00:00
16:04
Our very own Zach Nunn steps in for Latesha and Amy today and delivers a powerful statement regarding the recent deaths that we've been forced to engage and encounter. He also implores white diversity, equity and inclusion leaders to ask how they can decenter themselves in their own efforts, stating definitively that "You should not be the face of your diversity, equity and inclusion work."

Find out how the CDC suggests you wash your hands by clicking here or below.

https://bit.ly/2Ug4l5K

Help food banks respond to COVID-19. Learn more at FeedingAmerica.org.

https://bit.ly/2WD73Uk

Check out our website.

https://bit.ly/living-corporate




TRANSCRIPT

Zach: What's up, y'all? It's Zach with Living Corporate, and yeah, it's a Saturday. I'm here, uh, talking to you. As you know, Living Corporate exists to amplify and center marginalized voices at work. I believe that we're one of the few spaces that does that in a consistently intentional way by having black and brown voices, including my daughter who's in the background. As y'all know, she's a new cohost of the pod. [laughs] Oh, man. Keep it in. Keep it in, keep it in, 'cause we're talking about life actually. Typically you hear Latesha Byrd with Link Up with Latesha or you'll hear Amy C. Waninger from the See It to Be It series, but I wanted to 1. give our team a bit of a mental and emotional break this week and do a bit of a, like, a state of the pod and, like, more of a current events type episode today, so I'ma be rocking with y'all for just a little bit, not too long, as I seek to really get some mental restoration myself. So let's get started with just, like, the recent deaths that we've been forced to engage and encounter through social media or through closer circles. So we have George Floyd, Regis Korchinski-Paquet, Tony McDade, Ahmaud Arbery, and then of course Brianna Taylor, all senselessly murdered by the hands of the state, and, you know, it's just another set of black bodies brutalized for no other reason than just existing, right? Like, brutalized by the state and/or killed and then covered up and then supported by the case, to be clear, because Ahmaud Arbery was not killed by police, but the legal system failed and was forced to come back to the table after being pressured and shamed through social media. You know, it's challenging for me to do this work, and I think it's challenging for us just black folks. Like, we talk about black--some people say "Being black is exhausting," and that's true in that being black is exhausting in the fact that we have to deal with white systems that continually oppress and harm us, and for the white systems that are harming us or the white folks who aren't being maliciously intentional about it, then you have a whole 'nother set of people who are just being complicit in that they are too lazy to figure out ways to engage honestly and openly about the problems. You then of course have a portion of people who are really engaged in seeking to be allies, and I'm gonna talk to you guys in a minute as well, but, you know, when it comes to George Floyd specifically, I knew of George. I knew of George because George, he was a part of a church plan that came out of a former mentor and colleague, and we had very similar circles, ministry circles, and so I recall helping them set up a church service because George was very active in the community. He was a man of love and peace. And I remember seeing him. I remember seeing him at that church service, because he was helping with the chairs and he was talking to the people. I mean, again, he was a man of the community. He was in his community. And so knowing that he was so--the degree of separation is just so small. Not only that, but he was murdered in Minnesota, and my father and my step-mother and my siblings and my step-grandmother and my--and I have cousins and aunts who live in Minnesota, and an uncle too. I have family up there, like, very close, very, very close to where George was murdered, and so, you know, I'm seeing a lot of folks question the rioting that's happening and, you know, what I want to do, what I really want to do, is talk about the systemic challenges and reasons as to why people riot, and as you look at just kind of, like, the system of oppression and why these things continue to happen, but instead what I think I'm gonna do is I'm going to actually read this piece, this excerpt, from King. You know, a lot of people have been saying, you know, "The riot is the language of the unheard." Like, they take a piece of King, of that quote, and like many times, like we mostly do with King, like, we'll, like, boil down these beautiful pieces of what he's saying into something like a sound bite. It's disrespectful to his legacy. It's disrespectful to his genius. I want to read it in totality, and then we can kind of--we can go on from there. "Certain conditions continue to exist in our society which must be condemned as vigorously as we condemn riots, but in the final analysis, a riot is the language of the