
There is something deeply wrong with a society that claims to care about children and families, but only when it is politically convenient.
I keep hearing the same phrases over and over.
“We care about human beings.”
“We care about families.”
“We care about compassion.”
But I don’t believe it. Not when those same voices go silent about what is happening every day in urban Black communities across this country.
If you truly cared about families and children, you would be just as loud about what is happening in those neighborhoods as you are about illegal immigrants. You would be just as passionate about Black children walking to school safely as you are about people crossing the border. You would be just as outraged about Black families burying their children as you are about the political narratives of the moment.
But you’re not.
In too many cities, little Black children cannot even walk to school without fear. Crime is so rampant that some kids feel they have to join gangs just to survive long enough to make it home. Parents send their children out the door every morning not knowing if they will come back alive. Empty bedrooms, broken families, and funerals have become normal in places where childhood should be protected.
That is not justice.
That is not compassion.
That is not love.
And then there is this part no one wants to say out loud.
When President Trump attempted to send in the National Guard to help stabilize crime, in some of these cities, to show SOMEONE hears you, the response was, “We don’t need you here.” On the surface, it sounded like pride. But in practice, it meant rejecting help that could have saved lives. Instead of keeping hope alive, politics kept crime alive.
You cannot say Black lives matter while refusing solutions that might actually protect Black lives.
You cannot claim to care about Black communities while fighting anything that might disrupt the chaos that keeps those communities trapped.
What this reveals is not compassion. It reveals control.
Because you fight harder for the so-called “rights” of people who entered this country illegally than you do for the basic survival rights of Black Americans who were born here. You will march, riot, and shout for illegal immigrants, but you will not fight to ensure Black children can walk to school safely, Black families can live without fear, or Black communities can survive their own streets.
That is not justice.
That is optics.
And here is where the deeper truth sits.
This was never about saving lives. It was about controlling the story. And not just the story, but the people. Not only was history rewritten over the centuries, now the present and the future are being shaped the same way.
You do not want Black people rising. You want them dependent.
You do not want strong families. You want broken ones.
You do not want safe neighborhoods. You want fear.
Because fear is easier to manage than freedom.
This is how slavery survives without chains.
On paper, slavery was abolished. But in practice, new systems were built that produce the same outcome. Laws and policies replaced whips. Programs replaced plantations. Bureaucracy replaced overseers. The language changed, but the result stayed the same. Control. Dependency. Silence.
It looks legal.
It sounds compassionate.
But it keeps people trapped.
So do not tell me you care about families.
Do not tell me you care about human beings.
Because if you truly believed that, you would not be silent about what is happening to Black children in urban America. And you would not block help when it appears.
Here is the truth people do not want to face.
If your compassion only shows up when it benefits your politics, it is not compassion.
If your outrage only shows up when it can be weaponized, it is not justice.
And if your solutions never reach the communities that are bleeding the most, then you were never trying to save them in the first place.
You were trying to control them.