Queen•Mother•Wife•Social Worker•Educator•Writer•Therapist•🔺DST•❤️God•❤️Food/Travel•🍀 fan *My profile are MY views only* #BlackSocialWorkersTeachersMatter
A BlackOwned grocery store just outside of Chicago! I hope to see a chain of these stores all over the country! And it STAYS BlackOwned! I love us!
#GroceryStore#BlackOwned#BlackBusiness#Chicago
I found a Black American Owned Beauty Manufacturing Company that we should all support and lock in with🔥🔥🔥
CMO of mSEED Group, the largest Black, woman-owned contract manufacturing facility in the U.S.
There’s no more excuses‼️
Meet Alena Analeigh McQuarter, a 17-year-old phenomenon and unstoppable young queen rewriting history in STEM and medicine! 👏🏽
At just 13 years old, she made history as the youngest Black student ever accepted into a U.S. medical school (University of Alabama at Birmingham Heersink School of Medicine).
Now at 17, this powerhouse has already achieved what most only dream of:
• Graduated high school at 12
• Earned her Bachelor’s in Biomedical Sciences and Master’s in Biological Sciences (both Summa Cum Laude) from Arizona State University by age 15
• Became the youngest person of color to intern at NASA (at just 12)
• Founded The Brown STEM Girl and The Brown STEM Girl Foundation — creating scholarships, mentorship programs, and global opportunities for girls of color in STEM
• Conducting advanced research in cancer immunology, virology, and global health
• Pursuing her PhD in Integrated Biomedical Sciences (focus on infection, immunity & inflammation) at Loma Linda University while on the path to her MD/PhD
• Initiated into Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. as one of the youngest members
From Texas to NASA to the frontiers of medicine — Alena’s journey is a powerful testament to discipline, brilliance, and purpose. She’s not just breaking barriers… she’s building bridges for every young Black girl behind her.
Her story is a powerful one. Keep shining, Queen! 👏🏽
THE GREATEST JAMEIS WINSTON CLIP OF ALL-TIME.
“That 9-year-old girl sprayed with hoses, attacked by dogs, and jailed for marching is still alive today. History isn’t behind us — we’re living in it now. Uncomfortable moments can divide us or help us grow”
Black people started Memorial Day.
It was originally called Decoration Day and it included a parade, but the most remarkable detail to me is that the newly freed dug up bodies of Union soldiers from mass graves, identified them and gave proper burials.
👇🏽