We followed the promise of power through education — only to find the cost was our stability.
By: Beautiful Truth | Distorted Truths | October 17, 2025
Sources: WABE , (August 2025), Jennifer R. Farmer, 92.7 The Block, (August 2025), S.E. Williams, Black Voice News, (September 2025), Michelle Duster, Rebellious Magazine for Women, (April 2025),
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, ( July 2025), Katica Roy, Fortune, (2025).
TODAY’S TRUTH
SUMMARY
Within just three months, over 300,000 Black women either left or were pushed out of the workforce, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data. Add that to the 518,000 Black women who never returned after the pandemic, and the total climbs above 800,000 Black women out of the workforce.
These job losses are not random. They’re tied to federal layoffs, attacks on diversity, equity, and inclusion, and DEI-related budget cuts. Many of the hardest hit were concentrated in federal jobs in Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia — positions Black women worked decades to secure.
“White America told us to get the education, the degrees, the certifications — and when we did, they shut the doors we built our futures on.”
The Lie Behind the Compliment
Before we talk about “The Setup,” it’s worth revisiting how deep this conditioning runs. In a 1989 interview, Donald Trump spoke about educated Black Americans — claiming they “had an advantage” over their white counterparts. But advantage in theory means little when the system was never designed for true equity. The irony? Decades later, that so-called advantage became the very setup so many Black women are now paying for — through student debt, delayed careers, and a promise that never paid off.
If Trump truly believed what he was selling back in 1989, then what we’re seeing in 2025 exposes the lie. He wasn’t praising progress — he was positioning control. What’s unfolding now isn’t a shift in belief — it’s a confession of intent.
Video Source: Donald Trump on Educated Black Americans (1989), originally uploaded by CNN Archives, via YouTube.
The Set-Up: Education as a Gate and a Trap
For decades, black women were told education was the key to “having a seat at the table.” We were told if we wanted better jobs, better pay, better access, we had to out-educate, outwork, and outqualify everyone else – especially white men.
The setup didn’t start in college classrooms – it started with the illusion of opportunity.
And a generation of black women did exactly that — believing education was the bridge to equality. Black women became the most educated demographic in the country. We stacked degrees, certifications, federal clearances, and professional development courses — often while raising families, working multiple jobs, and paying for it all through student loans.
It reminds me of the movie Miss Juneteenth (Channing Godfrey Peoples, 2020) –where a mother pours everything she has into her daughter’s education, believing it’s the only way out, only to discover the system was never designed to let them win. That story wasn’t fiction; it was foreshadowing. When the promise turns into pressure, and the degree becomes debt, that’s when you realize the system was never built to free you — only to make you believe freedom was for sale.
But here’s the catch — those degrees didn’t just cost time; they cost generational wealth. They positioned an entire generation to depend on federal job sectors now being strategically gutted. This was never about access. This was a setup — a system where we climbed the ladder they built, only for them to snatch it away once we finally reached financial stability.
When the Doors Close, They Take the Jobs Too
From D.C. to Atlanta, from Chicago to Baltimore, cities where black women have carried the weight of government work and community leadership for generations — the cuts are hitting hardest. Programs once rooted in equity, health, and community engagement are being quietly dismantled, while “restructuring” has become the new word for removal.
The pattern didn’t stop with education — it extended into the workforce.
While we’re left with the degrees, the debt, and the fallout… those same jobs are being restructured or filled by people with less education, less experience, and none of the same barriers.
Because the truth is:
• They never had to over qualify to get in the door.
• And now, they don’t need to over qualify to take what’s left.
The Economic Cost — and the Silence
The loss of Black women’s labor force participation equals a $37 billion GDP hit, according to gender economist Katica Roy. That’s not small change.
But what’s worse is the erasure of the human story: no national coverage centering these women, no political outcry, no meaningful protection. Just pure silence.
While Black women are being told to “pivot” or “be resilient,” federal programs continue to be cut, wages aren’t increasing, and pathways to rebuild are closing fast.
Dear White America Let’s Be Honest
I’m going to ask the real question — was this ever about layoffs, or was it about control?
Whether it’s corporate boardrooms or federal agencies, the mindset is the same — when progress costs power, they call it “restructuring.”
Black women entered the system on their terms — get the degrees, play by the rules, climb the ladder — and now that we’ve proven we can excel, the terms are being rewritten. This time, the rules don’t include us.
Because let’s be real — if equality were truly the goal, the doors wouldn’t keep closing the moment we walk through them.
This moment reminds me of the kind of trap our elders used to warn us about: when someone gives you the shovel and the hole at the same time.
“Every time we build the house, they move the land.”
Thank you all for reading–not just for opinions, but for principle, fairness, and clarity.
— Beautiful Truth
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Truth Reign Unfiltered is an independent commentary platform that shines light where others stay quiet. All content published represents protected speech under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. Opinions expressed are based on publicly available information, cited sources, and personal analysis.
I do not publish to defame—but to inform, challenge, and encourage critical thought. Accountability is not hatred. Truth is not defamation. And silence is never my strategy.

