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Money Talk With Tiff

Money Talk With Tiff

    Money Talk With Tiff
    Episode•November 15, 2022•1h 5m

    Twitter Spaces Replay 11/7/22 | Ep. 165

    Every Monday at 9 PM exclusively on Twitter, Tiffany hosts a Space called FinNoir: A Space for Black Money Talk. This Space features a variety of black voices in personal finance to give their perspectives, information, and thoughts on money topics that affect the black community. This session discusses whether being black is synonymous with struggle and why. Hosts: Tiffany Grant & Rahkim Sabree Speakers: Markia Brown, Steven Stack, Camari Ellis, Nia Adams, Jonathan Thomas, Renita Young, Tamika Howell This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Podcorn - https://podcorn.com/privacy OP3 - https://op3.dev/privacy

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    Key Takeaways

    • 1

      Being Black and struggling is not synonymous on an individual level, but systemic and historical factors create ongoing challenges for the Black community as a whole.

      The conversation distinguishes between personal experiences of wealth-building and the macro-level struggles tied to historical disenfranchisement.

      Participants emphasize that media and societal narratives often equate Blackness with struggle, but this is uniquely American and not universal globally.

    • 2

      Single-parent households face unique societal assumptions and biases, particularly for Black mothers and fathers.

      Teachers and others often assume single Black mothers lack education or support, leading to defensive behaviors like emphasizing co-parenting.

      Single fathers also report being questioned about the absence of the mother, highlighting how deviation from norms invites judgment.

    • 3

      Generational wealth transfer should focus on experiences, character, and resilience rather than just material resources.

      Steven Stack stresses equipping children with character to maintain wealth, warning against giving resources without discipline.

      Kamari Sabree advocates for providing positive experiences over things to avoid entitlement.

    • 4

      Cultural self-perception and media programming influence how Black success and struggle are viewed internally and externally.

      Markeia Brown notes that glorifying 'struggle' or 'hood' life can discourage upward mobility and self-worth.

      International perspectives reveal that other countries do not frame Blackness as inherently tied to struggle in the same way.

    Intro

    • This episode of the Money Talk with Tiff podcast replays a Twitter Space discussion on whether being Black is synonymous with struggle, exploring historical, cultural, economic, and personal dimensions within the Black community.
    • Tiffany Grant hosts alongside Rahkim Sabree, with speakers including Markia Brown, Steven Stack, Camari Ellis, Nia Adams, Jonathan Thomas, Renita Young, and Tamika Howell, all contributing perspectives on finance, trauma, and Black experiences.
    Tiffany GrantRahkim Sabree

    – Opening and Introductions

    • Tiffany Grant introduces FinNoir as a space for Black money talk and welcomes participants. Rahkim Sabree shares his focus on financial trauma and his new podcast.

    The hardest part is starting. The hardest part of anything is starting.

    – Tiffany Grant

    – Topic Introduction: Is Being Black Synonymous with Struggle?

    • Tiffany frames the discussion as a continuation from the previous week, inviting personal and group-level interpretations of struggle.

    To be Black is the struggle in this country.

    – Camari Ellis

    – Historical and Global Perspectives on Struggle

    • Speakers discuss generational trauma from slavery through Jim Crow, media portrayals, and how struggle manifests differently outside the U.S.

    It's really crazy how uniquely American this conversation actually is.

    – Markia Brown

    – Single Parenting and Societal Assumptions

    • Linda, Nia, and Markia share experiences of bias against Black single mothers, including assumptions about education, fathers, and family structure.

    They always just assume because I'm the parent that's usually emailing.

    – Linda

    – Steven Stack on Individual vs. Collective Narratives

    • Steven clarifies his intent: to normalize Black financial success and reject the idea that struggle defines Black identity.

    The black experience is not synonymous with struggle.

    – Steven Stack

    – Cultural Glorification of Struggle and Wealth Mindset

    • Markeia critiques the glorification of hardship in media and questions why success is sometimes viewed as 'not Black enough.'

    I hope my children never have to be resilient.

    – Markia Brown

    – Self-Perception, Education, and Cultural Pressures

    • Rahkim and Tiffany discuss how reading and articulate speech can lead to accusations of 'talking white,' creating identity conflicts.

    I would often be told that I was speaking white.

    – Rahkim Sabree

    – Wealth Transfer, Character, and Privilege

    • Steven and Kamari debate giving children experiences versus material wealth, and the need for character alongside resources.

    What makes me royal is how I love and serve other people.

    – Steven Stack

    Books Mentioned

    • The Miseducation of the Negro by Carter G. Woodson

    Resources

    • Overcoming Financial Trauma podcast
    • Money Talk with Tiff podcast

    Topics

    Black financial experiencesGenerational traumaSingle parentingWealth buildingMedia representationCultural identityFinancial traumaSystemic racismParenting and privilegeInternational perspectives on race

    Twitter Spaces Replay 11/7/22 | Ep. 165

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