Category Archives: RACE

The Solution to Dwindling Numbers of White Male Collegians?: Affirmative Action and Preferential Treatment During Admissions

Although it was a common refrain of Black male educators and a complaint by my Black female friends, it never really hit me that there are few Black males on collegiate campuses. I attribute my relative blindness to the seriousness of this matter to the fact that Black males tend to sign up for my courses in droves.

Long ago, I came to understand that so many of the academic advisors on my campus were intentionally putting Black males in my African-American History courses that purposefully traverse across a wide swath of issues/topics that directly impact Black men. My teaching methods and subject matters are purposeful and aimed at the Black experience.

At the beginning of one semester, I arrived for the initial day of class and, for some reason, noticed that in a class of nearly eighty students, there were approximately four Black males present. Without the slightest thought, I heard myself musing, “Jesus, who are these sisters going to marry?” At this moment, the crisis of the disappearing Black male collegian leaped from theoretical studies to a real problem threatening to doom Black America.

My daily exposure to Black collegians on an HBCU prepared me for a recent study calling attention to the dwindling numbers of men on collegiate campuses. According to the survey, only 40% of collegians were males. Additionally, the disappearing male collegian accounted for more than 70% of the enrollment decline in colleges over the past five years. It goes without saying that if White male enrollment is spiraling downward, things are much worse among Black males. Unfortunately for Blacks, former Presidential candidate Ross Perot’s infamous observation that “If America catches a cold, Black America gets pneumonia” holds in this and every other matter.

I find this moment to be particularly interesting because it will provide a rare glimpse into the strategic actions of American society to reverse the trend of White males disappearing from collegiate campuses. Of course, the fairest remedy to this issue is the same one that white society rushed to the forefront to install within Black America; the alluded remedy is for Black families to reprioritize their values and place unprecedented emphasis on education when it came to their sons. After all, White America’s reading of this matter was that the lagging academic performance of Black boys/males is a by-product of social dysfunction in Black America. If only Black males would turn off the rap music, put down the video game controller, and focus on their academics, they would succeed.

Why aren’t the above remedies being applied to White males who are also disappearing from collegiate campuses? Power-brokers’ avoidance of any criticism of white culture and using a dubious socialization process transmitting dysfunction and questionable priorities is unsurprising. From the lens of white privilege, it is a given that there is nothing wrong with White America or the White males they produce. So, it must be the flawed system preventing their entrance into higher education needing correction.

The solution to the issue of the disappearing White male on collegiate campuses is the discarding of fairness in admission policies resting on GPAs and standardized test scores and a discreet, yet very powerful, embrace in preferential treatment. Yes, many private institutions are implementing Affirmative Action plans to reverse this trend of the disappearing White male collegian. Rest assured that I am not oblivious that this shrewd move to bolster the presence of White male collegians will benefit Black and Brown males as well.

Yet, the most important message coming from this slanting of admission standards in favor of males proves yet again that the unspoken mantra of powerful White males is “if you ain’t cheatin, you ain’t tryin.” However, I must tip my hat to powerful White men whose determination to maintain their position atop American society outweighs any semblance of fairness or justice. If nothing else, they are consistent in the evil that they do.

James Thomas Jones III, Ph.D.

©Manhood, Race, and Culture, 2021

 

 

 

 

Black Student Housing on White Campuses: Is this a Return to the Days of Segregation?

We are inviting you to this week’s Manhood, Race, and Culture Interactive Zoom discussion over the rising argument surrounding Black-only Student Housing on the campuses of Predominantly White Institutions.  Why are White Students crying “reverse racism” at the thought of Black Students living separately from them?

MRCi discussions occur every Thursday @ 7:30 (EST) – 6:30 (CST). Click on the link below to join our intellectual community.

Join us as we discuss pressing matters facing and impacting Black Men and Black America.

Just in case you can not get the link to work, use the information to join the Zoom session.

Meeting ID: 353 334 8869
Passcode: 1YF4BG

A Discussion of Affirmative Action — A MRCi event

You are cordially invited to participate in this week’s Manhood, Race, and Culture Interactive Zoom discussion over Affirmative Action. Is this government program needed today? Who were the largest beneficiaries of it?

Please review the video below starting at the 31:00 minute mark, as it will be the basis for tonight’s discussion.

