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	<title>historical narratives &#8211; Urban City Podcast Group</title>
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	<title>historical narratives &#8211; Urban City Podcast Group</title>
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		<title>5 Powerful Truths About Race, Freedom, Stereotypes, History, and Equality in America</title>
		<link>https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/race-freedom-and-equality-5-powerful-truths/</link>
					<comments>https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/race-freedom-and-equality-5-powerful-truths/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Urban City Podcast Group]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Jun 2026 14:31:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[African American history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[American society]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Black Americans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Black Codes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Civil Rights]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[community empowerment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[convict leasing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cultural awareness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[discrimination]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[emancipation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[equality]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[freedom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[historical narratives]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[human dignity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[public policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[race]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[racial equity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[racial justice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[racial perceptions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[segregation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sharecropping]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[slavery legacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social change]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social justice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stereotypes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[systemic inequality]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/?p=8926</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Felicia-Brookins-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="Portrait of author Felicia Brookins wearing oversized black glasses and a black turtleneck, smiling confidently with long curly highlighted hair against a neutral background." decoding="async" />Award-winning author Felicia Kelly-Brookins explores how historical narratives transformed Black Americans from valued laborers into targets of suspicion, examining race, freedom, stereotypes, and equality while challenging readers to confront the lasting impact of perception.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Felicia-Brookins-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="Portrait of author Felicia Brookins wearing oversized black glasses and a black turtleneck, smiling confidently with long curly highlighted hair against a neutral background." decoding="async" /><p data-section-id="1vu252g" data-start="357" data-end="378"><strong>Major Takeaways</strong></p>
<ul data-start="379" data-end="799">
<li data-section-id="1361i8c" data-start="379" data-end="547">Historical stereotypes about Black Americans did not emerge naturally; they were created and reinforced through social, political, and economic systems after slavery.</li>
<li data-section-id="1i7iyvk" data-start="548" data-end="685">Perceptions influence behavior, policy, and opportunity, making it important to examine the origins of long-standing racial narratives.</li>
<li data-section-id="1929jbr" data-start="686" data-end="799">True freedom requires not only legal rights but also dignity, equal treatment, and the presumption of humanity.</li>
</ul>
<h2>How Black Americans Went From Valuable Labor to Disposable Lives</h2>
<p><strong>An Urban City Podcast Featured Opinion Editorial</strong></p>
<p><strong>By Felicia Kelly-Brookins• </strong><span style="color: #000080;">7 min read</span></p>
<p>PART II-Continuing the Conversation<br />
In Part I of this series, I asked a question <a href="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/3-historic-shifts-that-rewrote-black-worth-in-america/">America</a> has never fully answered; How did a people<br />
once considered valuable enough to be bought, sold, insured, worked, and exploited become a<br />
people so often portrayed as dangerous, lazy, criminal, and disposable once they were free?</p>
<p>It is a question that remains as uncomfortable today as it was then. Yet it is a question we cannot<br />
afford to ignore. Before emancipation, enslaved Africans were viewed primarily through the lens<br />
of economics. They were denied citizenship, denied basic human rights, and denied the dignity<br />
afforded to others, yet their labor was considered indispensable to the nation&amp;#39;s prosperity. Their<br />
hands built industries. Their labor generated wealth. Their work transformed cotton into a<br />
global commodity and helped establish America as an economic power. No one questioned<br />
whether Black people could work when plantations, railroads, farms, and businesses depended<br />
upon their labor.</p>
<p>No one argued they lacked value when financial institutions accepted them as collateral and<br />
slaveholders calculated their worth down to the dollar. No one questioned their productivity<br />
when entire industries profited from their forced labor. Then slavery ended. And suddenly,<br />
freedom itself became a problem. Not because African Americans lacked the ability or desire to<br />
work, but because those who had built wealth from free labor were now confronted with the<br />
possibility of paying for it. The abolition of slavery did not eliminate the desire for control. It<br />
simply demanded a different method.</p>
<p>The greatest irony in American history is not what happened to <a href="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/what-happened-to-the-village-raising-the-people-in-the-black-community/">Black people</a> after slavery.<br />
It is how they were described. The same people whose labor was considered essential suddenly<br />
became portrayed as lazy. The same people who built wealth for others suddenly became<br />
portrayed as unwilling to work. The same people who had survived centuries of oppression<br />
