America is in the midst of a counter-revolution. Republican legislatures redraw voting maps mid-decade to hold onto power. The Supreme Court, compromised and partisan, shields these acts from consequence. Lower courts resist here and there, but they are outnumbered, overruled, and overwhelmed. This is not “politics as usual.” It is a Confederate revival clothed in legality.
The South may have lost the Civil War on the battlefield, but it is winning in courtrooms, legislatures, and boardrooms. The Confederacy has learned that you don’t need muskets when you have gerrymanders, voter suppression, and legal fictions to accomplish the same goal: a nation remade in the image of the slaveholding South.
This hypocrisy is not new. It is America’s original blueprint. The White House—the symbol of democracy itself—was built by enslaved Africans. They quarried the stone, cut the wood, laid the bricks, and crafted the iron. Their skill gave the building its form, but their names were mostly lost because they were considered property.
And even after the White House was completed in 1800, slavery continued inside its walls. Presidents Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, and Jackson all enslaved men, women, and children in the People’s House. The symbol of freedom was built on captivity, then maintained by it. That contradiction is America’s DNA.
Today is no different. The Confederates of our era have traded plantations for courts and overseers for legislators. The pattern is the same: preserve white power, deny Black freedom, call it “law.”Breaking the Cycle
If America is in its third revolution—one that seeks to restore the Confederacy in spirit—then Black people cannot wait for institutions to save us. We cannot rely on courts or elections to undo what was built to oppress us. We must build something of our own.
That is the purpose of the Black Infrastructure Trust (BIT).
BIT is not a charity program or a temporary fix. It is a system of communal power, built through consistent contributions from its members. Each contribution is a brick in a new house—one not built by slavery but by self-determination.The First National Effort: Childcare
Childcare will be the Trust’s first national project. Why? Because childcare is both the anchor of family life and one of the most predatory markets in America. Costs are crushing, and the burden falls hardest on Black families.
Under BIT:
This model makes childcare affordable, rewards members for consistent investment, and generates revenue to expand the system. Every BIT childcare center is Black-owned, staffed by Black workers paid fairly, and supported by the collective.Scaling Out: Businesses That Free Us
Childcare is only the beginning. The same model applies to housing, healthcare, food, and financial institutions:
Each enterprise that comes online weakens our dependence on a capitalist system built to exploit us. As BIT expands, members step out of the cycle of overwork and underpay, moving toward communal ownership and freedom.Communalism as Liberation
This is more than economics. It is a cultural return. Black people have always survived through mutual aid, maroon societies, and cooperative care. BIT is the modern extension of that tradition—a deliberate choice to stop begging for justice from a system that thrives on injustice.
Liberation under Black management is the only path forward.
Stay Woke (because they’ve demonized it). Stay Building. Stay Black on Purpose.
Because our survival—and our future—depends on it.