For Black History Month, a review of various economic faux pas and ideology will be reviewed for the next couple of weeks. This includes pathology and mindsets that shaped how problems were avoided, caused, and conditioned the Black community’s management of situations over the years in American culture.
The reason why it’s time to have honest context of faux pas in the Black community is because not all management requires the “White” way of handling things. Some issues aren’t as bad as they seem, while others are toxic habits that condition how engagement with economic stability spils into other life areas.
Faux paus also explain why some issues never seem to go away, while systemic issues prove why the Black community’s resiliency outweighs others, especially when faced with the same collective problem.
Overall, these faux pas have conditioned some of the dumbest ass problems that seem pathological to others but, some antics fortify the most sustainable survivor tactics not fairly credited to Black Americans.
Some public historical tactics may be reference but this for the subtle issues Black people do and say that affect how to adjust for modern America culture today. Hopefully the review proves that when digging deep, prior historical wins can improve attitudes towards some faux pas, and present failures can refocus on why the failing happens in the first place.
















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