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Do African Americans Create Their Own Majority Identity?

It is a fact that a majority of African-Americans have this untruth that their racial duty and responsibility is to be strictly defined as "workers" of our many occupations, or "receivers" of anything that is left, that is second best.  They feel some sense of duty or honor with being a part of this unlabeled working order in America. They love seeing such identifiable images as entertainment (as though it identifies the identity of all blacks). Any other image on the screen isn't being black enough, seems to be a false sense of social reality, or simply doesn't bring in the big rating numbers. What images do you immediately notice, when you look around your community?

White leaders (business, entertainment):"Well, if you don't mind  ... It works for us." [Hell yeah! Cool.]

Even with the vast amount of people, globally, the reality is this form of making our world go around is no longer working for the white-race identity.  And when their economic system doesn't work for them, it doesn't work for anyone else.  America is at a stand still due to internal citizen stubbornness, pride, and lack of social or household choice freedoms. Are these overall citizen characteristics a new social problem? Or an age-old problem?

Facts (Source: A Bluestein. February 2015)
21% of the fastest-growing private companies in the U.S. were born outside of the U.S.
Immigrants start businesses at twice the rate of native-born citizens.
Immigrants learn Algebra at a faster pace than an average of Americans of any racial identity.
If immigrant entrepreneurs or business owners hold a H-1B visa, their company gets to operate in the U.S. for at least six years.  American workers that's six years of job opportunities. One possible solution is EB-6: the start-up visa.