unheard. And what is it that America has failed to hear? It's failed to hear that the plight of the Negro poor has worsened over the last few years. It has failed to hear the promises of freedom and justice have not been met. And it has failed to hear that large segments of white society are more concerned about tranquility and the status quo than about justice, equality and humanity. And so in a real sense our nation’s summers of riots are caused by our nation’s winters of delay, and as long as America postpones justice, we stand in the position of having these recurrences of violence and riots over and over again. Social justice and progress are the absolute guarantors of riot prevention." And so I think what people miss the most about King--because a lot of folks, they just use King as a cudgel to shame and shut up black voices as they grow discontented with the reality of America, and what I think--what's the biggest challenge, right, as it comes to, like, this DEI work is that there's a bunch of folks in this space for reasons that have nothing to do with black equity, that have nothing to do with justice, that have nothing to do with actual equality, but it has more to do with creating false peace and, in so doing, they recenter themselves. They recreate or they reestablish the very systems that silence and mute and discourage black thought and black and brown voices, and they create, unto themselves, fiefdoms of thought leadership that have really nothing to do with anything tangible. We are in the middle of a racist cold war, and it has everything to do with white America's reluctance to face itself. It's neglected itself, it's neglected its own humanity in as much as it's neglected its black brother and sister. It's coming to a head, and it's gonna continue to surface. I mean, the fact that I'm able to quote a quote that's over 50 years old. He said this in 1967, and yet it's just as pertinent now. I think what we have to ask ourselves is what does it really look like to create and pursue justice, and those words are scary for white people in the context of race. Despite our obsession with justice in media, right--we love Law and Order, Criminal Intent, Elementary, NCIS, like, the list goes on and on. Cops. We love justice when we are on the dispensary end, but no one wants to rush to be on the other end of justice, and the fact that white America is so terrified of justice really is an indicator as to the extent and depths of their crimes. And that's what makes this work hard, being a black person, being a black man, and, like, even being a cis, hetero, black, large, Christian man makes this work challenging. We're at a crossroads though where esoteric language that really isn't approachable or doesn't mean anything just doesn't--we're just past that, right? Like, we're coming up on a national election, and the likelihood is that there's gonna be another black or brown person, a woman, a trans woman, a trans man, a cishet man, black man, body, there's going to be someone else who's gonna be brutalized by police this year. The statistics show it. And so we're at a fever pitch, but things have to change, and so with that being said, I want to talk about white response, right? So there are folks who listen to this podcast regularly who consider themselves allies by various measures. I'm not here to really judge the voracity of your claim. I will give you points of advice though as you ask yourself what it is that you can do today. I'll start with this. I'm seeing a lot of things on social media around checking in on your people of color colleagues. I'm gonna say don't do that. It's an unpopular position I'm sure, but don't do that. If you're listening to this and you and I are friends and you are white, don't check in on me. I have people who look like me, I have my family, I have my friends, I have my daughter, I have my wife, I have my parents, I have my cousins. Like, I have people that can empathize and support me in a unique way because of their joint shared lived experience, and I'm not really looking for your words right now. And I say that with love. I'm not mad, right? I'm just trying to be honest that I'm not looking for your words right now. I'm looking for your actions. So what you can do and who you can check in on are your white colleagues, your white family members, your white friends, your--again, I know I said family, but parents. Like, check in on the folks that you know don't understand, don't engage, and don't listen and/or believe the reality of black and brown people in America. Check in on your boss, the people who actually have access and power. If you actually have access and power, check in on yourself. Ask yourself "What are you doing to help improve the experience of the people that you work with?" "How can you leverage your voice and your power, the power that comes with that voice, the political capital that come
