Will Obama one day become an angel?

by YankeeJim | November 4, 2011 at 02:49 am
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President Obama, future angel

President Obama, future angel

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Calling all Angels

There are millions of potentially successful people in America who just need a little financial assistance and some coaching to start new businesses and to produce and provide products and services. Having helped start and support the GTE Intrapreneur Program in the 1980s and having supported new ventures throughout my career, I documented the process that I call New Business Engineering. What I learned is that new product and new business unit development is a process that begins with a qualified team of individuals who want to address a qualified market with highly felt needs, and the team has ideas and willingness to pursue providing competitively superior solutions.

The job of entrepreneur and intrapreneur (entrepreneurs operating inside an existing company) is difficult, challenging, and most rewarding. Needed, as Mike Green says, are angels – people to risk investing on new entrepreneurs. His focus is Black America as he believes people of color have not been given equal opportunity.

I think targeting entrepreneur assistance based on race is a wrong premise. His making an appeal may be right-hearted, but needed in America is a comprehensive program, not one based on race as that is even more divisive.

Since the President has never been an entrepreneur, he doesn’t know exactly what Green is talking about. When Obama leaves the White House, he will have a pot of gold from which he can be an angel if he wants to.


“An angel investor or angel (also known as a business angel or informal investor) is an affluent individual who provides capital for a business start-up, usually in exchange for convertible debt or ownership equity.”

“Black America needs angels to create entrepreneurs, not Superman

By Mike Green, Published: November 3

Mike Green is an award-winning journalist and tech entrepreneur. He is a co-founder of The America21 Project, which offers a new narrative for Black America in the 21st century innovation economy.

Long before anyone ever heard the name Barack Obama, Jonathan Holifield was leading the establishment of an urban innovation ecosystem, preaching the gospel of start-up tech innovations, 21st century job growth and wealth creation in Black America.

 “More than 100 years ago, we asked the right questions and developed the right narrative and strategies to progress in the industrial economy. In the 21st century, we have not,” said Holifield – an attorney, former NFL player and a fellow co-founder of the Black Innovation and Competitiveness Initiative (BICI).

“Rethinking our economic narrative and evolving our prosperity strategies to reflect today’s opportunities,” he continued, “is our principal challenge.”

Business incubators and accelerators are necessary components of a vital entrepreneurial ecosystem that drives job creation and wealth in this country. That ecosystem requires capital to fuel job growth. Black American and urban centers have historically been disconnected from that ecosystem. And, with millions of Black Americans sitting on the sidelines, we don’t need to look much further than ourselves for leadership in changing the equation and brightening the economic future for those who seek to compete in the new innovation economy.

The Kauffman Foundation reports that all net, new jobs in America since 1980 were produced by companies five-years old and younger — the result of economic fuel-injection from equity-risk capital angel investors and venture capital. Meanwhile, Black America and large swaths of urban America experience just the opposite — no job growth. The Census counted 1.9 million Black-owned businesses in 2007, which produced $137.5 billion in revenue. That’s less than 1 percent of GDP. Nearly 1.8 million of those businesses are sole proprietors with no employees.

But that was before the economic collapse.

Today, Black unemployment is 16 percent — twice the unemployment rate of Whites. The depth of the problem is underscored by the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ (BLS) broader measure of unemployment data, referred to as U-6 data. This includes, “the unemployed, as well as people who would like to work but have not looked for a job recently, and those involuntarily working part-time.” For Black Americans ages 18-29 with only a high school diploma, the U-6 unemployment rate is slightly over 29 percent, according to a Sept. 2011 data report compiled by the Center for Immigration Studies. An even more troubling fact is the depth of the unemployment problem in Black America has been a constant reality since 1963, when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke about the issue of unemployment to thousands on The National Mall. Moreover, in the aftermath of the Great Recession, the wealth gap has widened, with White median wealth now 20 times greater than that of Blacks.”

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YankeeJim

We're all black now.

1
The 1

Shark Tank 

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YankeeJim

Obama will form the Obama Foundation, a self-service model

1
"thirty-aught-six"

Anyone else wondering why the "Center for Immigration Studies" would be compiling data on Black Americans??

One consideration in the wealth conspiracy game that isn't addressed is the ratio of births to income. In general, White people are having fewer children which affords access to more opportunities. In general, Black people are having more children and giving up access to more opportunities. If you already have less in terms of opportunity, and having more children hinders the advantage of existing opportunity, any expectation of equality based on race doesn't compute.

A second consideration is the density of the Black 'ghettos'. A lot of disenfranchised poor having a lot of children in one place isn't likely to become a hive of social liberty. The Black wants to escape and no White business would survive the racist attacks and property destruction. It's not a recipe for success and a reason why it is an unfortunate fact that, Black American and urban centers have historically been disconnected from that ecosystem of capital investment.

Removing race from the equation. Government and government service execution promotes having all the poor and disenfranchised in one localized community for efficient rendering of service. That is the principle behind the formation of the urbanization of social services and central government. And both White political power and Black political power.

As Nietzsche noted, when you stare into the abyss the abyss stares back at you. And this is a monster of our own creation. One that will not be resolved by continuing the same thought process that created it. A Black society vs. a White society.

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