Law in Contemporary Society

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JermelMcClureFirstEssay 3 - 04 May 2022 - Main.JermelMcClure
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Secure The Bag – The Importance of Wealth Generation in the Black Community

 
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Securing The Bag – The Importance of Wealth Generation in the Black Community

 
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-- By JermelMcClure - 17 Mar 2022
 
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Money Talks

 
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“Money Talks” is an age-old adage that dates back to the fifth century b.c. and still rings true over 2,500 years later.
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Money Talks

 
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How can we actually date such an idea? Aren't we actually dating money, that is, currency? Once there were coins in Lydia, we are saying, someone said they were talking. But had no one mentioned that "cattle talk" during the preceding 15,000 years?
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Wealth and access to graduate education provide families with resources and privilege that compound over time and equips families with the freedom of choice. Black families in America have consistently faced roadblocks preventing the establishment of generational wealth and stifling their ability to secure high-wage employment. Systemic racism has held Black families in a state of economic stagnation, while white families have been afforded the opportunity to achieve economic prosperity with ease. While policymakers and talking heads debate over the best solutions for combating the racial wealth gap, Black students perusing their J.D. should prioritize capitalizing on the economic opportunities that a law license provides. Focusing on wealth generation will allow Black professionals to protect themselves and their descendants by ensuring that they are amassing generational wealth – Securing The Bag.
 
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Wealth and income provide families with access and privilege that compounds over time and provides longevity and the freedom of choice. Unfortunately, for Black families in America there have consistently been roadblocks preventing the establishment of generational wealth and the ability to secure high wage employment. The systemic racism that plagues our nation has held Black families in a state of economic stagnation, while white families have been afforded the opportunity to achieve economic prosperity with ease. While policymakers and talking heads debate over the best solutions for reducing and combating the racial wealth gap, Black professionals must take steps to protect themselves and their descendants by maximizing their wealth potential – Securing The Bag.
 
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A Legacy of Disenfranchisement

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A Legacy of Disenfranchisement

 
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Since America’s founding there has been an exploitative culture of white wealth generation and Black wealth stagnation. For hundreds of years Black people were forced into slave labor that built America into the global powerhouse that it is today without compensation. The impacts of slavery’s institutionalized theft persist today and contribute to the enormous disparity between the median wealth of Black families when compared to white families. The legacies of slavery, the Jim Crow era, and mass incarceration are expressed today through residential segregation, housing discrimination, and discrimination within the labor market.
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Since America’s founding, there has been an exploitative culture of white wealth generation and Black wealth stagnation. For hundreds of years, Black people were forced into slave labor that built America into a global powerhouse without compensation. The impacts of slavery persist today and contribute to the enormous disparity between the median wealth of Black and white families. The intentional sabotage of Black generational wealth is exemplified by atrocities like the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. According to the New York Times, the Tulsa Oklahoma neighborhood of Greenwood was so promising and vibrant that it became home to what was known as America’s Black Wall Street. What took years for the Black community to build was erased in less than 24 hours by a white mob of looters and arsonists driven by their resentment toward the Black prosperity found in the community. Today, resentment towards black wealth creation is more insidious and is expressed through residential segregation, housing discrimination, and discrimination within the labor market.
 
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Contemporary Times

 
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Although the societal constraints on Black people have morphed over time, the racial wealth gap persists. In 2019 the Federal Reserve conducted a survey that recorded Black family median and mean wealth as less than 15 percent of that of white families. Additionally, the survey recorded that liquid savings for white families are four times higher than the number for Black families. The findings regarding the disparities between Black and white family’s liquid savings are especially pertinent in the contemporary moment because of the millions of Covid-19 related job losses. The ability to save more money for unforeseen emergencies provides white families with a level of insulation from what for families who lack similar savings capacity would be a devastating blow. The global economic downturn caused by Covid-19 disproportionately negatively affected Black families and likely took a toll on their ability to generate wealth for future generations.
 
