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In 1991, John Singleton released Boyz n the Hood with a devastating statistic: "One out of every twenty-one Black American males will be murdered in their lifetime. Most will die at the hands of another Black male." This is the perilous environment—the crooked room Black boys are born into, long before they ever have a chance to make a Faustian Bargain.
Before we judge Black men for "selling out," we have to understand the impossible circumstances that shaped their choices. Boyz n the Hood, Menace II Society, Snowfall, and the novels of Walter Dean Myers show us that Black men are navigating a world designed to kill them—making impossible choices just to survive.
But here's what nobody wants to talk about: Black women are navigating perilous environments too. And one of the most dangerous environments we navigate is the one where we're expected to support, uplift, and advocate for Black men—while those same Black men try to dominate us, silence us, and dim our light.
In this episode, I analyze the perilous environments Black men face through film and literature, connecting Boyz n the Hood, Menace II Society, Snowfall, and Walter Dean Myers to the Faustian Bargain framework. But I also share my own story from this week—battling a Black male vice chair in DeKalb County Democrats who told me I have to "listen to him" because of his title, and becoming campaign manager for Derrick Jackson, a Black gubernatorial candidate who is being dismissed as "not palatable" because he's a truth-teller who doesn't fit the mold.
This is about the perilous environments Black men navigate. This is about the perilous environments Black women navigate when we support them. This is about the Faustian Bargain and the Sacrificial Bargain as two sides of the same coin. And it's time we name it.
By Hilerie LindIn 1991, John Singleton released Boyz n the Hood with a devastating statistic: "One out of every twenty-one Black American males will be murdered in their lifetime. Most will die at the hands of another Black male." This is the perilous environment—the crooked room Black boys are born into, long before they ever have a chance to make a Faustian Bargain.
Before we judge Black men for "selling out," we have to understand the impossible circumstances that shaped their choices. Boyz n the Hood, Menace II Society, Snowfall, and the novels of Walter Dean Myers show us that Black men are navigating a world designed to kill them—making impossible choices just to survive.
But here's what nobody wants to talk about: Black women are navigating perilous environments too. And one of the most dangerous environments we navigate is the one where we're expected to support, uplift, and advocate for Black men—while those same Black men try to dominate us, silence us, and dim our light.
In this episode, I analyze the perilous environments Black men face through film and literature, connecting Boyz n the Hood, Menace II Society, Snowfall, and Walter Dean Myers to the Faustian Bargain framework. But I also share my own story from this week—battling a Black male vice chair in DeKalb County Democrats who told me I have to "listen to him" because of his title, and becoming campaign manager for Derrick Jackson, a Black gubernatorial candidate who is being dismissed as "not palatable" because he's a truth-teller who doesn't fit the mold.
This is about the perilous environments Black men navigate. This is about the perilous environments Black women navigate when we support them. This is about the Faustian Bargain and the Sacrificial Bargain as two sides of the same coin. And it's time we name it.