Our very own Zach Nunn steps in for Latesha and Amy today and delivers a powerful statement regarding the recent deaths that we've been forced to engage and encounter. He also implores white diversity, equity and inclusion leaders to ask how they can decenter themselves in their own efforts, stating definitively that "You should not be the face of your diversity, equity and inclusion work." Find out how the CDC suggests you wash your hands by clicking here or below. https://bit.ly/2Ug4l5K Help food banks respond to COVID-19. Learn more at FeedingAmerica.org. https://bit.ly/2WD73Uk Check out our website. https://bit.ly/living-corporate TRANSCRIPT Zach: What's up, y'all? It's Zach with Living Corporate, and yeah, it's a Saturday. I'm here, uh, talking to you. As you know, Living Corporate exists to amplify and center marginalized voices at work. I believe that we're one of the few spaces that does that in a consistently intentional way by having black and brown voices, including my daughter who's in the background. As y'all know, she's a new cohost of the pod. [laughs] Oh, man. Keep it in. Keep it in, keep it in, 'cause we're talking about life actually. Typically you hear Latesha Byrd with Link Up with Latesha or you'll hear Amy C. Waninger from the See It to Be It series, but I wanted to 1. give our team a bit of a mental and emotional break this week and do a bit of a, like, a state of the pod and, like, more of a current events type episode today, so I'ma be rocking with y'all for just a little bit, not too long, as I seek to really get some mental restoration myself. So let's get started with just, like, the recent deaths that we've been forced to engage and encounter through social media or through closer circles. So we have George Floyd, Regis Korchinski-Paquet, Tony McDade, Ahmaud Arbery, and then of course Brianna Taylor, all senselessly murdered by the hands of the state, and, you know, it's just another set of black bodies brutalized for no other reason than just existing, right? Like, brutalized by the state and/or killed and then covered up and then supported by the case, to be clear, because Ahmaud Arbery was not killed by police, but the legal system failed and was forced to come back to the table after being pressured and shamed through social media. You know, it's challenging for me to do this work, and I think it's challenging for us just black folks. Like, we talk about black--some people say "Being black is exhausting," and that's true in that being black is exhausting in the fact that we have to deal with white systems that continually oppress and harm us, and for the white systems that are harming us or the white folks who aren't being maliciously intentional about it, then you have a whole 'nother set of people who are just being complicit in that they are too lazy to figure out ways to engage honestly and openly about the problems. You then of course have a portion of people who are really engaged in seeking to be allies, and I'm gonna talk to you guys in a minute as well, but, you know, when it comes to George Floyd specifically, I knew of George. I knew of George because George, he was a part of a church plan that came out of a former mentor and colleague, and we had very similar circles, ministry circles, and so I recall helping them set up a church service because George was very active in the community. He was a man of love and peace. And I remember seeing him. I remember seeing him at that church service, because he was helping with the chairs and he was talking to the people. I mean, again, he was a man of the community. He was in his community. And so knowing that he was so--the degree of separation is just so small. Not only that, but he was murdered in Minnesota, and my father and my step-mother and my siblings and my step-grandmother and my--and I have cousins and aunts who live in Minnesota, and an uncle too. I have family up there, like, very close, very, very close to where George was murdered, and so, you know, I'm seeing a lot of folks question the rioting that's happening and, you know, what I want to do, what I really want to do, is talk about the systemic challenges and reasons as to why people riot, and as you look at just kind of, like, the system of oppression and why these things continue to happen, but instead what I think I'm gonna do is I'm going to actually read this piece, this excerpt, from King. You know, a lot of people have been saying, you know, "The riot is the language of the unheard." Like, they take a piece of King, of that quote, and like many times, like we mostly do with King, like, we'll, like, boil down these beautiful pieces of what he's saying into something like a sound bite. It's disrespectful to his legacy. It's disrespectful to his genius. I want to read it in totality, and then we can kind of--we can go on from there. "Certain conditions continue to exist in our society which must be condemned as vigorously as we condemn riots, but in the final analysis, a riot is the language of the unheard. And what is it that America has failed to hear? It's failed to hear that the plight of the Negro poor has worsened over the last few years. It