Buy Black movement gains momentum

jimpeel

Well-Known Member
If I were to announce that I would be only shopping at White owned stores I would be called a bigot, a racist, a separatist, and a person of ill repute.

SOURCE

Chicago Family's 'Buy Black' Experiment Becoming a Nationwide Movement

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

ATLANTA — It's been two months since 2-year-old Cori pulled the gold stud from her left earlobe, and the piercing is threatening to close as her mother, Maggie Anderson, hunts for a replacement.

It's not that the earring was all that rare — but finding the right store has become a quest of Quixotic proportions.

Maggie and John Anderson of Chicago vowed four months ago that for one year, they would try to patronize only black-owned businesses. The "Empowerment Experiment" is the reason John had to suffer for hours with a stomach ache and Maggie no longer gets that brand-name lather when she washes her hair. A grocery trip is a 14-mile odyssey.

"We kind of enjoy the sacrifice because we get to make the point ... but I am going without stuff and I am frustrated on a daily basis," Maggie Anderson said. "It's like, my people have been here 400 years and we don't even have a Walgreens to show for it."

(And in Africa there is no evidence that you had the invention of the wheel, the most basic natural machine, prior to foreign interaction on the African continent; and your people have been there for countless centuries. -- j)

So far, the Andersons have spent hundreds of dollars with black businesses from grocery stores to dry cleaners. But the couple still hasn't found a mortgage lender, home security system vendor or toy store. Nonetheless, they're hoping to expand the endeavor beyond their Chicago home.

Plans are under way to track spending among supporters nationwide and build a national database of quality black businesses. The first affiliate chapter has been launched in Atlanta, and the couple has established a foundation to raise funds for black businesses and an annual convention.

"We have the real power to do something, to use the money we spend every day to solve our problems," Maggie Anderson said recently at a meet-and-greet in Atlanta. "We have to believe that black businesses are just as good as everybody else's."

Now, the Andersons are following up with 4,000 people who signed up for the experiment on their Web site to gauge their commitment and set up online accounts to track their spending. Hundreds have also joined the experiment's Facebook page, Maggie Anderson said.

Gregory Price, chairman of the economics department at Morehouse College, said black visionaries like Booker T. Washington and Marcus Garvey made similar calls to action.

"The idea is a sound one, given that black Americans are still underrepresented in the ranks of the self-employed and that entrepreneurship is a key component to wealth," Price said.

There are one million black businesses in the United States accounting for more than $100 billion in annual sales, according to the National Black Chamber of Commerce. The latest U.S. Census numbers report that blacks have more than $800 billion in expendable income each year.

The Andersons track their spending on their Web site and estimate about 55 percent of their monthly spending is with black businesses for things like day care, groceries, car maintenance and home improvements.

One of the businesses highlighted by the Empowerment Experiment is Brenda Brown's Atlanta wine boutique, a shop with a growing black clientele. She said the project can help overcome the problems many black consumers lament.

"When we were a community of black folks who could not go to the white stores, our community of black stores flourished," Brown said. "When we were given the opportunity to go into the white store, it was like nothing else mattered anymore and we wanted to go to the white store, regardless of what the black store provided. We could have the same or better products if we supported (black businesses) in the same way."

Lewis Peeples, 45, lives in a black neighborhood in southwest Atlanta but didn't think to spend his money with black businesses until a friend told him about the project.

"So often, we make purchases and decisions and aren't even mindful that there is a a need to support our own businesses," said Peeples. "Now, I'm reaching out and making sure I know that I have an option when I look to make a purchase."

Two months ago, he committed to patronizing black businesses and found a black dry cleaner 10 minutes from home. Even when he was dissatisfied with his black doctor, he was able to find a new one. He suggests both to friends and refers others to the experiment's Web site, where he tracks his expenses.

Dallas Smith, who owns a commercial real estate firm in Atlanta, said mainstream retailers have undervalued black consumers. He lives in a black neighborhood in southwest Atlanta, where he tries to dine at black restaurants. He lamented the lack of quality businesses catering to black customers and said blacks should appreciate such businesses more.

"We've still got that 'the white man's water is colder' mentality," he said. "We can't take us for granted. When we go to our establishments, it's almost like we're doing a favor. That ought to be a given for us."

The Andersons remain encouraged by their momentum online and in the media. At the end of 2009, they hope to show $1 million in spending with black businesses among supporters across the country.

"The response has been so huge," Maggie Anderson said. "We think so much can come out of this. We're in movement-making mode now."

Price, the Morehouse professor, said defining the project's success won't be easy, since the real barriers to black advancement are poor access to capital and lack of training opportunities.

"It would be nice to see some real, hard data," Price said. "Otherwise, it could just be an episode of ethnic cheerleading."
 
Several groups do the same thing with little or no fanfare... Maggie and John Anderson of Chicago. your 15 minutes are up.

Oh..Jim.
only shopping at White owned stores
The odds are good that you and most other people are already doing this...consciously or not.
 
Several groups do the same thing with little or no fanfare... Maggie and John Anderson of Chicago. your 15 minutes are up.

Oh..Jim.
The odds are good that you and most other people are already doing this...consciously or not.

Hardly the same thing, as there's no decision to NOT buy at non-white owned stores.
 
Hardly the same thing, as there's no decision to NOT buy at non-white owned stores.
I was speaking of averages.

