Bartram
Brand HBCUbian
in predominantly black counties?
This, my friends and young HBCU college matriculating upstarts, is totally unacceptable. When are black folks going to learn the value of land/realestate?! When are we going to stop buying the biggest car we can afford upon making a little money and, instead, invest in land/property? (stocks and any other legit business venture are all good, but I'm speaking specifically here in the south were we once OWNED significant amounts of land and either gave it away, left it for the carcasians to assume ownership of, or had it outright taken from us by the carcasians)
Yeah, yeah, I know,,, there's nothing wrong with rewarding ourselves for all the hard work and sacrifice we make in college, but we need more young people to take up/continue the tradition that many of our ancestors started which was having more control over our own destiny through the long term sustainable wealth potentially generated by owning land/realestate. Indeed, because in predominantly rural regions like the south, land/realestate ownership is still a huge means to that end as we don't have all the high-tech companies and factory/service jobs of large metro areas (although that's changing to an extent in our largest metro regions like Atlanta, Charlotte, Raliegh-Durham, Nashville, Dallas-Fort Worth, Memphis, Miami,,, etc).
Comments?
This, my friends and young HBCU college matriculating upstarts, is totally unacceptable. When are black folks going to learn the value of land/realestate?! When are we going to stop buying the biggest car we can afford upon making a little money and, instead, invest in land/property? (stocks and any other legit business venture are all good, but I'm speaking specifically here in the south were we once OWNED significant amounts of land and either gave it away, left it for the carcasians to assume ownership of, or had it outright taken from us by the carcasians)
Yeah, yeah, I know,,, there's nothing wrong with rewarding ourselves for all the hard work and sacrifice we make in college, but we need more young people to take up/continue the tradition that many of our ancestors started which was having more control over our own destiny through the long term sustainable wealth potentially generated by owning land/realestate. Indeed, because in predominantly rural regions like the south, land/realestate ownership is still a huge means to that end as we don't have all the high-tech companies and factory/service jobs of large metro areas (although that's changing to an extent in our largest metro regions like Atlanta, Charlotte, Raliegh-Durham, Nashville, Dallas-Fort Worth, Memphis, Miami,,, etc).
Comments?