever controls the history, controls the vision.” – Dr. Leonard Jeffries

It seems that very few people remember how African American History Month even began. It has gotten so bad that many of us think we were “bamboozled” by being given the shortest month. Despite the fact it was we who chose the month and by “we” I mean Dr. Carter G. Woodson, who started it as Negro History Week in 1926. Woodson chose that week because at the time it encompassed the birthdays of two men whom he felt greatly impacted the African American population, Fredrick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln.

At the school I attended as a child, of which had a 100% African Diaspora student body with 99% African American faculty and headed (and owned) by an African American principal, we celebrated Black History Month every day. My kindergarten teacher was a 6’3, 225-pound African American male member of Omega Psi Phi. I’ll let you wrap your mind around the rarity of that for a moment. From the moment you walked into the school there were pictures up around the room of great African Diaspora citizens and their stories, as we awaited our teacher to come receive us for the day. Your curiosity as a child would beckon you to see who these great people were on the wall. The books in the room were for all I can remember always with us as African American students in mind. To see that which looked like us. Amazingly, this was just the recreation room before the day’s lessons even started. Once in class every subject we learned had a culturally relevant historical component attached to it. If we were learning about math, we would also learn about Benjamin Banneker. If we were learning about science, we learned about Ron McNair. I’ll never forget that on January 28, 1986 we stopped our day to watch the launch of the Space Shuttle Challenger because Astronaut McNair was going to be on that flight. They wanted to us to see someone that looked like us reach into the heavens. Despite the tragedy of that day the richness of that moment and its history was built into the curriculum with every subject we learned. It made all the difference in the world to us as children.

These are the benefits and things we gave up when we decided to desegregate without demanding that more than just our ability to go to school with European Americans but that our teachers, principals, administrators, and the right to dictate the curriculum be included as well. Instead we have seen the watering down of our history decade after decade with those who of us intensely guarded about it viewed as “militant” now instead of just proud and knowledgeable of whom we are.

In our own community African American history month has allowed almost a laziness thought to our history. Kids now assuming they know about being African American simply because they are African American. They are a glass with no water. I even asked one of my daughter’s friends one time why Martin Luther King, Jr. was killed and his reply “because he tried to run for president”. At the time they were in middle school and the young man’s reply broke my heart. His parents had failed him, his community had failed him, and his school had failed him. The sad thing for me once I left my initial elementary school was that I would then be attending majority (and by majority I mean 95% and up European American student bodies) European American schools where the most exposure to African American history I was going to get was Martin Luther King, Jr. and only during Black History Month and never would it be the militant Martin that talked about African American self-sufficiency. Over the years Martin was watered down and filtered to present the image they wanted me to have of who Martin Luther King, Jr. was. I have a dream speech became the beginning and end of who Martin was in a sad way. Last year my daughter and niece, both in high school, said their schools did absolutely nothing for African American history month. Thankfully, I had a mother growing up who worked at an HBCU campus, where my initial elementary was located, and came from a very active family who tirelessly exposed us our history and made us attend events on the HBCU campus because all of the events had us in them. Any event at a museum that was about our history they made sure we attended if they could. My father made me watch, much to my dismay, Mississippi Burning while I was still in elementary. However, most children today do not have parents who care this much about teaching their child their history. Most in fact would rather not even acknowledge that history. In some subconscious hope of that child knowing a color blind world to that child’s detriment. Either that or they are so benighted themselves to their own history that they can’t teach what they do not know nor know its value.

Our naivety at times also to believe that one day European Americans will be willing to share the spoils of America prosperity is both unfounded and dangerous. I have always said and continue to say that no group in power in the history of mankind has ever willingly conceded some of its power so that another group could rise – not even thirty centuries of African dynasties or Asian dynasties willingly ceded their power. This flies in the face against self-interest and group interest, the foundation of all animal behavior. Nor do I expect as brother Huey Newton once said “I do not expect white media to create positive black (male) images.” We have seen the history of European Americans and Europeans in Africa, the Caribbean, and Africa and their changing of that history as its presented to the people they conquer. There is some illogic and irrational thought in our mind that seeks to believe they would present our history in a “fair and balanced” manner instead of us being the one to do it.

Almost all African American, Africana, and African Diaspora studies are housed at Historically White Colleges & Universities (HWCUs) which means they are the vessels through which our stories are told, written, and passed along to generation after generation. No, just having African American professors at an HWCU does not change institutional ownership. That is simply labor to ownership in the way an African American athlete is to their European American owner who profits most from their skill and is only around so long as that labor is staying within the ownership protocol. Let me also be clear that this is not an African Diaspora vs. European Diaspora issue. The rise of the Asian Diaspora if they were in charge of our history would fair no different. It is the lion who must tell the lion’s story. Not the hunter, not the tiger, but the lion. Others can tell your story from their point of view but only the lion knows what the lion feels and went through as the hunter and hunted. Without a move to ownership of our history institutionally we will continue to see a watered down and irrelevance given to who we are as a people.Glasses empty of their water.

Mr. Foster is the Interim Executive Director of HBCU Endowment Foundation, sits on the board of directors at the Center for HBCU Media Advocacy, & President of AK Companies, Inc. A former banker & financial analyst who earned his bachelor’s degree in Economics & Finance from Virginia State University as well his master’s degree in Community Development & Urban Planning from Prairie View A&M University. Publishing research on the agriculture economics of food waste, full-time contributor at HBCU Money, and guest contributor for a number of African American media outlets.

