Thank you Reda Rountree (she/her), PJ Schuster, M Hope, Victoria Viste, Dalai Mama đ, and many others for tuning into my live video! Join me for my next live video in the app.
Let me break this down for anybody whoâs confused about how we ended up here.
February 28th: United States and Israel, in a joint effort, struck Iran. Donald Trump claimed it was to address their nuclear program.
But hereâs the history: there was a nuclear deal. It allowed inspections. Iran committed to using nuclear tech only for energy. Trump killed that deal. Tried to make his ownâwhich wouldâve looked basically the sameâand that fell through.
Now weâre here.
Benjamin Netanyahu has been sounding the alarm about Iran having nuclear weapons since the 80s. Decades. Theyâve been âa week awayâ from developing nukes for 40 years. But now we have an administration that doesnât care about nuance, doesnât care about diplomacy, and sees conflict as the first option, not the last.
After February 28th, March 1st, Iran retaliated. Explosions all through the Middle East. Dubai. Drones flying past buildings. Itâs getting wild in ways we havenât seen in years.
And then Marco Rubio said the quiet part out loud: âWe knew that if Iran was attacked, they would attack us. So we attacked them first.â
Thatâs not defense. Thatâs premeditated aggression dressed up in flag pins.
The Jasmine Crockett Situation: Being Right About the Wrong Thing
I started the night with this, and I meant every word. The outrage Iâve been seeing about Jasmine Crockettâs loss in Texas? I get it. I do. When you see Dr. Rashad Richey and other progressives pointing at the electability conversation and saying it wasnât fair to her, theyâre not wrong.
But hereâs the thingâand I need yâall to sit with thisâtheyâre right about the wrong thing.
Her electability was tied to her being a Black woman. Texas is the biggest state in the continental U.S. It ainât Georgia, where you can win Atlanta and some suburbs and squeak it out. Texas has rural areas the size of small countries, and those areas donât like Black people like that. Specifically, they donât like outspoken Black women.
People literally said, âWe love her, but sheâs not gonna win a statewide election in Texas on some cultural s**t.â Thatâs the quote. Thatâs the reality.
Now, hereâs where I need my people to hear me: we canât abandon the electability conversation just because itâs Jasmine Crockett. Those same people shouting âelectability is a dog whistleâ were fine with voting for Kamala Harris because she was âmore electableâ than Joe Biden. You canât have it both ways.
In a winner-take-all, first-past-the-post system, if you donât win elections, the whole thing was pointless. The policy doesnât matter if youâre not in the room.
Born and Raised in Texas: A Different View
Iâm from Texas. I live here right now. And watching this conversation unfold from outside the state has been... interesting.
A lot of people are missing that this was a primary election. Theyâre comparing it to general elections, to Stacey Abrams vs. Brian Kemp. Thatâs a bad metaphor.
Most people who voted for James Talarico also voted for Kamala Harris. This wasnât about Democrat vs. Republicanâit was about who we thought could win in November.
And hereâs the timeline people ignore: Talarico was in this race first. People had already made up their minds when it was him versus Colin Allred. When Jasmine got in, nothing she brought to the table made folks switch. Not because sheâs not talentedâshe is. But because in a primary, youâre asking people to abandon a candidate they already believed in.
I saw a TikTok breaking down legislative accomplishments: Talarico had passed 18 bills. Jasmine had passed 0. Thatâs not a value judgment on her potential, but in a primary where people are looking at who can actually do the job, that gap matters.
Toyaâs Point: Donât Take Your Ball and Go Home
Toya brought the heat on this one, and I was nodding the whole time.
She said, âDonât be the fool thatâs just like, âOh, another one of them is getting that chance.â You need to show up and lock in.â
Because hereâs what happens when you fall in love with a candidate and they lose: you stop paying attention. You stop caring about the midterms. You let the real enemyâKen Paxton, Ted Cruz, whoeverâslide because youâre having a pity party.
Jasmine conceded gracefully. She posted the text. But there were mishandlings in Dallas, people getting turned away from lines. Thatâs the system working exactly how itâs designed to work. And if you donât pay attention to thatâif you donât show up for the next election because your girl lostâthen the system wins.
Beto didnât get the support he needed when it mattered. Donât let that happen again.
