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Submit ReviewExplore economic resources for black business communities, and the importance of creating a broader community so we can all rise together.
Leader, coach, speaker, and training facilitator Gerald Jones, host of the Buy Black Podcast | The Voice of Black Business, shares how the deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile led to his podcast.
We also discussed creating economic resources for black business communities, and the importance of creating a broader community so we can all rise together.
So many insights your head might just explode.
Everything is intersectional. Learn more about building black business communities. I can’t speak to what it is to be a woman. But in a lot of cases, I just kind of wing it and I substitute misogyny for racism and I substitute woman for black. But I use the exact same words of a thing that happened to me. And the heads start nodding. It’s like, “That happens to me all the time.” And I’m like, “And what do you think?” “Freaking sexism.” I’m like, “Exactly. That’s also how racism works.” Power treats the disadvantaged in very similar ways. We just call it different things. — Gerald Jones, Coach
Explore economic resources for black business communities, and the importance of creating a broader community so we can all rise together.
Leader, coach, speaker, and training facilitator Gerald Jones, host of the Buy Black Podcast | The Voice of Black Business, shares how the deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile led to his podcast.
We also discussed creating economic resources for black business communities, and the importance of creating a broader community so we can all rise together.
So many insights your head might just explode.
Everything is intersectional. Learn more about building black business communities. I can’t speak to what it is to be a woman. But in a lot of cases, I just kind of wing it and I substitute misogyny for racism and I substitute woman for black. But I use the exact same words of a thing that happened to me. And the heads start nodding. It’s like, “That happens to me all the time.” And I’m like, “And what do you think?” “Freaking sexism.” I’m like, “Exactly. That’s also how racism works.” Power treats the disadvantaged in very similar ways. We just call it different things. — Gerald Jones, Coach
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