During tonight’s discussion, we will review the case of Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson using Affirmative Action to help Blacks in that city and the Alan Bakke challenge to Affirmative action.

MRCi discussions occur every Thursday @ 7:30 (EST) – 6:30 (CST). Click on the link below to join our intellectual community.

Join us as we discuss pressing matters facing and impacting Black Men and Black America.

Just in case you can not get the link to work, use the information to join the Zoom session.

Meeting ID: 353 334 8869
Passcode: 1YF4BG

Are Black heterosexual males in the worst position of all American groups?: A MRCi Discussion About Manhood, Masculinity, Race, and Gender

Tonight’s MRCi discussion will cover the question of “Are Black heterosexual males been losing the most ground to other groups in the pursuit of life, liberty, and the pursuit of property?” As always, you are welcome to join us as we delve into what many still believe is a taboo subject matter among Black men.

MRCi discussions occur every Thursday @ 7:30 (EST) – 6:30 (CST). Click on the link below to join our intellectual community.

Join us as we discuss pressing matters facing and impacting Black Men and Black America.

If you can not get the link to work, use the information to join the Zoom session.

Meeting ID: 353 334 8869
Passcode: 1YF4BG

What Black Millennials Who Still Believe in that “Old Time Religion” Must Do To Save Black America

While putting the final touches on an essay about the Black Panther Party’s demise, Minister of Defense Huey P. Newton’s view of the group’s biggest mistake shocked me. According to Newton, the Black Panther Party’s most grievous error is Eldridge Cleaver’s unwise decision to distance the Panther Party from the Black Church.

A profound study of Panther history will implicate Eldridge Cleaver, the Panther Party’s Minister of Information, in what Newton considered an unjustifiable pattern of attacking Black Pastors in their place of worship. Making matters worse in Huey P. Newton’s mind was that Cleaver did such things in front of a startled and frightened congregation. Contrary to Eldridge Cleaver, Huey P. Newton believed that the Black Church was essential to the Black Panther Party because it was their only buffer against law enforcement agencies such as J. Edgar Hoover’s Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Huey P. Newton’s view of the utility of the Black Church to Black liberation struggles validates my long-held belief that our praise houses have been, are, and will always be the most important institution in Black America.

I am confident that many people will take issue with the above assertion. I ask those people to consider that the Black Church is the only institution capable of rallying millions of Black folks, votes, and dollars behind a single cause overnight. Within a Capitalist nation that rests on a system of representative democracy, there is strength in numbers. Despite wild assertions from naysayers, the Black Church is a powerful entity if guided by enlightened leadership. Without courageous visionary leadership, the power of the Black Church remains dormant.

For those who do not believe that the praise house remains an important gathering spot for Black Millennials, recent data tells us that six in ten of them pray at least once a day; less than 40% of their non-Black counterparts pray at the same rate. According to a Pew Research Center Religious Landscape Study, Black Millennials also outpace their counterparts when it comes to attending religious services by a whopping 13%. The above study also reports that 64% of Black Millennials consider themselves highly religious — believe in God, consider religion important, pray regularly, and attend worship service.

When one considers the continuing importance of the Black Church to Black America, two things should be apparent.

  1. Black Pastors need to deliver sermons focused on the uplift of Black America.
  2. Black Millennials need to either leave or execute a hostile takeover of churches that refuse to focus their energies on the uplift of Black America.

It will be difficult to find Black Millennials raised hearing that old-time religion who disagree that the gospel must do much more than prepare our souls for the afterlife. I pray that Black Millennials will be able to do what those who came before them failed to do, that being, divorcing themselves from exhilarating emotionally charged messages devoid of substance.

If we learn nothing else from the history of the Black Panther Party, lessons regarding the essential nature of the Black Church to the advancement of our people are one of the most resounding. Now, suppose we could only get the Black men of God to realize that their leadership and sermons matter mightily to those who listen to them weekly. Were that achieved, Black Pastors would recognize the true power of the hermeneutical slices of the breath of God that they deliver to starving people every Sunday. I could make a strong argument that Sunday’s sermon is the single most significant factor in positioning our people’s minds for an exodus out of their earthly suffering.

Can I get an Amen?

James Thomas Jones III, Ph.D.

©Manhood, Race, and Culture, 2021