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One Step forward, Two Steps Back

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One Step forward, Two Steps Back

 
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Despite the societal changes that have taken place since America’s founding like the Supreme Court’s ruling in Brown v Board of Education and the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, there is currently a debate that questions if any real progress has occurred regarding the economic subordination of Black people within society. According to the Federal Reserve, growth rates for the median wealth of Black families rose 33 percent during the three year period from 2016 – 2019, whereas for white families over the same period of time the growth rate was only 3 percent. Despite the substantial growth in median wealth for black families there has only been a modest change in the gaps between wealth in black and white families. A recent article published by the Harvard Gazette cited a 2018 study which noted that historical data reveals that no progress has been made in reducing income and wealth inequalities between black and white households over the past 70 years. The debate over the advancements or lack thereof that have been made in terms of reducing the racial wealth gap have merit. While we’ve been able to observe some substantial gains regarding the growth of the median Black household wealth, there has been a skyrocketing increase in the median wealth of white families over a longer period of time. A 2018 study conducted by the Economic Policy Institute found that the top 1 percent of Americans has seen their wealth grown by 157 percent over the past 40 years whereas the bottom 90 percent’s wealth has only grown by 24 percent over the same period of time.
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One might ask if any real progress has occurred regarding the economic subordination of Black people over the last century. According to the Federal Reserve, growth rates for the median wealth of Black families rose 33 percent during the three-year period from 2016 – 2019, whereas for white families over the same period of time the growth rate was only 3 percent. Despite the substantial growth in median wealth for black families, there has only been a modest change in the gaps between wealth in black and white families. A recent article published by the Harvard Gazette cited a 2018 study which noted that historical data reveals that no progress has been made in reducing income and wealth inequalities between black and white households over the past 70 years. While we’ve been able to observe some substantial gains regarding the growth of the median Black household wealth, there has been a skyrocketing increase in the median wealth of white families over a longer period of time.
 
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Ensuring a Prosperous Future

 
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Young Black professionals in general, and law students in particular should be mindful of the daunting racial wealth gap when choosing their career paths and employment. It is important to enter into high income positions early in ones career because investing and earning compound interest is the easiest way to ensure the creation of generational wealth. While a high income can lead to wealth creation they should be considered as two distinct categories. Wealth is often passed down through generations of a family, providing future generations with more choices and greater opportunities. Income is more short-term and solely dependent on the capital that is brought in by through a direct exchange for labor. In a paper published by the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality, “The Fading American Dream” it was noted that the number of children who are higher earners than their parents has sharply declined over the past 50 years due to the growth in inequality regarding familial wealth and resources. Black professionals provided with the opportunity to access high paying jobs should take advantage of those opportunities with future generations in mind. Professor Jack, Assistant Professor of Education at the Harvard Graduate School for education opined that his research shows that access to elite institutions increases the chances of historically marginalized communities’ odds of establishing generational wealth so long as those students, “use their education as springboard to a better future the same way their richer counterparts do.”
 
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Get The Bag

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Ensuring a Prosperous Future

 
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Money Talks, and if Black professionals are interested in ensuring a brighter future for their children and future generations, they should choose a career that will enable them to earn enough to do so.
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Young Black legal professionals should be mindful of the daunting racial wealth gap when planning their practice. It is important to enter into high-income positions early in one's career because investing and earning compound interest is the easiest way to ensure the creation of generational wealth. Wealth is often passed down through generations of a family, providing future generations with more choices and greater opportunities. Income is more short-term and solely dependent on the capital that is brought in through a direct exchange for labor. In a paper published by the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality, “The Fading American Dream” it was noted that the number of children who are higher earners than their parents has sharply declined over the past 50 years due to the growth in inequality regarding familial wealth and resources. Black lawyers provided with the opportunity to access high-paying jobs should take advantage of those opportunities with future generations in mind. Professor Jack, Assistant Professor of Education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education opined that his research shows that access to elite institutions increases the chances of historically marginalized communities’ odds of establishing generational wealth so long as those students, “use their education as a springboard to a better future the same way their richer counterparts do.”
 
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The strength of the draft is also its weakness: it powerfully and elegantly argues for the truth of its premise, which leaves no space to take the idea further in combination with others.
 
