Product Management Executive | Trust & Safety & Responsible AI | Ethical Behavior Change | Former Meta, Twitter, Startup CEO | Speaker | Investor
To quote my brilliant friend Ken Miles, “…this day serves as a reminder of the ways in which justice and convenience are at odds in this country and continue to be. In a time when headlines highlight how our country has often failed to fulfill its promises, and our approaches to ethics and accountability frequently take a backseat to profit-driven motives, let us remember that the past isn’t merely a historical textbook; it’s a living, dynamic force shaped by our present actions and choices. May we find ways to work together in service of the freedoms of others, and recognize the roles learning AND unlearning play in that possibility. And may we find ways for communities and institutions to play a greater shared role in taking those insights and amplifying them to the world.” May this Juneteenth be a day or learning, unlearning, remembering and envisioning.
Did you know the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture has two artifacts so large that the museum’s foundation had to be designed around their placement? Southern Railway Car No. 1200, a segregated passenger car from the Jim Crow era, and the bars and gate for the prison cell from cell no. 3 of Camp A at Angola prison in Louisiana. I became an Ambassador for the NMAAHC the moment I heard it was being conceived. I didn’t know how I’d be involved, but I wanted to put my resources where my heart was. In 2012, I signed on as an Ambassador, four years before the museum was completed and opened to the public. La Fleur Paysour, a dear friend and fellow alum from my alma mater, was the NMAAHC public affairs liaison and eventual Communications Director when she invited me for a visit. She handed me a hard hat, and we walked over to the site’s foundation being poured. We stared down into that pit to observe Southern Railway Car No. 1200 being permanently enshrined in the base of that museum’s foundation. It was a quiet moment; we didn’t say much. But we took it in, together. La Fleur would eventually travel across the globe to help tell the story of these varying artifacts, and the ways they connected to a shared history, awareness, and ultimately a reimagining of what folks thought they knew about Black history. So why am I sharing any of this? Today marks #Juneteenth, a day that commemorates the date when enslaved people of African descent in Galveston learned of their freedom in the United States. In many ways, this day serves as a reminder of the ways in which justice and convenience are at odds in this country and continue to be. In a time when headlines highlight how our country has often failed to fulfill its promises, and our approaches to ethics and accountability frequently take a backseat to profit-driven motives, let us remember that the past isn’t merely a historical textbook; it’s a living, dynamic force shaped by our present actions and choices. May we find ways to work together in service of the freedoms of others, and recognize the roles learning AND unlearning play in that possibility. And may we find ways for communities and institutions to play a greater shared role in taking those insights and amplifying them to the world.