Yesterday I was reading Kwik’s “Black Male Teen Unemployment Astronomical; Indicator Of How Society Stigmatizes, Rejects Them” which opened with:
My son is 19 and has been trying to get a job for three years…but nobody will hire him. I don’t want to believe it’s because he’s black, but…
When my son hit 16 in March of 2011, I told him: “Welcome to the work force!” I took him around to various fast food joints and grocery stores where he put in applications for basically any and every entry level job you can name from dishwasher to bus boy to bagger to stocker to janitor. We both thought it would be a matter of time before he got an interview and then a job. However, here it is over three years later and in spite of our continued efforts to find a job for him, he still hasn’t been hired.My son is a great young man. He graduated from high school last year, made good grades and never got into trouble. Right now, he’s attending the local community college, where he continues to do well. To put it bluntly, he’s a model citizen.
One thing that really exasperates me is that one of his best friends of the Caucasion persuasion who I know well because he lives down the street from us and is roughly the same age, has already been hired at three different nearby places. All of which are places where my son also applied, including the place with the golden arches, which generally hires almost anyone white that walks in without a prison record. That young man from down the street is not nearly as intelligent, responsible, well-mannered, well-groomed or well-spoken as my son. Not even close. Yet, he gets hired repeatedly? And by the way, the reason he’s had at least three jobs is because he keeps getting fired.
We all are aware of the school-to-prison-pipeline, for profit-prisons, the targeting of young males of color in police programs like Stop and Frisk…and the death statistics for far too many of our youth cut down by gun violence and police. We also know that this nation has a long history of stereotyping black males into the roles of animals, and ‘wilding’ rapists, and thugs.
Wherever there is a narrative, there are also efforts to build counter narratives. These young brothers have a video they would like you to see.