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Fortunately you can have both. This is the cut-to-build stage, and the next draft can grow immensely. First we need to condense the history. Every word that isn't strictly necessary must leave. Sentences must grow shorter and their grammar simpler. You will get back the room necessary to speak to your clearly-defined audience, young Black professionals (let us actually sharpen it and say lawyers), more directly and fully.
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The Target Remains

While a legal degree can enable Black professionals with the ability to ascend into the upper-middle class, it is important to note that Black lawyers face unique challenges in the workforce. The J.D. is viewed as one of the most valuable advanced degrees in American society because of the power and access it provides. The esteem that accompanies a wealthy lawyer can be understood as both a blessing and a curse. While a legal degree can provide opportunities for the establishment of generational wealth, the power that is associated with it can be threatening. Similarly, to the resentment that led to the destruction of Black Wall Street, wealthy Black lawyers must be hyperaware of the increased threats that they face. Although awareness of the heightened adversity Black lawyers are likely to face is important, it should not act as a deterrent to the establishment of generational wealth. Regardless of class or social status, Black people will consistently be targeted by various modes of oppression. The establishment of generational wealth provides Black families with the resources needed to combat systemic oppression effectively.

Secure The Bag

Money Talks, and if Black legal professionals are interested in ensuring a brighter future for their children and future generations, they should choose a practice that will enable them to earn enough to do so. The establishment of generational wealth is a crucial component of the success and longevity of the Black community. – Secure The Bag.
 
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Let us think of those folks as building a chair that stands on four legs: wealth, meaning, conditions of life and effect in community. Building each is essential: a lawyer's practice must create wealth; satisfy the lawyer's desire for meaningful work; fit into the personal, familial, geographic and other conditions of the lawyer's life in a healthy way; and fit within the lawyer's self-defined community in what the lawyer considers to be positive ways. These can be differently proportioned as the lawyer develops her practice throughout her life. Discussion of how those proportions should be executed, how design becomes reality, is one of the best things for lawyers to talk about with one another, in all their various social contexts where they meet and can enjoy one another's company. To do that, it's really important that they have a vocabulary in which to share experience and think fully. You have something to say that can help, and improvement involves making the idea more explicit in the larger context of discussion.
 

JermelMcClureFirstEssay 2 - 26 Mar 2022 - Main.EbenMoglen
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 -- By JermelMcClure - 17 Mar 2022
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Money Talks
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Money Talks

 
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“Money Talks” is an age-old adage that dates back to the fifth century b.c. and still rings true over 2,500 years later. Wealth and income provide families with access and privilege that compounds over time and provides longevity and the freedom of choice. Unfortunately, for Black families in America there have consistently been roadblocks preventing the establishment of generational wealth and the ability to secure high wage employment. The systemic racism that plagues our nation has held Black families in a state of economic stagnation, while white families have been afforded the opportunity to achieve economic prosperity with ease. While policymakers and talking heads debate over the best solutions for reducing and combating the racial wealth gap, Black professionals must take steps to protect themselves and their descendants by maximizing their wealth potential – Securing The Bag.
>
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“Money Talks” is an age-old adage that dates back to the fifth century b.c. and still rings true over 2,500 years later.
 
Changed:
<
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A Legacy of Disenfranchisement
>
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How can we actually date such an idea? Aren't we actually dating money, that is, currency? Once there were coins in Lydia, we are saying, someone said they were talking. But had no one mentioned that "cattle talk" during the preceding 15,000 years?

Wealth and income provide families with access and privilege that compounds over time and provides longevity and the freedom of choice. Unfortunately, for Black families in America there have consistently been roadblocks preventing the establishment of generational wealth and the ability to secure high wage employment. The systemic racism that plagues our nation has held Black families in a state of economic stagnation, while white families have been afforded the opportunity to achieve economic prosperity with ease. While policymakers and talking heads debate over the best solutions for reducing and combating the racial wealth gap, Black professionals must take steps to protect themselves and their descendants by maximizing their wealth potential – Securing The Bag.

A Legacy of Disenfranchisement

 Since America’s founding there has been an exploitative culture of white wealth generation and Black wealth stagnation. For hundreds of years Black people were forced into slave labor that built America into the global powerhouse that it is today without compensation. The impacts of slavery’s institutionalized theft persist today and contribute to the enormous disparity between the median wealth of Black families when compared to white families. The legacies of slavery, the Jim Crow era, and mass incarceration are expressed today through residential segregation, housing discrimination, and discrimination within the labor market.
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Contemporary Times
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Contemporary Times

 Although the societal constraints on Black people have morphed over time, the racial wealth gap persists. In 2019 the Federal Reserve conducted a survey that recorded Black family median and mean wealth as less than 15 percent of that of white families. Additionally, the survey recorded that liquid savings for white families are four times higher than the number for Black families. The findings regarding the disparities between Black and white family’s liquid savings are especially pertinent in the contemporary moment because of the millions of Covid-19 related job losses. The ability to save more money for unforeseen emergencies provides white families with a level of insulation from what for families who lack similar savings capacity would be a devastating blow. The global economic downturn caused by Covid-19 disproportionately negatively affected Black families and likely took a toll on their ability to generate wealth for future generations.
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One Step forward, Two Steps Back
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One Step forward, Two Steps Back