I find this couple's attempts to buy strictly from 'black owned' stores as their sacrificial way of trying to support black entrepreneurs. As such there's nothin wrong with it, in the same way as there's nothing wrong with buying locally farmed produce only, or 'Made in America' products for our American members, or even groups that promote Jewish stores, or Women-owned, or 'fair trade' products only.

You want to support a group and ideal or a 'cause', regardless of whether it represents you or not, and speak with your wallet? By all means, enjoy.

I see no issue with it at all. It's your money, after all.
You use your choice to gain attention for the group/ideal/cause? M'kay
You use it to gain attention for yourself? Weak-sauce. *In other words. "A grocery trip is a 14-mile odyssey" BooHoo!!
 
i try to buy from gay-owned places if i have a choice, but only because their existence pisses off the small-minded. nothing noble here ha ha.
 
Africans invented AIDS didn't they?
I say we should withhold the white man’s contrivances from
this black family and see how well they fare.
Mud huts anyone?
 
I was speaking of averages.

I find this couple's attempts to buy strictly from 'black owned' stores as their sacrificial way of trying to support black entrepreneurs. As such there's nothin wrong with it, in the same way as there's nothing wrong with buying locally farmed produce only, or 'Made in America' products for our American members, or even groups that promote Jewish stores, or Women-owned, or 'fair trade' products only.

You want to support a group and ideal or a 'cause', regardless of whether it represents you or not, and speak with your wallet? By all means, enjoy.

I see no issue with it at all. It's your money, after all.
You use your choice to gain attention for the group/ideal/cause? M'kay
You use it to gain attention for yourself? Weak-sauce. *In other words. "A grocery trip is a 14-mile odyssey" BooHoo!!




Sorry, but I'm not seeing it. You can put as much lipstick on it as you like, I still smell pork.

But, I will grant them respect for upholding their belief ... driving about in pain trying to find a black owned pharmacy. Odd how similar choices in the past ... refusal to allow a black, woman or gay doctor to examine you ... isn't seen in the same light. I wonder how long they'll hold to those beliefs while they look for a black owned hospital.
 
Aren't most hospitals here owned by giant, faceless corporations that will sell shares of stock to anyone who's buying?
 
Several groups do the same thing with little or no fanfare... Maggie and John Anderson of Chicago. your 15 minutes are up.

Oh..Jim.
The odds are good that you and most other people are already doing this...consciously or not.

Key word ... consciously.

That's the difference. The people who are the subject of the article consciously seek out only their own kind to deal with, eschewing all others. That makes them racist bigots.
 
... if i made it my business, er, obsession to post endless intarwebs threads about assertive african americans.

it JUST ISN't FAIR!!!! :crying4:

Just pointing out racial bigotry where it is assumed not to exist.

Remember, only Whites are racist bigots. Blacks who exhibit racist tendencies are merely exhibiting "Black rage" over four-hundred years of inequality.

"Assertive [A]frican [A]mericans"? Why don't you just come out and say what you really mean. Come on. You can do it.
 
Using their money to buy the things they need or want at a place that they wish to shop...how capitalistic.
 
Just pointing out racial bigotry where it is assumed not to exist.

Remember, only Whites are racist bigots. Blacks who exhibit racist tendencies are merely exhibiting "Black rage" over four-hundred years of inequality.

"Assertive [A]frican [A]mericans"? Why don't you just come out and say what you really mean. Come on. You can do it.

whatever jim. you're obviously obsessed with this shit. i'd troll your previous threads and post links to show the sad and alarming pattern, but i think i'd rather spend that time looking at boobies.
 
Mink, even a blind squirrel finds a nut once in a while. Deny it all you like, this is racist.


But then, I`ve never really had an issue with racists. People hate what's not them. That's normal human behaviour. That's what wars are about, and why we're so good at them. So long as racism doesn't impinge on the rights of others, I don't see a problem with it. Just be honest enough to call it what it is.
 
Mink, even a blind squirrel finds a nut once in a while. Deny it all you like, this is racist.


But then, I`ve never really had an issue with racists. People hate what's not them. That's normal human behaviour. That's what wars are about, and why we're so good at them. So long as racism doesn't impinge on the rights of others, I don't see a problem with it. Just be honest enough to call it what it is.
SO Jews who buy from Jewish owned businesses are being racist? Christians who shop from Christian owned? Women who buy from Women owned?

If you're putting down another race, that's racist...if you're supporting your own primarily, is that racist too? *peepwall*
 
Making any decision based solely on race is racist .... hence the word race being part of the word racist. Case in point. If two grocery stores side by side both offer kosher food, but a jew only buys from the jew owned store, because it's owned by a jew... that's racist. If he only buys from the jew owned store because it has a better selection, and fresher food than the gentile owned one .... that's not.

It falls into the same catagory as nepotism. Not a damn thing wrong with it in my book. You get what you pay for.

Now, if the jew store owner offers a lower price to other jews and he offers gentiles .... that's a whole different ball game. But if he offers a better price based on volume purchased ... and it just happens that 80% of those buyig enough to qualify are jews .... that's not.
 
Several groups do the same thing with little or no fanfare... Maggie and John Anderson of Chicago. your 15 minutes are up.

Oh..Jim.
The odds are good that you and most other people are already doing this...consciously or not.
Mormons support each others businesses, even to the point of giving discounts to other Mormons at the expense of their other customers. Why should blacks be any different?

This is not a new concept. Why should I care?
 
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