Saturday, November 16, 2024
Black History

Hope Wiseman, Youngest Black Owner of a Dispensary in the U.S.

Hope Wiseman is Making History

This very cool young woman is the youngest, black dispensary owner in the U.S. Her name is Hope Wiseman, and she has set out to take many of the misconceptions, judgments, and confusion that surround the use of marijuana, and educate more people on exactly how this plant works. She is set to open Mary & Main in Maryland next month; and one of her goals is to take the negative stigmas that come along with marijuana use, in order to educate her community.

Hope Wiseman Instagram

This 25 year old investment banker /reality show star of WAGS Atlanta/ former Falcons cheerleader, along with her mother and a family friend, who are both dentists, have worked to create this business. While in the process of creating her cannabis empire, she also noticed the amount of confusion and skepticism she’s received from people close to her who feel negatively about the plant. In an interview with the Huffington Post, she details why people’s natural skepticism is one of the reasons education is so important, Wiseman explains:

“I understand that stoner stigma may come off very negatively. But then you hear the stories. Stories about children who had multiple seizures a day, which completely stopped because they’re taking CBD oil, or Cannabidiol, a compound found in marijuana which has absolutely zero psychoactive effect. Stories about people who have glaucoma who use it to alleviate their symptoms. Stories about people who have cancer, who have a better quality of life when they’re going through chemotherapy.”

Correcting The Stigmas

Wiseman also details how generally, mostly white men and women are celebrated for their use of the plant, and how they’ve used their business skills in order to generate billions in the marijuana industry. However, people of color are continuously locked up; in America, “black people have a lower usage rate than white people who use cannabis, but they are arrested for possession at four times the rate as whites,” per the American Civil Liberties Union.

With laws regarding marijuana use slowly changing across the coutry, Hope Wiseman’s ultimate goal is to educate, and she will be offering free classes in order to change some of the bad stigmas in communities of color. Her goals for these community education classes are:

“To explain the history behind the plant so you can understand why it became a scheduled drug, why African-Americans have been prosecuted at higher rates than other races and minorities and how that affects us today.”

Hope Wiseman is making history, and she seems to be excited on what’s to come. She has admitted, in the marijuana industry and at her position, it is a little lonely, but she has been able to build a solid team with her community and other dispensaries throughout Maryland. Let’s hope Maryland is showing up in droves to support this young entrepreneur!

Source: Huffington Post

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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Catch All Your Black Power ‘Feels’ Today!

Today is the day to catch all your civil rights: ‘i’m black and i’m proud’, ‘blacka than black’, ‘no justice no peace’ feels! After you leave your official Martin Luther King Day Parade and finish with your service projects for the day, make sure you make it back home by 9pm EST to watch the acclaimed documentary “I Am Not Your Negro”. The Oscar nominated 2016 film will air tonight on PBS and it’s all about about one of the Civil Rights era’s most powerful speakers, James Baldwin. On a day where we celebrate the most influential civil rights leader of our day, its a great time to watch a documentary on one of the greatest writers and one of the most outspoken civil rights heroes of our era.Read more about “I Am Not Your Negro” Here.

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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Stop Embarrassing S.C.

As if Lindsey Graham and Tim Scott aren’t embarrassing enough, South Carolina seems to continuously experience epic fails and embarrassment during this political reality show – season 1. If you don’t believe me just check out this clip of one of our beloved Republican Senators getting dissed on the world’s stage:

Well, two of South Carolina’s State Senators are determined to carry on the legacy of continuing to embarrass the good ole citizens of South Carolina buy hanging and clinging on for dear life, to the sad memories of the Confederacy. But this time there’s a twist; instead of another General Lee statue or another remnant of one of their confederate ancestors, Bill Chumley, R-Woodruff, and Mike Burns, R-Taylors have decided to sponsor a bill would honor African Americans who served in the Confederate army.

The Confederate Agenda

Yes, to further justify this Confederate agenda, they will now use the legacy of slaves who fought for the confederacy during the Civil War, and design an African American Confederate Veteran monument. Along with creating a monument, they also plan to devise an agenda to promote this piece of history inside South Carolina class rooms.

