
Cari sits down with UCLA sociology professor Dr. Marcus Hunter after a random first-class chance encounter on a train to Philadelphia, and their bond was an instant connection.
Despite the candor of their initial union, the conversation is basically a wake-up call about reparations being real, not just “40 acres and a mule” talk. Hunter breaks down how the Freedman’s Bank (started in 1865) built what he calls “our first sacred money,” roughly “about a billion dollars” in Black deposits, then collapsed after white managers used Black funds on risky white loans, leaving depositors with only “60% of the money” paid back over decades.
He explains how Frederick Douglass was pulled into calm concerns, then found himself “married to a corpse” when the truth came out. They connect that history to today’s “$1.776 billion” anti-weaponization fund and argue it proves “they do have it,” pushing listeners to move away from reaction and into response.
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