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The Great Awakening: Why Moving Abroad is a Necessary Consideration for Black America

Updated: Sep 28

Black American Family Building A New Life Abroad
Black Americans Can Build a Better Life For Themselves Outside of America

For generations, the promise of America has been a deferred dream for many Black families. We have built, contributed, and thrived against unimaginable odds, fueled by the hope that our perseverance would lead to true freedom and safety for our children. Yet, a confluence of recent events—economic, social, and political—suggests that for the first time since the crucible of the Civil Rights Movement, the most strategic act of liberation may not be in staying and fighting, but in strategically seeking sanctuary elsewhere.


This is not about fear; it is about clarity. It is about recognizing that the systems designed to protect and provide are failing us with a shocking rapidity, and it is time to consider building a future on more stable, respectful ground.



A Chilling Pattern: "Suicides" That Defy Belief



Trey Reed Found Hanging From Tree on Mississippi university campus
Trey Reed Found Hanging From Tree on College Campus


A deep-seated terror from our past has resurfaced in modern-day America: the sight of Black men hanging from trees. In Mississippi, the suspicious deaths of several young Black men over the past decade has been hastily categorized as suicide by authorities, despite glaring evidence and the ardent, adamant protests of their families.

The most recent happened this past Monday on the 15th, when the body of 21 years old Delta State University student Demartravion “Trey” Reed was found hanging from a tree near the university’s pickleball courts. The death was ruled a suicide almost immediately by the county coroner, but all investigative material in the “active” case was turned over to the FBI and the US attorney office for review, despite local authorities’ insistence of no foul play.


Shockingly, on the same day Cory Zukatis, 36, of Brandon, was also found dead, hanging from a tree in a wooded area two hours away from the DSU campus. Though Zukatis was a homeless white male, it is worth noting his death in this conversation about Mississippi's increase in these incidents. Police do not believe the deaths are related.


The shared common theme of being initially labeled suicides despite family and community demands for investigation is prolific. Some of the more high-profile cases with similar deaths include the Mississippi hangings of two black males in Spring, 2020, and those of two black men in California that same year. The following year yet another suspicious death of a young black man by hanging

happened in New Orlean’s 9th ward and was not reported publicly until 2023.

This horrific pattern is not isolated. Recall the case of 19 years old black twins Qaadir Malik and Naazir Lewis, found dead under suspicious circumstances in Georgia, this past May. This case also saw a rush to judgment that failed to satisfy a grieving community or answer critical questions. The message is chillingly clear: the lives of Black men and boys can be discarded with minimal investigation, their deaths explained away with a convenient, centuries-old narrative. This refusal to seek true justice is a profound form of state-sanctioned neglect that tells us our lives do not matter.



The Economic Exodus: No Friends in the Pipeline



Black American Professional & Working Classes are Being Decimated Economically

The economic landscape for Black America is equally dire. While inflation siphons wealth from every household and unemployment numbers explode, the most devastating blow has been precisely targeted. As reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and analyzed in a pivotal Forbes article by Janice Gassam Asare, Ph.D., "No Friends In The Pipeline: Why 300,000 Black Women Were Pushed Out Of The Workforce", approximately 300,000 Black women were pushed out of the workforce in July 2025 alone.


Dr. Gassam’s analysis reveals the insidious mechanism behind this exodus: the stark reality that an estimated 70% of jobs are secured not through merit alone, but through personal networks and connections, basically “who you know.” As a demographic that represents a much smaller portion of the population, and one that has been systematically excluded from powerful corporate and social circles, Black women are operating with a crippling network deficit. This is compounded by a culture still rife with racist ideology, where stereotypes directly influence hiring, promotion, and retention decisions. The result is a system where Black Americans, and Black women in particular, are forced to climb a career ladder that most other demographics access with far more ease and significantly less resistance.


This isn't just theory; it is the lived experience of being passed over for opportunities, having your expertise questioned, and being the "first one out the door" when economic winds shift. And this systemic bias has been relentlessly fueled and justified by a mainstream, celebrated rhetoric of hate.



The Martyrdom of Hate: Charlie Kirk's Damaging Legacy



Charlie Kirk, Turning Point USA
Charlie Kirk Was Known For His False Rhetoric Against Black People

The recent death of influencer Charlie Kirk did not erase the profound harm of his years of spreading stereotypes, lies, and twisted statistics to dehumanize Black Americans. Kirk was a celebrated voice in certain political circles, and his words had power. He consistently posited that Black women were intellectually inferior and unqualified, rhetoric that undoubtedly provided intellectual cover for the biases that led to the economic devastation of hundreds of thousands of our sisters, mothers, and daughters.


Kirk’s own quotes paint a damning picture:


·       On IQ and Capability: "The Washington Post has a single Black female columnist, which is probably too many... The average IQ of a Black female is 90, of a White woman is 100... If you have a lower IQ, you have less ability to think in the abstract. You have less ability to build and create and maintain a complex civilization."

·       On DEI and "Stealing Jobs": He frequently accused Black women of taking jobs from more qualified white candidates through Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion initiatives, calling it a "racist scam." This is a profound lie. Government statistics consistently show that the biggest beneficiaries of DEI programs have been white women, followed by white men. Black women were simply a scapegoat.