Chumley, a supporter of the confederate flag, believes the flag is an important aspect of history. He also admits that they realized they didn’t know much about these black soldiers and called these slaves the, “forgotten heroes”. The bill they proposed states,

“While there is representation of those African Americans from South Carolina who took up arms for the Union, there is nothing to show the contributions, sacrifices and honor of their Confederate counterparts.”

A False Narrative

These senators’ real reason for pitching an African American Confederate monument may have an underlying agenda, according to critics. Some who do not support this bill believe that this is a slick way of being able to argue the importance of the Confederate flag. The Senators have denied that this is tied to a plan to bring back the Confederate Flag to our State House. However, the real concern is that these Senators may not have an understanding regarding the real reason many African American fought for the confederacy during the Civil War. In order to tell the real story of these African Americans, one would need to research the varying elements involved in deciding to have blacks participate in a war that would have been a catalyst of keeping them enslaved.

Caption: “A rebel captain forcing negroes to load cannon under the fire of Berdan’s sharp-shooters—seen through a telescope from our lines, and sketched by Mr. Mead.”
Cover of Harper’s Weekly May 10, 1862

The Root covered this conversation back in 2015. There are many researchers who disagree that these black soldiers were in support of fighting for the continued practice of slavery. Actually, many of these men were given promises of freedom if they fought for the south. Also, according to The Root, many of the slaves involved in the war were really there to do the dirty work and manual labor that white soldiers did not want to do. The article stated that these African American soldiers were, “laborers, servants and teamsters. They built roads, batteries and fortifications; manned munitions factories—essentially did the Confederacy’s dirty work.”

Basically, these senators are trying to rewrite history by convincing Citizens that black soldiers were in support of a war that would continue to hold them and their descendants as slaves. These Senators are on the verge of presenting a false narrative that African American soldiers were in support of slavery, and fought equally beside their white brethren – we know that’s BS!

The Root article also says that the term ‘Black Confederate’ according to many historians, “betrays a pattern of distortion, deception, and deceit in the use of evidence. The very term Black Confederate is “meaningless,” “a fiction,” “a myth,” utter “nonsense.”

With almost every Civil War historian disputing the fact that there were thousands of blacks fighting for and in support of the South, it would be a huge error in judgment and a total and complete insult to these black men and their descendants to erect an African American Confederate monument.

Source: The Root,Raw Story

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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The Oscar-Nominated autobiography, “I Am Not Your Negro” opened this past weekend; the critically acclaimed work honor’s James Baldwin, one of the greatest writers in American history and an outspoken pillar of the civil rights movement.

Director Raoul Peck had this to say about the film:
“I had no choice but to make the movie, an autobiographical sketch of literary icon James Baldwin. It’s not a game, this is the future of the country. The film is a sort of last call, or we’re going down the drain like everybody else – including everyone in power.”

The irony of listening to Baldwin as we go back in time in this film, or while viewing online footage, often feels as if he’s speaking to us today! All that Baldwin has given the world can be applied to what’s going on right now in our country.

In the first 60 seconds of the clip below Baldwin proclaims:

“If any white man in the world says give me liberty or give me death, the entire white world applauds. When a black man says exactly the same thing, he is judged a criminal and treated like one, and everything possible is done to make an example of this bad nigger so there won’t be anymore like him.”

This statement rings true of how many white Americans have labeled the Black Lives Matter movement as a racists and terrorist organization, comparing it to the KKK – although BLM has never had a violent history of murdering, hanging or harming anyone.

Peck believes this movie is for people of all color and says he wants people to understand the “country’s racial backstory” in order for everyone to have an honest conversation. Peck says, “You can’t be innocent anymore, nobody can go out this movie and say they didn’t understand this world. I didn’t understand what America was. I didn’t understand that the American Dream was a myth.”

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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Out of the mouths of babes. This hilarious clip of kids responding to Stacy Dash’s ridiculous comments of getting rid of Black History month is the perfect, and probably the most intelligent response we’ve heard so far. These kids are awesome. Happy Black History Month!

“Does Carter G Woodson know about this?” – Hilarious

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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