Bren Kelly
1 min readOct 1, 2024

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Surprisingly, I learned that back in the 1930s, 40s, and 50s, there were black dentists and doctors in the south produced by the HBCUs. They needed some medical expertise because society was segregated and the south needed plausible deniability. One documentary had black dentist in it and black nurses working that I saw. I ironically, or perhaps white planned, many of those jobs were canceled when integration was forced on the south. It should’ve been forced on the south, that’s a good thing but many of the black teachers were fired as a result.

As a result of repressing the general education of wax in America through lack of tax funding by keeping taxes and white suburban areas, we have deprived the whole people of proper education. We don’t find activist trying to get equal funding across an entire state of taxes per student. This is the solution. Federally would be better. But whites in suburbs, and now other races in upscale suburbs that are diversifying will NOT let that happened. They feel their home pays for schools and they are paying for the better schools through the work. They don’t want to share, or what the Founders called providing for “the general Welfare.” They know giving a solid base was critical for everyone to launch careers or lives from. They knew the spirit and letter of democracy, hence the word general welfare. It is we who have forgotten.

Thank you for bringing this critical issue to our attention.

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Bren Kelly
Bren Kelly

Written by Bren Kelly

Engaged in Inequalities, dismantling Western Consciousness, confronting American narratives, seeking inherent injustices to address.

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