I write this piece following the ground work laid by W.E.B. Dubois’s Veil of Double Consciousness.
The veil he described was a visualization of the racial duality blacks
take on as part of their American identity. I now undertake the daunting
task of clarifying the new veil of economics that has covered the
struggles of a generation. The decadent veil looks at black Americans
through a lens of group theory and seeks to explain an illusion that has
taken form over a 30-year
span of financial deregulation and new found access to unsecured
credit. This veil is trimmed with million-dollar sports contracts, Roc
Nation tour deals and designer labels made for heads of state. As black
celebrity invited us into their homes through shows like MTV cribs, we
forgot the condition of overall African American financial affairs.
Despite a large section of the 14 million black households
drowning in poverty and debt the stories of a few are told as if they
represent those of millions, not thousands. It is this new veil of
economics that has allowed for a broad swath of America to become not
just desensitized to black poverty, but also hypnotized by black
celebrity. How could we not? Our channels from ESPN to VH1 are filled
with presentations of black Americans being paid a king’s ransom to
entertain. As black celebrity has been shown to millions of people,
millions of times, the story of real lives has also been lost, and with
it the engine that thrust forward the demand for social justice by the
masses. The heartbeat of social action is to recognize your
mistreatment, and demand better. With each presentation of Kobe Bryant’s
25 million dollar a year contract, or Oprah’s status as the sole
African American billionaire a veil of false calm is created within the
overall American economic psyche about the immense black wealth
disparity. Young black men from ghettos across America that used to
dream to make great changes in racial inequity now just dream to be a
millionaire and be like mike and dunk a ball or dance on a stage. The decadent veil
not only warps the black community’s vision outward to a larger
economic world, but it also distorts outside community’s view of Black
America’s actual financial reality.
Federal Reserve numbers show the median net worth (Assets less Debts) for
white households in the top 1 percent is about $8.3 Million dollars.
While median net worth for all white households is $112,000 — this is
the exact midpoint of America’s 90 million white families, where half or
45 million families have more and the other half possesses less. That
makes for a staggering 74 times less wealth for an average white
household when compared to the asset holdings of the top 1 percent of
white homes. This
is among the highest levels of income stratification between classes in
the developed world. Yet, the wealth difference between the American
black household in the top 1 percent and the average black household is
several times worse. As reported
by MSNBC the median net worth of the few black households in the top 1
percent was $1.2 million dollars, while according to the Census median
net worth for all black households was about $6,000 in total.
A black
family in the 1 percent is worth a staggering 200 times that of an
average black family. If black America were a country we would be among
the most wealth stratified in the world.
It is because
of this concentration of wealth that any view of averages is destroyed
for black America, the disparity between rich and poor is too high. When
a few families have a massive percentage of wealth it pulls the average
up so astronomically that it makes the mean present a false narrative.
The key in this kind of stratification is to look closely at the median
and understand its real world impact.
Looking more closely at the numbers according to MSNBC the Grio Black America
is a mere 1.4 percent of the Top 1 percent of households. That means
only 16,400 black households of the total 14 million black families are
in the top 1 percent. Yet based on the regularity with which media
flaunts young black men signing million dollar sports and music
contracts, and the frequency with which they display fabulous videos
with African Americans in expensive cars and houses you would think a
larger percentage of us were rich.
The sad truth is that added together all black households are worth a mere $1.4 trillion of the $80 trillion of total U.S. household net worth. A group that is 13 percent of the U.S. population and built one
of the the wealthiest countries the world has known as slave labor
controls less than 1.75 percent of that country’s household wealth. With a massive amount of the small slither in the hands of a small black elite. According to the Pew Research Study,
35 percent of Black households have Negative or No Net Worth. Another
15 percent have less than $6,000 in total household worth, that’s nearly
7 million of the total 14 million black households that have little or
no security.
The veil
created by mass media, sports organizations and our own psyche in Black
America is one of safety through presentation. It is an inversion of the
same model implemented by Dr. Martin Luther King so many years ago,
except where Dr. King instilled global empathy by showing
images of Bull Conner’s disciples water hosing black teenagers. Instead
NBA commissioner Adam Silver hands black teenagers million-dollar deals
and ESPN then projects that as a normal image of black life across the
globe creating apathy for Black America’s truly dire financial straits. This all being shown despite there being a prison rate amongst young African American males that is higher than we have seen in any modern society in history. While media projects Beyonce signing a Pepsi $50 million ad campaign throughout the World Wide Web, the fact that single Black mothers across America have a median net worth of a mere $5 dollars falls in the shadow of the singularity of her financial success.
Even though
their numbers are infinitesimal in comparison to the whole of Black
America the 21st century million dollar black celebrity’s image has
grown to a point of normalcy in homes across the world. So much so that
the lives of those struggling financially in urban centers across
America have become overcast by the projection of these larger than life
individual brands. The issue is our veiled mask glazed with decadent
trim has in many ways hidden the true consequence of our historical
scars. Without that veil removed, we project progress that has not yet
occurred, and in doing so perpetuate an illusion that may in the end
destroy us all.
“To be a
poor man is hard, but to be a poor race in a land of dollars is the very
bottom of hardships.” W.E.B. Dubois - Souls of Black Folks