 Despite the societal changes that have taken place since America’s founding like the Supreme Court’s ruling in Brown v Board of Education and the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, there is currently a debate that questions if any real progress has occurred regarding the economic subordination of Black people within society. According to the Federal Reserve, growth rates for the median wealth of Black families rose 33 percent during the three year period from 2016 – 2019, whereas for white families over the same period of time the growth rate was only 3 percent. Despite the substantial growth in median wealth for black families there has only been a modest change in the gaps between wealth in black and white families. A recent article published by the Harvard Gazette cited a 2018 study which noted that historical data reveals that no progress has been made in reducing income and wealth inequalities between black and white households over the past 70 years. The debate over the advancements or lack thereof that have been made in terms of reducing the racial wealth gap have merit. While we’ve been able to observe some substantial gains regarding the growth of the median Black household wealth, there has been a skyrocketing increase in the median wealth of white families over a longer period of time. A 2018 study conducted by the Economic Policy Institute found that the top 1 percent of Americans has seen their wealth grown by 157 percent over the past 40 years whereas the bottom 90 percent’s wealth has only grown by 24 percent over the same period of time.
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Ensuring a Prosperous Future
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Ensuring a Prosperous Future

 Young Black professionals in general, and law students in particular should be mindful of the daunting racial wealth gap when choosing their career paths and employment. It is important to enter into high income positions early in ones career because investing and earning compound interest is the easiest way to ensure the creation of generational wealth. While a high income can lead to wealth creation they should be considered as two distinct categories. Wealth is often passed down through generations of a family, providing future generations with more choices and greater opportunities. Income is more short-term and solely dependent on the capital that is brought in by through a direct exchange for labor. In a paper published by the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality, “The Fading American Dream” it was noted that the number of children who are higher earners than their parents has sharply declined over the past 50 years due to the growth in inequality regarding familial wealth and resources. Black professionals provided with the opportunity to access high paying jobs should take advantage of those opportunities with future generations in mind. Professor Jack, Assistant Professor of Education at the Harvard Graduate School for education opined that his research shows that access to elite institutions increases the chances of historically marginalized communities’ odds of establishing generational wealth so long as those students, “use their education as springboard to a better future the same way their richer counterparts do.”
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Get The Bag
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Get The Bag

 Money Talks, and if Black professionals are interested in ensuring a brighter future for their children and future generations, they should choose a career that will enable them to earn enough to do so.
Added:
>
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The strength of the draft is also its weakness: it powerfully and elegantly argues for the truth of its premise, which leaves no space to take the idea further in combination with others.

Fortunately you can have both. This is the cut-to-build stage, and the next draft can grow immensely. First we need to condense the history. Every word that isn't strictly necessary must leave. Sentences must grow shorter and their grammar simpler. You will get back the room necessary to speak to your clearly-defined audience, young Black professionals (let us actually sharpen it and say lawyers), more directly and fully.

Let us think of those folks as building a chair that stands on four legs: wealth, meaning, conditions of life and effect in community. Building each is essential: a lawyer's practice must create wealth; satisfy the lawyer's desire for meaningful work; fit into the personal, familial, geographic and other conditions of the lawyer's life in a healthy way; and fit within the lawyer's self-defined community in what the lawyer considers to be positive ways. These can be differently proportioned as the lawyer develops her practice throughout her life. Discussion of how those proportions should be executed, how design becomes reality, is one of the best things for lawyers to talk about with one another, in all their various social contexts where they meet and can enjoy one another's company. To do that, it's really important that they have a vocabulary in which to share experience and think fully. You have something to say that can help, and improvement involves making the idea more explicit in the larger context of discussion.

