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Post: Why What We Build Matters More Than What We Post Beyond the FeedLet’s be honest: professional networking platforms were designed for visibility, résumés, and job hunting. And while those functions are valuable, something deeper has emerged among us—Black professionals actively seeking more than just career advancement. We’re searching for connection with purpose, collaboration with integrity, and spaces where our ideas can grow into legacy.But alongside that intention, we’ve also normalized a culture of noise—posts that entertain but don’t empower, updates that perform but don’t produce, content that distracts more than it directs.We are living through a pivotal chapter in history. The stakes for our communities—in America, across the diaspora, and especially on the African continent—are higher than ever. In this moment, it’s not what we’re saying that matters most—it’s what we’re actually doing. And more importantly, who we’re doing it with, and who truly benefits from the value we create.This is part of the “why” behind Blaqsbi.com.We didn’t just want another platform. We wanted a digital ecosystem rooted in African-centered values—where Black creators, builders, investors, and visionaries can collaborate on our own terms, keep value within our communities, and build infrastructure for long-term liberation, not just short-term engagement.Because entertainment has its place—but so does economics. Because visibility matters—but so does ownership. Because posting is easy—but building is everything.Africa isn’t “emerging.” Africa is remembering. And the global Black community is waking up to the truth: liberation begins with ownership—of our data, our narratives, our capital, and our digital spaces.Blaqsbi.com is already where we need to be. Not because it’s perfect—but because it’s ours.So as you scroll, comment, and connect this week, ask yourself: Am I just adding to the feed—or am I contributing to the foundation?The future isn’t built in likes. It’s built in deeds.— Thomas Tyrone Founder, Blaqsbi.com | Advocate for Black Digital Sovereignty & Economic Liberation#BlackTech #DigitalSovereignty #EconomicLiberation #Blaqsbi #OwnThePlatform #AfricaIsRemembering #BuildDontJustPost

Post: Why What We Build Matters More Than What We Post: Beyond the FeedLet’s be honest: professional networking platforms were designed for visibility, résumés, and job hunting. And while those functions are valuable, something… #Unemployment #BlackTech #DigitalSovereignty #EconomicLiberation

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Post: Building Black Beyond Ourselves Tyrone Thomas Jr. Why the Future Demands Ownership, Collective Power, and Long-Term VisionIn a world obsessed with instant success—overnight fame, quick cash, viral moments—it’s easy to forget that the most meaningful progress is rarely immediate. True legacy isn’t built in a quarter; it’s sown over generations.Yet, too often, I see three patterns that keep us stuck in cycles of short-term thinking and missed opportunity:1. The Trap of the “Here and Now”Most people can’t—or won’t—see beyond today’s urgency. Rent is due. Bills are piling up. Social media feeds demand our attention. But while survival is real, liberation requires vision beyond crisis. The elders who built mutual aid societies, land co-ops, and credit unions understood this: lasting freedom is built by those willing to invest in what they won’t live to fully enjoy.2. The “Me, Myself, and I” MentalityIndividual hustle is celebrated—but collective power is what transforms communities. When we operate in isolation, we replicate the very systems designed to keep us fragmented and weak. Real strength lies in co-creation: pooling resources, sharing risk, and building institutions that belong to us, not them. From farming cooperatives to community-owned tech platforms, collaboration isn’t just noble—it’s strategic.3. Chasing Status Instead of Securing SubstanceToo many trade equity for exposure, ownership for likes, and long-term assets for short-term clout. But money without ownership is fragile. Status without control is illusionary. Real wealth—and real freedom—comes from owning the land, the tools, the data, the distribution, and the platforms that sustain our lives. If we don’t own what’s necessary for survival and dignity, we remain dependent. I know these patterns intimately—because I’ve lived them.At one point, I owned significant real estate, ran successful businesses, and was making tens of thousands of dollars a month. But I was chasing money, validation, and the appearance of success—not legacy. I didn’t understand the long-term cost of living in the “here and now.” I spent what I earned, celebrated short-term wins, and assumed abundance would always return.And just like that—it was gone.That loss became my greatest teacher. It showed me that income without ownership, and profit without purpose, is a dead end. True wealth isn’t what you make—it’s what you keep, grow, and pass on. That reckoning redirected my entire life’s work toward building systems that create generational equity, not temporary income.So What’s the Alternative?It’s building infrastructure—not just for ourselves, but for those who come after us. It’s creating economic ecosystems where value stays within our family and the communities, where our children and other young people inherit not just stories of struggle, but systems of sovereignty.This is why I’ve dedicated my work—from United Shared Savings Network to Cashback Invest Global (coming soon) —to advancing African-centered models of collective ownership, digital self-determination, and intergenerational equity.And it’s why we built Blaqsbi.com: a digital home where Black voices aren’t shadowbanned, creativity isn’t exploited, and community—not algorithms—shapes what rises. Blaqsbi isn’t just another social platform. It’s a declaration of digital sovereignty—a space where we control our data, our narratives, and our economic value. Every post, connection, and collaboration on Blaqsbi strengthens an ecosystem designed by us, for us, and owned by us.This Isn’t Just Economics—It’s RemembranceOur ancestors planted seeds in barren soil so we could harvest. Now, it’s our turn. This work is spiritual, ancestral, and deeply practical. It’s about honoring those who came before by ensuring those who come after inherit more than debt and displacement—they inherit land, equity, technology, and self-determined futures.Our Next Step—Start Where We AreWe don’t need permission. We don’t need to wait for a system to include us. Start today:Shift your spending: Ask, “Does this transaction build our black economy, contribute to a black ecosystem or extract from it?” Redirect even 5% of your purchases to Black- and African-owned businesses and platforms like Blaqsbi that return value to the community.Join or form a giving circle, land trust or investment co-op like United Homeowners Club—structures that turn individual action into collective power.Build with others: If you’re a developer, designer, storyteller, or strategist, consider contributing your skills to community-led tech and economic projects like Blaqsbi.com. Sweat equity today can become shared ownership tomorrow.Visit Blaqsbi.com. Not just to scroll—but to connect, create, and co-own a digital future that reflects our values, not corporate profit motives.You don’t have to build alone. Movements are made of people choosing, together, to do things differently.The future isn’t just coming - its here, We are building it—right now. And it begins with ownership. With collaboration. With vision that reaches beyond our own lifetimes.The world will rise when Black People and Africa fully awakens. And that awakening starts with us—choosing substance over spectacle, community over isolation, and legacy over likes.#EconomicLiberation #CollectiveOwnership #IntergenerationalWealth #BlackEconomy #DigitalSovereignty #AfricaRising #BuildForLegacy #Blaqsbi #CashbackInvestGlobal #UnitedSharedSavingsNetworkThomas Tyrone | Building Black & African-centered ecosystems for economic, cultural, and spiritual sovereignty.