 

The Oprah Illusion: The Reality of OWN

Just because you rise to head an army, does not mean you’re part of the power system. – Amos Wilson on slave generals

As the launch of OWN came on New Year’s Day it seemed that a number of worlds were a buzz and all for very different reasons. The cable world was a buzz as it wonders if the “Oprah Effect” can help it continue to close the advertisement revenue gap that exists between cable and broadcast channels. The battle for advertising dollars currently sees cable companies getting only 39% of the advertising revenue pie. African America was a buzz because finally our shining star of wealth would be finally in possession of her very own network. The hope by many is that we will see positive images of African Americans and especially African American women, which is something that we all agree is sorely lacking in America’s mindset and our own community. This, after all, is the beauty of ownership – you get to dictate what your company puts out. But that is assuming you have not just an ownership stake but majority or controlling ownership. We were told this is Oprah’s Network so she must own it all right? Well, not exactly. Unfortunately, this is where our lack of financial literacy at times gets us in trouble. Technically, I own Disney but then again so do a lot of other owners of Disney shares. My say so in the direction of Disney is equal to that of my ownership stake. This leads me into the illusion of OWN.

Let me point out a few things. The first and probably most important thing is that this is a partnership between Oprah & Discovery, a 50/50 partnership at that. Discovery ponied up the $200 million to kick-start the infrastructure for the network, which was previously Discovery Health, so unless the big O finds a way to gain another percentage point in ownership, she will not have absolute control of the network without first having to check with her partner. Discovery will have equal say so in programming and all other things as it pertains to the OWN network. The appointing of an African American woman CEO might have been more symbolic for appearance sake than anything else. Not saying this is the case but with the CEO being the most public figure after Oprah herself, if one wanted to keep up the notion that this is indeed “Oprah’s Network” then this is a good move. See Sun Tzu’s Art of War.

We see similar cases of strong and silent European American influence over perceived African American controlled media. Like BET, who unknown to most of us until the sale had a large shareholder in Liberty Media who held a 33% stake in BET giving it quite a large say so in the direction of the company. Another African American perceived owned outlet is TVOne. It too is not majority owned by Radio One but a partnership with Comcast. In this instance it is highly likely that Radio One is actually a minority owner (given its financial state – market value of Radio One is $65 million versus Comcast $63 billion) and Comcast the majority.

Oprah’s company ironically could be one of very few African America’s businesses that creates voluminous amounts of capital flight out of the European & Asian America groups into African America. In the way that Arab & Asian stores create capital flight out of our neighborhoods into their own by the stores they own in our community. Far more money is going out of African America than coming, even with Oprah. On a more macro level capital flight is currently happening from the European Diaspora into the Asian Diaspora (primarily China & India). These same principles apply here on the micro level within the country community to community.

My concerns about OWN are a bit more long-term. Is this network sustainable into another generation after Oprah passes?African America passes few generational assets along. None will be bigger than Oprah’s estate at the moment. Her estate could mean major windfalls for African Diaspora institutions here in the U.S., Africa and the Caribbean, which is a circulation of our global dollar – something we are sorely lacking. But again, is there a market for OWN or Harpo Productions without Oprah herself as the primary asset?

On a social level, it is hard to put much of any social value on the network for African America or African American women. Notice I said the network not Oprah. There is only one thing that European American controlled corporations like more than profits and that is power. Companies have been known to take losses on products just to control the market share of a product and drive competitors out of the space. John Rockefeller was infamous for this in maintaining the oil inventory under his control in early 20th century and in more modern times we’ve seen DeBeers use this same ploy to control 85% of the world’s diamonds.

Power to control the social capital of the society in this case is no different. In order to do so they must maintain the status quo of where an African American woman’s value is in the society. This despite African American women controlling $0.85 of every $1.00 in African America’s $913 billion buying power pie, the second largest buying power of any ancestral diaspora in the U.S. trailing only that of European America (although Latino America is on the verge of surpassing us). The danger of allowing African American women to gather social capital is that African American women are more than willing to fight for the survival of the African Diaspora than many in society would like to give them credit for. They have and continue to fill the void of African American men being swept away by the system through abnormally high death rates, incarceration, and poor education. Thus they provide the “doggy paddle in an ocean” for survival of African America as we continue to try and right our ship. Dr. John Henrik Clarke said it best “Powerful people cannot afford to educate the people that they oppress, because once you are truly educated, you will not ask for power. You will take it.” This is the crux of social capital and thus, with African American women controlling the economics of African America they too must be kept in their place for they pose a threat to those who control the society. If you control the society you control the economics and politics of it as well. One of the most powerful parts of social capital is a positive view of images of oneself and because of this we must realize why Oprah potentially does not have majority control of her own network.

But there is hope. This is the beauty of the stock market. If we want to influence the programming on OWN then buy shares of Discovery Communications, Inc. (Ticker Symbol:DISCA) and establish an African American & Diaspora ownership block. You would not only have influence over OWN but of all of Discovery’s assets. In the past I’ve made this same suggestion for buying Disney shares, as they are the owner of ESPN, which makes it revenue primarily from sports where the labor is predominantly African-American. An owner’s gripe that is invested in the company goes a lot further than just a gripe from the crowd.

Follow the money and power. The decisions, people, and institutions tend to explain the reality of what actually is rather than the illusion of what is presented.

Mr. Foster is the Interim Executive Director of HBCU Endowment Foundation, sits on the board of directors at the Center for HBCU Media Advocacy, & CEO of Sechen Imara Solutions, LLC. A former banker & financial analyst who earned his bachelor’s degree in Economics & Finance from Virginia State University as well his master’s degree in Community Development & Urban Planning from Prairie View A&M University. Publishing research on the agriculture economics of food waste as well as a contributing author for a number of African American media outlets.