How to Fix Financial Disconnections by Recycling Dollars Using Ultimate Cycleer

Posted by Bryce Jackson
6
Jun 13, 2011
589 Views
Image Disconnection, is a term used to describe the severance of all ties between and a friend, colleague, or family member. The practice of disconnection is a form of shunning.  Disconnection is viewed as an important method of removing obstacles to one's spiritual growth.

 Connection  A relationship in which a person, thing, or idea is linked or associated with something else: "the connections between social attitudes and productivity".2. The action of linking one thing with another: "connection to the Internet"

Recycling Dollars between members is a Premier independent group of individuals who compound, duplicate and leverage their money together.. We represent individuals who want to make a difference Financially from all over the world. This fact and our great links give our clients access to tremendous information and great products. We provide information and solutions for businesses and individuals alike worldwide. We know and have the latest innovations to assist you in all your financial matters.

If there was ever the best contemporary time to advance the economic status and condition of the African-American community it is now. As of May 2011, the American economy continues to steadily recover and rebound. The stock market in the United States is up and the largest U.S. corporations are reporting record profits. But, the disproportionately high unemployment for Black Americans is still twice the unemployment of white Americans. Black unemployment remains more than 16 percent across America. But, President Barack Obama just announced that during the month of April 2011, there were another 258,000 jobs added by the private sector. In fact, during the last 14 months more than 2 million new jobs have been provided by the “private sector” to the U.S. economy.
 
The private sector is that part of national economy made up of private enterprises. It includes the personal sector (households) and corporate sector (companies), and is responsible for allocating most of the resources within an economy according to the Business Dictionary definition of key economic terms. What is happening, therefore, with the Black American private sector in terms of producing and providing new job opportunities for Black Americans? Too often we have been too dependent on economic forces outside our community to provide economic upward mobility. There is no better time than now for the expansion of currently African American-owned businesses and for the establishment of new and innovative businesses within our communities throughout the United States.

All of our national organizations, not just a few but all, should be making the economic development of our communities, in addition to education, one of the top priorities for African Americans in 2011. From the NAACP to the National Urban League, from the National Action Network to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, from the National Business League to National Bar Association, and from the Congressional Black Caucus to the Hip-Hop Caucus to the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network, we all have work to do. And, we all should be working together for the economic uplift of 50 million Black Americans. The 2010 U.S. Census counted 45 million Black Americans, but you and I know that we are always under counted. Plus, if you add the millions of our brothers and sisters who are Black Latinos, we are more than 50 million in the United States. Yet, this is not about how we just count ourselves numerically. This is about how we should be empowering ourselves economically. The Black American “private sector” has to be strengthened substantially. In every state, we should be building new businesses and financing those businesses with more of the one trillion consumer dollars that we spend annually. We are the “richest” poor people in the world. Black American spending power needs to be translated into real Black American economic power through new business and community economic development projects that will train and employ millions of Black Americans.

Now is the time that we must be ready to meet both the challenges and the opportunities to make more economic progress. http://www.whatablessing.net

Bryce Jackson, Business Mentor, Success Coach
whatablessing.bryce@gmail.com


Comments
avatar
Please sign in to add comment.