The Constitutional Question
Hereâs where Iâm going to piss some people off, and Iâm okay with that.
The Plug asked whether the Constitution is a real check on power or if weâve been lying to ourselves. My answer? Weâve been lying to ourselves since 1803.
Letâs talk about the Louisiana Purchase. Thomas Jefferson didnât have Congressional approval to do that. The Constitution was less than 30 years old and already being reinterpreted by whoever had the power to reinterpret it.
James Monroe? Monroe Doctrine. Set policy without Congress. Didnât deploy troops that time, but set a precedent that allowed every president after him to stretch war powers like taffy.
Harry Truman? Korean War. No Congressional approval.Dwight Eisenhower? Lebanon. No approval.JFK? Cuban Missile Crisis. No approval.LBJ? Vietnam. No approval.
Every president since World War II has done military actions without Congress. The only difference with Trump is speed and shamelessness. Heâs moving faster and caring less about hiding it.
But hereâs what I need yâall to understand: when we romanticize the Constitution, when we put it on a pedestal and pretend itâs always been this pure document that protected the vulnerable, weâre ignoring the material reality. The Constitution was written on the backs of enslaved people. It had to be amendedâmultiple timesâto include the people it originally excluded.
Thatâs not a bug. Thatâs the feature. Itâs always been âgood for me, not for thee.â
Education Is Elevation is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Why This Matters to Black People
Somebody in the chat asked the question that always comes up when we talk deep politics like this: âWhat does this have to do with niggas? Donald Trump ainât droning the hood.â
And look, I get why people ask that. When youâre struggling to pay rent, when youâre watching your kids navigate schools that donât care about them, when youâre dealing with police who see you as a problem before a personâinternational politics feels distant.
But hereâs the thing: Black people represent 20% of the military. Weâre less than one-fifth of the population, but weâre one-fifth of the people getting shipped overseas to fight these unconstitutional wars.
When the president decides to bomb another country, those bombs are being loaded by Black hands. When troops get deployed, Black bodies are on those planes. When soldiers donât come home, Black families are grieving.
And itâs not just the fighting. When the U.S. engages militarily, domestic surveillance goes up. Local police departments get more military equipment. ICE gets more aggressive. The same ânational securityâ justification used to bomb a school in Iran gets used to raid a neighborhood in Chicago.
I just came back from Iowa. Shout out to Des Moines. And while I was there, I learned something that blew my mind. The founders of the Divine Nineâthe Alphas, the Ques, the Kappasâafter they started those organizations on college campuses in the early 1900s, they all got recruited to go to Des Moines to be captains and sergeants leading Black folks in the military.
The same pattern, different century. The best and brightest Black Americans get funneled into the military machine. Thatâs the pipeline. Thatâs the trap.
So when you ask why this matters, Iâm telling you: the presidentâs interpretation of the Constitution always has a direct impact on Black livelihood. Always.
The Enemy of My Enemy Is Still My Enemy
Toya raised an interesting point: Iranâs leaders have acknowledged Black American struggles. They tweeted âI Canât Breatheâ during the Eric Garner protests. They released Black hostages in 1979 because they recognized the unique oppression Black people face in America.
Does that create an âenemy of my enemyâ dynamic?
Short answer: no.
Long answer: hell no.
I know about Afro-Iranian history. I know about the erasure of Black Iranians in that country. You canât convince me you care about Black folks in America when you donât care about Black folks in your own country. Thatâs not solidarityâthatâs performance. Thatâs using our pain as a cudgel against America while running the same playbook at home.
The Ayatollah who was just killed in these recent attacks tweeted support for Black Lives Matter. Cool. But what about the Black Iranians who canât live freely in Iran? What about the erasure of their history, their culture, their existence?
We donât have friends in governments. Not here, not there. Our solidarity is with oppressed people, not the people oppressing them.
50 Cent and the Weaponization of Trauma
We couldnât leave without touching pop culture, and this 50 Cent vs. T.I. situation is a perfect example of how the same dynamics play out in the culture.