suddenly became portrayed as the source of America&#8217;s problems. These stereotypes did not<br />
emerge by accident. They emerged because systems of inequality often require stories to justify<br />
themselves.</p>
<p>If African Americans demanded fair wages, they could be labeled difficult.<br />
If they demanded equal rights, they could be labeled dangerous. If they challenged injustice, they<br />
could be labeled disruptive. If they organized politically, they could be labeled threatening and if<br />
they were viewed as threats, unequal treatment became easier to defend. Over time those<br />
narratives weren’t just reflected in laws, They were painted into newspapers, Movies, Television,</p>
<p>Politics, Public policy and eventually, public consciousness.<br />
What began as propaganda became perception, What became perception eventually became<br />
belief, and belief has consequences. And what happens when a stereotype comes before the<br />
facts? In my opinion, one of the most troubling legacies of America&amp;#39;s racial history is not simply<br />
the laws it created, but the assumptions it normalized.</p>
<p>For generations, Black Americans have<br />
lived beneath the weight of narratives that portray them as suspicious before they are known,<br />
threatening before they are understood, and guilty before facts are established. This type of<br />
history matters because perceptions influence decisions. And decisions have consequences.<br />
For example, the tragic death of 14-year-old Cyrus Carmack-Belton and the recent verdict<br />
involving store owner, 61 year-old-Ricky Chow, has reignited conversations about race,<br />
perception, and whose lives receive the benefit of the doubt. The legal questions were for a jury<br />
to decide.</p>
<p>The <a href="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/social-media-is-reshaping-love-and-dating-norms/">social</a> questions belong to all of us. At the center of this tragedy was a Black child<br />
who was viewed through a lens of suspicion before the facts were fully known. For generations,<br />
Black boys have often been perceived as older than they are, More dangerous than they are,<br />
More threatening than they are, and more criminal.</p>
<p>The issue is not whether Black youth are incapable of making mistakes,The issue is whether they<br />
are granted the same presumption of innocence, <a href="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/black-identity-do-rags-cultural-stereotypes/">humanity</a>, and childhood as others. Would the<br />
same assumptions have been made if the child’s skin tone had been different? Would the same<br />
pursuit have occurred if different stereotypes had been attached to him? Would fear have<br />
escalated as quickly?</p>
<p>Those are uncomfortable questions. But they are questions worth asking.<br />
Because when stereotypes become so deeply rooted that they shape how people interpret<br />
behavior, ordinary encounters can become dangerous ones.The larger concern is not one case,It<br />
is a culture that has spent centuries associating Blackness with criminality while rarely<br />
examining how those associations were created in the first place.<br />
A people once considered valuable enough to build a nation became a people too often viewed<br />
through a lens of suspicion within the nation they helped build.</p>
<p>Today, discussions about race often become trapped in political arguments. One side insists<br />
racism is over and the other points to evidence that it isn’t.<br />
This is not about me assigning guilt to people living today for actions committed generations<br />
ago. Nor is it about creating hostility between racial or ethnic groups. It is about understanding<br />
how systems, laws, and narratives shape perception. Because perceptions shape behavior,<br />
Behavior shapes policy, and policy shapes lives.</p>
<p>The stereotypes surrounding African Americans<br />
did not happen naturally, They were created, reinforced, and repeated. And they continue to<br />
influence how Black Americans are viewed and treated even today.<br />
America often celebrates the end of slavery but there is rarely acknowledgement of what<br />
happened afterwards, The Black Codes, Convict leasing, Peonage, Sharecropping, Segregation,<br />
Discriminatory policing, Economic exclusion, Housing discrimination, Educational inequities<br />
and so much more.</p>
<p>The question has never simply been whether Black Americans were free.The<br />
question has always been whether Black Americans would be treated as fully human. Because<br />
freedom without dignity is incomplete. Freedom without opportunity is fragile. And freedom<br />
without equal humanity in my opinion isn’t truly freedom at all.<br />
The challenge before America is not simply to remember history, The challenge is to recognize<br />
where its residue still remains. Because freedom is not merely the absence of chains, Freedom is<br />
the presence of dignity. It is the ability to move through society without carrying the burden of<br />
assumptions created centuries before your birth. It is being seen as a citizen before being seen as<br />
a suspect., It is being seen as a child before being seen as a threat and until America fully<br />
embraces that truth, the distance between freedom and equality will remain what it has always<br />
been: Unfinished.</p>
<p>Felicia Kelly-Brookins is a four-time award-winning author, educator, screenwriter, cultural<br />
advocate, and founder of S.A.F.E. S.P.A.C.E. TheaterTherapyFoundation. Her work examines the<br />
intersections of history, race, faith, trauma, and social justice while creating spaces for difficult<br />
conversations that lead to understanding and healing.</p>
<p>3 Things We Must Learn From This Conversation<br />
1. Question the Narratives You Inherit<br />
Not every belief we hold was formed through personal experience. Many stereotypes are passed<br />
down through history, media, culture, and institutions. Take time to examine where your<br />
assumptions come from and whether they are rooted in fact, fear, or tradition.</p>
<p>2. Learn the History Behind the Headlines<br />
Current tensions cannot be fully understood without understanding the systems that came before<br />
them. Slavery, Black Codes, convict leasing, sharecropping, peonage, segregation, anddiscriminatory policies did not simply disappear they helped shape perceptions that continue to<br />
influence society today.</p>
<p>3. See People Before Stereotypes<br />
Every person deserves the opportunity to be known before they are judged. When assumptions<br />
replace understanding, humanity is diminished. Progress begins when we choose to see<br />
individuals as people first, not as labels, fears, or stereotypes attached to their race, background, or community.</p>
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