Recently, I watched a video by Gary Acosta, co-founder of NAHREP (National Association of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals). He spoke about the power of the Latino community’s demographic growth, what it means for economic influence, and why the real threat isn’t the data itself — but whether or not we act on it.
If you haven’t seen it yet, take five minutes:
In just a few minutes, he turns dry Census data into a clear rallying cry: “Math has no opinion — but leadership gives it meaning.”
That one statement lit a fire under me — because what Gary is doing for Latinos is exactly what Black America so desperately needs.
- Black Americans number over 40 million people.
- Our median age is young: 34.5.
- Our homeownership rate has hovered around 44% for decades.
- Our median household income is under $54,000.
- Our median wealth is just $24,500, compared to more than $250,000 for White households.
We are the largest percentage of the homeless population. We represent the largest percentage of people living below the poverty line. We continue to be overrepresented among the poor while also holding the lowest rate of homeownership in the nation.
None of this is new. None of this is hidden. It’s public, official, federally verified. Yet it sits in PDFs and web portals while Black families struggle month to month.
We do not have our own “Gary Acosta.” We do not have an organization like NAHREP, with tens of thousands of engaged members pushing one coordinated message about economic growth and homeownership.
We know the historic obstacles: redlining, the KKK, Jim Crow, white privilege, and systemic racism. These realities shaped the gaps we live with today.
But who is stopping us now from buying homes? From starting banks? From organizing around reparations? From setting policy agendas backed by economic data?
Are we waiting for someone to save us — or are we willing to become the generation that builds the leadership we lack?
We can’t keep pointing to the past as if today’s gap is only about racism. It’s about a missing framework for unity and strategy. It’s about the fact that data without a messenger is useless — and leadership without strategy is just noise.
- Black homeownership will remain flat or decline, especially during recessions.
- Our generational wealth gap will become a canyon our children cannot cross.
- Reparations will stay in the realm of slogans and hashtags — instead of becoming actionable policy.
- Our people will continue living on the edge, hoping next month’s paycheck can keep the lights on.
Gary Acosta’s video is more than a message to Latinos — it’s a blueprint for everyone. He shows what happens when someone says, “Look at the data. Now here’s what it means — and here’s what you do with it.”
That’s thought leadership. That’s vision. That’s power.
It’s what Black America needs: consistent messaging, grounded in numbers, translated into local action and national policy.
I am trying to do my part. As an African-American professional in real estate, finance, and media, I share what I know, speak to what I see, and teach what I’ve learned. But I’ll be honest: I am no Gary Acosta. I don’t have a national organization behind me with tens of thousands of members. But I know this truth:
It’s time we rise
Thank you for reading this blog. Please share it. Start the conversation. Let’s stop surviving month to month — and start building the leadership that will close these gaps for good.