Post: Building Black Beyond Ourselves: Tyrone Thomas Jr. Why the Future Demands Ownership, Collective Power, and Long-Term VisionIn a world obsessed with instant success—overnight fame, quick cash, viral moments—it’s easy to forget that the… #TannerMcKee #EconomicLiberation #CollectiveOwnership

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Post: The Uncomfortable Truth No One Wants to Say Out Loud (Not a complaint. Not victimhood. Just reality.)There’s a pattern—deeply consistent, painfully visible—that deserves honest acknowledgment: Black people often show up en masse for movements, campaigns, and protests created or amplified by white people. Yet when the call to action comes from within our own community—for our own liberation, economic power, or collective healing—silence, skepticism, or indifference often follows.This isn’t about blame. It’s about seeing clearly what is happening… and why.White-led initiatives frequently harness Black faces, voices, and pain to legitimize their causes. Our grief becomes their moral credibility. Our outrage fuels their campaigns. Our culture gives them edge, relevance, and “authenticity”—all while the architects of these efforts retain control, profit, and narrative power.Meanwhile, when Black visionaries launch platforms, cooperatives, mutual aid networks, or calls for unity—initiatives designed by us, for us, with us—they often struggle to gain traction. Not because the ideas lack merit, but because they lack the unspoken stamp of approval: white validation.Why does this happen?It’s not laziness. It’s not apathy. It’s the invisible wiring of a system built on centuries of racial hierarchy:Trust has been redirected outward. Generations of exclusion from institutional power have trained many to believe that legitimacy comes only when the dominant group endorses something—even if that thing is meant to serve us.Visibility is controlled elsewhere. Without access to mainstream media, major funding, or algorithmic amplification, Black-led efforts often remain invisible, no matter how vital.Risk feels higher. Supporting a white-led cause feels “safe”—it’s backed by infrastructure, insurance, and social acceptance. Supporting a Black-led effort can feel like stepping into uncertainty, even when it’s the path to real liberation.We’ve been taught to consume, not co-create. Capitalism and colonialism didn’t just extract our labor—they conditioned us to wait for saviors instead of building our own.And yes—white people don’t have to convince their communities to believe in themselves. They don’t have to prove that their ideas are “credible” simply because of their skin color. Their leadership is assumed. Their success is expected. Their movements are amplified before they even begin.This isn’t jealousy. It’s observation.The profound reality? True freedom won’t come from joining white people’s versions of justice—it will come from trusting our own.It will come when we show up for Black creators with the same urgency we show for viral hashtags launched by corporations.When we fund Black cooperatives like we fund celebrity endorsements.When we treat Black-led organizing not as “risky” but as sacred.This isn’t a call to reject interracial solidarity—it’s a call to center ourselves in our own liberation.Because if we keep waiting for others to lead the way toward our freedom… we’ll be waiting forever.The revolution doesn’t need more spectators.It needs believers—especially in our own power.—This is not a complaint. It’s a mirror.Look. Reflect. Then act—starting with what’s right in front of you.#BlackLed #TrustOurselves #CommunityPower #EconomicLiberation #BeyondPerformanceAllyship

Post: The Uncomfortable Truth No One Wants to Say Out Loud: (Not a complaint. Not victimhood. Just reality.)There’s a pattern—deeply consistent, painfully visible—that deserves honest acknowledgment: Black people often show up… #Ultron #BlackLed #TrustOurselves #CommunityPower #EconomicLiberation

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#DrMarcusBoard #Politics #Trump #Deportation #Prison #MassIncarceration #HowardUniversity #WHUT #Farming #Sustainability #STEM #CommunityBuilding #ComunityOrganizing #Health #Healing #Internationalism #Justice #Media #YouthPolitics #History #FinancialLiteracy #EconomicLiberation #ExplorePage #ForYou

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History teaches lessons, but the present demands action. We can’t win today’s battles with yesterday’s tools alone. Use what works, leave the rest, and create institutions that solve today’s issues. #SoulaanSolutions #BuildTheNow #EconomicLiberation #Soulaan

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