·       On American History: "The narrative that America is a racist country is a lie. It is the most tolerant, most generous country to ever exist in human history."


A Spiritual Betrayal: Co-opting Faith to Sanction Hate

Perhaps the most profound insult to injury is the attempted posthumous rewriting of Charlie Kirk’s character. Kirk often spewed his divisive rhetoric under the guise of being a "Christian." Now, there is a coercive national campaign to uphold him as a great man of Christian character and to demand our empathy.

This is a spiritual betrayal. To cloak rhetoric that is the absolute antithesis of Christ’s teachings—love for one’s neighbor, compassion for the marginalized, and the fundamental equality of all souls under God—in the language of faith, is a damning hypocrisy. It impugnes the heart, mind, and soul of Black American Christians, whose faith has been a bedrock of survival and liberation through centuries of oppression.


The most egregious act of this rewriting of history is the attempt to compare Charlie Kirk to the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. To draw any parallel between a man who dedicated his life to Christ’s message of love, unity, and racial justice, and a man who dedicated his platform to division, dehumanization, and the propagation of racist stereotypes, is not just inaccurate—it is an insult to Black American history, culture, and faith. It is the ultimate signal that in this America, even our most sacred symbols and leaders can be co-opted to sanitize hatred.



America as We Know it is Collapsing: Now is the Time to Leave




The case for staying is weaker than ever. The U.S. economy is teetering on the brink with a national debt growing by over $1 billion a day. We suffer under a healthcare system ranked at the bottom among developed Western nations. And we are engulfed by a culture that not only tolerates but increasingly martyrs open hatred.


We cannot ignore the message that is being given about an impending, catastrophic grid failure and cyberattack in the United States. Our politicians, military, energy experts and media have been warning us-and telling us to prepare-for a devastating event involving a loss of power and cyber sabotage unlike anything we've ever experienced.


Considering the current social tension and heightened racial climate in the United States which demographic will suffer the most from a life-changing emergency event?


As a smaller demographic with less access to resources how will we survive an extended period of time with no power and no help from government agencies?


Are we prepared?

Do you have at least 3 months of shelf-stable food and a gallon of water per person per day stored in your home? Do you have an alternative source for preparing it without electricity?


Are you prepared to meet all the medical needs of each of your family members for 3 months without power? What is your plan for sustaining physical, mental, and emotional wellness for you and your family throughout a life-changing event?


Do you have a community of family and friends and neighbors who you will be able to work with to support and protect each other, including your children and elderly?


Do you want to prepare to survive the current lifestyle and culture in America or do you want to pursue a different life outside the U.S.?


The time to act is now, before the U.S. dollar loses its global power and your ability to relocate diminishes, if not disappears completely. Your skills, education, and drive are in high demand abroad, where your dollar can stretch further for a higher quality of life—often including universal healthcare, affordable tuition, and safer communities. You can find peace of mind from the constant psychological toll of American systemic racism.


This is not a path only for the wealthy. Strategic relocation is possible at all budget levels. It requires planning, not a fortune.


Furthermore, with the U.S. government considering legislation that would censor free speech and the recent threat to revoke or deny citizen’s passports, removing the right to travel, the window of opportunity to make a choice may be closing. Securing your freedom to move is an urgent act of self-preservation.


Your Blueprint for Liberation: BlackoutBlueprintUSA.com


Where do you begin? How do you navigate visas, important documents, and finding a new home that aligns with your budget and values?


BlackoutBlueprintUSA.com is the answer. It is the leading self-paced course designed specifically for any American seeking a strategic pathway out. This comprehensive, step-by-step plan covers everything:


·       Securing your passport and necessary visas.

·       Compiling all important documents needed for relocation.

·       Identifying optimal countries based on your budget, career, and personal values.

·       A detailed, practical checklist for every step of the expatriation process.


With instructions on how to strategically relocate with a budget as small as $5K Blackout Blueprint proves that you do not need to be rich to claim your freedom and safety.


For those who are not yet ready to relocate, or who simply choose to remain in America for personal reasons, BlackoutBlueprintUSA.com is also the indispensable guide for emergency preparedness. In an era of potential social unrest, natural disasters, or a government-predicted catastrophic power loss and cyberattack, having a step-by-step plan to protect your family in-place is invaluable.


Whether your goal is to build a new life abroad or to fortify your current one in the U.S. against uncertainty, BlackoutBlueprintUSA.com provides the knowledge and power to protect your family and escape America's long history of racial biases, and life-threatening oppression. The greatest act of self-determination is to choose your own future. It’s time to choose.


September is National Emergency Preparedness Month, and in efforts to support you to take action NOW we’re extending a special sale of BlackoutBlueprintUSA Prep-in-Place or Strategic Relocation course guide at the discount price of $97, but only through the month of September!


Go to BlackoutBlueprintUSA.com, NOW and learn how to strategically relocate outside the USA in as little as *30 days, or get the step-by-step instructions on how to prep for a catastrophic emergency immediately!





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