50 Cent posted a picture of T.I. and Tiny, saying heâs developing a âSurviving T.I. & Tinyâ documentaryâlike the one he did on Diddy. And the caption: âRemember how quiet I got before the Diddy doc? I hope this doesnât mess up your promo tour. You might want to talk to a crisis PR person.â
Hereâs my problem with this: itâs the second time somebodyâs taken a rap battle somewhere it didnât need to go. This is Drake energyâgoing to the law, going to the legal system, using the courts and documentaries as weapons instead of bars.
Why canât you just rap about it? What happened to the craft?
And more importantly: youâre weaponizing trauma. Youâre commodifying victimization to get at your opp. You donât care about those womenâs sufferingâyou care about the âaha, gotchaâ moment. Youâre moving like a sleazeball.
We saw this with the Diddy doc. A lot of those claims were refuted. A lot of it wasnât factual. But the damage was done because trauma sells.
At this age, at this point in hip-hopâs history, we need to be better than this.
Education Is Elevation is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Where We Go From Here
Weâre in a wicked time. Congress has refused to check presidential power. The House voted 219-212 against a war powers resolution. The Senate did the same, with Fettermanâremember that nameâvoting to block efforts to stop unconstitutional war.
Parents are sending their kids to war for a president who said he wouldnât start any. The definition of when this war ends? They said âweâll know it when we see it.â Thatâs the pornography defense applied to military conflict. No clear goals, no exit strategy, just vibes and bombs.
Donald Trump said four weeks. Four weeks. We all remember George Bush standing on that aircraft carrier with the âMission Accomplishedâ banner. Weâre still in Iraq.
And while the bombs arenât dropping on U.S. soil, weâre going to feel it. Gas prices are up. Shipping costs are up. The economic squeeze is real, and itâs going to hit the people who can afford it least.
But hereâs what I need you to take away from all of this: we have to pay attention. We have to stay engaged. Not because the system worksâit doesnâtâbut because the people who benefit from it working against us are counting on us to check out.
Theyâre counting on us to say âpolitics ainât for meâ and go back to scrolling. Theyâre counting on us to fall in love with candidates instead of movements. Theyâre counting on us to let the grief of losing make us quit the game entirely.
Donât give them that satisfaction.
Stay woke. Stay engaged. Stay ready.
Related Readings
* The Condemnation of Blackness by Khalil Gibran Muhammad
* The Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B. Du Bois (for that double consciousness conversation)
* Dark Ghettos: Injustice, Dissent, and Reform by Tommie Shelby
* How to Hide an Empire by Daniel Immerwahr (for understanding U.S. military bases globally)
* The Half Has Never Been Told by Edward E. Baptist (for the real history of American capitalism)
Major Takeaways from Episode
* Electability is class reductionist, but itâs real. We can hate the game while acknowledging weâre stuck in it. Jasmine Crockett lost because Texas rural voters werenât ready for her. Thatâs not fair, but itâs facts. And facts donât care about our feelings.
* The Constitution was never pure. It was broken by Jefferson in 1803. It was written by enslavers in 1787. Every president since WWII has ignored its war powers provisions. Trump isnât an aberrationâheâs acceleration.
* Black people are the tip of the military spear. 20% of the armed forces, 14% of the population. When the bombs drop, our kids are dropping them. When soldiers die, our families grieve. This is our business.
* Iran ainât our friend, even when they cosign our struggle. Performative solidarity is still performance. If you oppress Black people in your country, I donât care what you tweet about Black Lives Matter.
* The culture is sick too. 50 Cent making trauma docs to win rap beef is the same energy as the government using ânational securityâ to start wars. Itâs all weaponization dressed up in respectable clothes.
* Donât take your ball and go home. Your candidate lost? Show up anyway. The midterms matter. The local elections matter. The sheriff matters. The judges matter. All of it matters.
* War costs what you donât have. Gas prices, grocery bills, shippingâitâs all going up. Weâre paying for these bombs whether we wanted them dropped or not.
* Checks and balances died when partisanship won. Fetterman and company blocked war powers resolutions. Thatâs not a bugâthatâs the system working exactly how itâs designed when party matters more than country.
* The imminent threat is always manufactured. Iran canât hit the U.S. mainland. They donât have the missiles. So what are we really fighting for? Oil. Always oil.
* Niggas ainât got no friends in government. Not here. Not there. Our solidarity is horizontalâwith the protesters, the oppressed, the people getting tear-gassed. Not the people doing the gassing.