has failed to hear the promises of freedom and justice have not been met. And it has failed to hear that large segments of white society are more concerned about tranquility and the status quo than about justice, equality and humanity. And so in a real sense our nation’s summers of riots are caused by our nation’s winters of delay, and as long as America postpones justice, we stand in the position of having these recurrences of violence and riots over and over again. Social justice and progress are the absolute guarantors of riot prevention." And so I think what people miss the most about King--because a lot of folks, they just use King as a cudgel to shame and shut up black voices as they grow discontented with the reality of America, and what I think--what's the biggest challenge, right, as it comes to, like, this DEI work is that there's a bunch of folks in this space for reasons that have nothing to do with black equity, that have nothing to do with justice, that have nothing to do with actual equality, but it has more to do with creating false peace and, in so doing, they recenter themselves. They recreate or they reestablish the very systems that silence and mute and discourage black thought and black and brown voices, and they create, unto themselves, fiefdoms of thought leadership that have really nothing to do with anything tangible. We are in the middle of a racist cold war, and it has everything to do with white America's reluctance to face itself. It's neglected itself, it's neglected its own humanity in as much as it's neglected its black brother and sister. It's coming to a head, and it's gonna continue to surface. I mean, the fact that I'm able to quote a quote that's over 50 years old. He said this in 1967, and yet it's just as pertinent now. I think what we have to ask ourselves is what does it really look like to create and pursue justice, and those words are scary for white people in the context of race. Despite our obsession with justice in media, right--we love Law and Order, Criminal Intent, Elementary, NCIS, like, the list goes on and on. Cops. We love justice when we are on the dispensary end, but no one wants to rush to be on the other end of justice, and the fact that white America is so terrified of justice really is an indicator as to the extent and depths of their crimes. And that's what makes this work hard, being a black person, being a black man, and, like, even being a cis, hetero, black, large, Christian man makes this work challenging. We're at a crossroads though where esoteric language that really isn't approachable or doesn't mean anything just doesn't--we're just past that, right? Like, we're coming up on a national election, and the likelihood is that there's gonna be another black or brown person, a woman, a trans woman, a trans man, a cishet man, black man, body, there's going to be someone else who's gonna be brutalized by police this year. The statistics show it. And so we're at a fever pitch, but things have to change, and so with that being said, I want to talk about white response, right? So there are folks who listen to this podcast regularly who consider themselves allies by various measures. I'm not here to really judge the voracity of your claim. I will give you points of advice though as you ask yourself what it is that you can do today. I'll start with this. I'm seeing a lot of things on social media around checking in on your people of color colleagues. I'm gonna say don't do that. It's an unpopular position I'm sure, but don't do that. If you're listening to this and you and I are friends and you are white, don't check in on me. I have people who look like me, I have my family, I have my friends, I have my daughter, I have my wife, I have my parents, I have my cousins. Like, I have people that can empathize and support me in a unique way because of their joint shared lived experience, and I'm not really looking for your words right now. And I say that with love. I'm not mad, right? I'm just trying to be honest that I'm not looking for your words right now. I'm looking for your actions. So what you can do and who you can check in on are your white colleagues, your white family members, your white friends, your--again, I know I said family, but parents. Like, check in on the folks that you know don't understand, don't engage, and don't listen and/or believe the reality of black and brown people in America. Check in on your boss, the people who actually have access and power. If you actually have access and power, check in on yourself. Ask yourself "What are you doing to help improve the experience of the people that you work with?" "How can you leverage your voice and your power, the power that comes with that voice, the political capital that come read more read less

3 years ago #america, #blackandbrown, #business, #corporate, #corporateamerica, #diversity, #inclusion, #linkedin, #livingcorporate, #melanin, #mentorship, #poc, #pocintech, #podsincolor, #professionaldevelopment, #solidarity, #tech, #vsco, #vscocam, #woc