Business History National News Uncategorized

Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey, African-American-owned spirit

Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey was founded by Fawn Weaver to honor the memory of Nearest Green, an enslaved African American who helped Jack Daniel to start his distillery. The 270-acre distillery became the first in U.S. history to honor an African-American whiskey maker, and one of the few distilleries in the country owned and operated Read More…

crime Politics

Operation Trojan Shield

The operation known as Trojan Shield led to police raids in 16 nations. More than 800 suspects were arrested and more than 32 tons of drugs — including cocaine, cannabis, amphetamines and methamphetamines — were seized along with 250 firearms, 55 luxury cars and more than $148 million in cash and cryptocurrencies. Criminal gangs divulged Read More…

Business Uncategorized

Altamonte Mall looks to add Black-owned stores by helping pay for setup, offering guidance

Altamonte Mall is trying to attract Black-owned businesses through a program that will help fund the setup of new stores there. Brookfield Properties has committed up to $25 million toward the Partner to Empower Program over the next five years. In addition to money to help build out the stores with things such as flooring Read More…

Mental Health Psychological Racism Sports Sports Uncategorized

NFL’S Psychological Racism

NFL’S Psychological Racism:  NFL assumed Black players had lower cognitive funcition now halts their “race-norming’ Since Black NFL retirees did not know GAGUT and the vibrational frequency of G ij,j =O, they did not know about the gene study testing that was conducted by Yale University of Medicine and others regarding the DNA polymorphism that Read More…

Education History Uncategorized

Tulsa Massacre Is American History. It’s Also Mine.

Tulsa Massacre, aired on HBO’S Watchmen, “Sunday night”  was something I thought I’d never see on television: the depiction of a dark day in American history that not many know about—the Tulsa massacre. Late in the afternoon of May 30, 1921, Dick Rowland needed to use the bathroom. A 19-year-old black shoe-shiner working in segregated Oklahoma, Read More…