 



JermelMcClureFirstEssay 1 - 17 Mar 2022 - Main.JermelMcClure
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstEssay"

Securing The Bag – The Importance of Wealth Generation in the Black Community

-- By JermelMcClure - 17 Mar 2022

Money Talks

“Money Talks” is an age-old adage that dates back to the fifth century b.c. and still rings true over 2,500 years later. Wealth and income provide families with access and privilege that compounds over time and provides longevity and the freedom of choice. Unfortunately, for Black families in America there have consistently been roadblocks preventing the establishment of generational wealth and the ability to secure high wage employment. The systemic racism that plagues our nation has held Black families in a state of economic stagnation, while white families have been afforded the opportunity to achieve economic prosperity with ease. While policymakers and talking heads debate over the best solutions for reducing and combating the racial wealth gap, Black professionals must take steps to protect themselves and their descendants by maximizing their wealth potential – Securing The Bag.

A Legacy of Disenfranchisement

Since America’s founding there has been an exploitative culture of white wealth generation and Black wealth stagnation. For hundreds of years Black people were forced into slave labor that built America into the global powerhouse that it is today without compensation. The impacts of slavery’s institutionalized theft persist today and contribute to the enormous disparity between the median wealth of Black families when compared to white families. The legacies of slavery, the Jim Crow era, and mass incarceration are expressed today through residential segregation, housing discrimination, and discrimination within the labor market.

Contemporary Times

Although the societal constraints on Black people have morphed over time, the racial wealth gap persists. In 2019 the Federal Reserve conducted a survey that recorded Black family median and mean wealth as less than 15 percent of that of white families. Additionally, the survey recorded that liquid savings for white families are four times higher than the number for Black families. The findings regarding the disparities between Black and white family’s liquid savings are especially pertinent in the contemporary moment because of the millions of Covid-19 related job losses. The ability to save more money for unforeseen emergencies provides white families with a level of insulation from what for families who lack similar savings capacity would be a devastating blow. The global economic downturn caused by Covid-19 disproportionately negatively affected Black families and likely took a toll on their ability to generate wealth for future generations.

One Step forward, Two Steps Back

Despite the societal changes that have taken place since America’s founding like the Supreme Court’s ruling in Brown v Board of Education and the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, there is currently a debate that questions if any real progress has occurred regarding the economic subordination of Black people within society. According to the Federal Reserve, growth rates for the median wealth of Black families rose 33 percent during the three year period from 2016 – 2019, whereas for white families over the same period of time the growth rate was only 3 percent. Despite the substantial growth in median wealth for black families there has only been a modest change in the gaps between wealth in black and white families. A recent article published by the Harvard Gazette cited a 2018 study which noted that historical data reveals that no progress has been made in reducing income and wealth inequalities between black and white households over the past 70 years. The debate over the advancements or lack thereof that have been made in terms of reducing the racial wealth gap have merit. While we’ve been able to observe some substantial gains regarding the growth of the median Black household wealth, there has been a skyrocketing increase in the median wealth of white families over a longer period of time. A 2018 study conducted by the Economic Policy Institute found that the top 1 percent of Americans has seen their wealth grown by 157 percent over the past 40 years whereas the bottom 90 percent’s wealth has only grown by 24 percent over the same period of time.

Ensuring a Prosperous Future

Young Black professionals in general, and law students in particular should be mindful of the daunting racial wealth gap when choosing their career paths and employment. It is important to enter into high income positions early in ones career because investing and earning compound interest is the easiest way to ensure the creation of generational wealth. While a high income can lead to wealth creation they should be considered as two distinct categories. Wealth is often passed down through generations of a family, providing future generations with more choices and greater opportunities. Income is more short-term and solely dependent on the capital that is brought in by through a direct exchange for labor. In a paper published by the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality, “The Fading American Dream” it was noted that the number of children who are higher earners than their parents has sharply declined over the past 50 years due to the growth in inequality regarding familial wealth and resources. Black professionals provided with the opportunity to access high paying jobs should take advantage of those opportunities with future generations in mind. Professor Jack, Assistant Professor of Education at the Harvard Graduate School for education opined that his research shows that access to elite institutions increases the chances of historically marginalized communities’ odds of establishing generational wealth so long as those students, “use their education as springboard to a better future the same way their richer counterparts do.”

Get The Bag

Money Talks, and if Black professionals are interested in ensuring a brighter future for their children and future generations, they should choose a career that will enable them to earn enough to do so.


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Revision 3r3 - 04 May 2022 - 17:40:29 - JermelMcClure
Revision 2r2 - 26 Mar 2022 - 12:39:58 - EbenMoglen
Revision 1r1 - 17 Mar 2022 - 05:49:33 - JermelMcClure
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