Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Will Black Students Stand Up For debt Forgiveness and Free Tuition? When They Do Will Anybody Cover It?
Bruce A. Dixon, BAR managing editor
20 Jun 2019
🖨️ Print Article

You get a car!

You get a car!

And you get a car!

Everybody gets a car!

Only they weren’t cars and Oprah wasn’t the giver, though her spirit hung over the whole thing.

This time the philanthropist was Robert F. Smith, a black billionaire who pledged to pay the tuition and loans of the entire Morehouse class of 2019. The media showed us the grateful students and their families jumping up and down thanking Jesus, going on after a while about how their mamas and aunties had worked and prayed for a miracle like this. This is about what you expect. But something was missing. Apparently none of the media covering the Morehouse tuition giveaway – not MSNBC or USA TODAY or CNN or Fox or any of them could find a student or group of students from Morehouse or anyplace else to stand up and say that college tuition was already free in a number of countries, and that saddling grads with crippling debt was unfair and immoral.

Amy Goodman, interviewing one of the 2019 Morehouse grads made space for the new grad to say something like this Twice in the interview, she almost appeared to try to pull the answer out of the young man, but he gave no sign that collective solidarity against predatory lenders and wih other students was something he understood. Ben Jealous was a friend of the family, he was Afro-Brazilian and his mother worked and prayed really hard. If Oprah wasn’t there, she definitely wrote the script.

It fell to former NAACP head Ben Jealous to make the points that student loans are inherently predatory, and that student debt should be eliminated. Would that Ben Jealous had spoken so plainly when there was a black president in the White House for two terms.

If I had finished college it would have been about 1972 or 73. If today’s predatory student loan system existed I cannot imagine organized groups of students NOT standing up to oppose it. The only exception to the joyful noise coverage was a grumbling LBGT-Q former Morehouse student who had to drop out early because it just cost too much. The story had him grousing because he’ll likely get nothing.

But why didn’t the media find any students who thought student loans we unfair? Has the enemy conquered our young peoples minds so thoroughly that organizing to question the predatory student loan system is just not in their universe of things that can be done? It’s been a long time since I was young, but I’ll bet there were and are students at Morehouse and the rest of the AUCs who know enough to stand up for themselves and their communities just like students did half a century ago. And free tuition and child care will give them a lot more time in which to do it.

HBCUs

Related Podcasts

hbcus
Bruce A. Dixon , BAR managing editor
Time For A Movement For Free Tuition at HBCUs and Public Colleges and Universities
02 March 2017
Instead of worrying about where Kellyanne Conway's feet are, or blasting Betsy DeVos's ignorance on HBCUs we should insist that black college presi
go bison!
Bruce A. Dixon , BAR managing editor
Roll Over & Die, or Shut Up & Sell Out: HBCUs & the Talented Tenth in the Obama Era
16 October 2013
When the Obama administration changed college loan rules in 2011, 28,000 students dropped out of HBCUs due to economic stress.

More Stories


  • Venezuela
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Week of Action in Solidarity with Venezuela
    14 Nov 2025
    The U.S. regime change effort against Venezuela has recently intensified with the killings of Venezuelans, Trinidadians, and Colombians said to be drug traffickers, the latest salvo in the long U.S.…
  • Peoples tribunal
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    International People's Tribunal for Palestine
    14 Nov 2025
    We're joined by Farah Imad, an organizer of the International People's Tribunal for Palestine, which takes place in Barcelona on November 22nd and 23rd. She is a lawyer who has written about…
  • Venezuela
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Glen Ford on the Bipartisan Nature of American Exceptionalism
    14 Nov 2025
    The Trump administration’s threats against Venezuela are a reminder that U.S. aggression is thoroughly bipartisan. In 2019, Glen Ford provided this analysis of a Democratic Party presidential debate…
  • Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Democrats' Treachery Ends the Shutdown
    12 Nov 2025
    Voter support for the Democratic Party in the government shutdown showdown was irrelevant. The Senate capitulation was a cynical and inevitable endgame for a party devoted to the austerity race to…
  • Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    ESSAY: The Southern Sudan, Joseph U. Garang, 1969
    12 Nov 2025
    “Thus it can be said that British colonialism is mainly responsible for the Southern Sudan problem…”
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us