Close Menu
  • Business
  • Education
    • Science
  • HBCU
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Tech
Featured Stories

“Power: Legacy” brings Tommy and Tariq back together

June 6, 2026

How Juneteenth exposes America’s racial double standard

June 6, 2026

How Taylor Swift’s Disney news became about Lizzo too

June 5, 2026
Load More
What's Hot

“Power: Legacy” brings Tommy and Tariq back together

June 6, 2026

How Juneteenth exposes America’s racial double standard

June 6, 2026

How Taylor Swift’s Disney news became about Lizzo too

June 5, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • “Power: Legacy” brings Tommy and Tariq back together
  • How Juneteenth exposes America’s racial double standard
  • How Taylor Swift’s Disney news became about Lizzo too
  • How Taylor Swift built a two billion dollar empire
  • Why Gayle King wants Tom Brady in her love story
  • Kelly Rowland’s most personal health confession yet
  • Why critics are calling Donald Trump’s health a crisis
  • How authentic media representation is healing disabled communities
  • Culture
  • Money
  • World
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Black TimesBlack Times
Subscribe
Saturday, June 6
  • Business
  • Education
    • Science
  • HBCU
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Tech
Black TimesBlack Times
Home»Culture

How Juneteenth exposes America’s racial double standard

The holiday marking Black emancipation is now federally recognized, yet the promises made in 1865 remain unfulfilled
Gesi LloydBy Gesi LloydJune 6, 2026 Culture No Comments4 Mins Read
Juneteenth
Photocredit: Shutterstock/elldoro
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

On June 19, 1865, Union troops arrived in Galveston, Texas, and delivered news that should have come two and a half years earlier. The Emancipation Proclamation had already been signed. The war was over. Yet the people it most affected were the last to know. That lag was not an accident. It was a pattern.

Juneteenth, now a federal holiday, marks that moment. But for many Black Americans, the day carries a weight that a cookout or a day off work cannot fully contain. It is a commemoration that doubles as a charge sheet — a yearly accounting of promises made and promises broken.

What Juneteenth actually promised

General Order No. 3, the announcement read aloud in Galveston that June, declared not just freedom but absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property. Those words were specific. Their application was not.

More than 160 years later, the gap between that declaration and lived Black American experience remains measurable in wealth, health outcomes, housing access, and educational opportunity. Reparations debates, which would begin to address that gap structurally, are routinely dismissed as too expensive or too divisive to pursue. The math behind that dismissal is rarely examined with the same urgency applied to other federal expenditures.

A double standard hiding in plain sight

That contrast became harder to ignore in the spring of 2025. The Trump administration proposed an Anti-Weaponization Fund intended to compensate individuals who claimed the federal government had unfairly targeted them. Among those expected to seek payments were defendants connected to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. The fund was abandoned June 2, 2025, following bipartisan criticism and legal challenges, but the instinct behind it had already been revealed.

Americans watched the Capitol attack unfold in real time. Officers were assaulted. Lawmakers fled. The machinery of democratic transfer was directly threatened. The people who carried that out were, in the large majority, White. Within a few years, a segment of political leadership was treating many of them as victims deserving compensation.

The question Juneteenth puts on the table is a simple one. Would that sympathy have been extended as readily had the crowd looked different?

Freedom arrived. Equality did not.

The people in Galveston who heard General Order No. 3 read aloud did not walk away with land, capital, legal protection, or equal access to institutions. They walked away with a legal status. The distance between those two things has defined much of Black American life in the century and a half since.

That distance is why Juneteenth unsettles some Americans in a way that other national holidays do not. The Fourth of July celebrates a founding. Veterans Day honors sacrifice. Juneteenth does something different. It requires the country to measure the space between its stated values and its actual record, and to sit with what that measurement reveals.

Reflection is not enough

Commemoration without accountability has a ceiling. Juneteenth, observed with speeches and festivals and now federal recognition, means something different depending on whether it is accompanied by any structural reckoning. The holiday was not created to make Americans feel good about how far the country has come. It exists because of how far it still has to go.

The conversations worth having this June 19 are not comfortable ones. They involve reparations, the persistence of racial wealth gaps, and the selective speed at which this country mobilizes political will depending on who is asking and who has been harmed. Those conversations do not resolve in a single column or a single day. But they have to start somewhere, and Juneteenth is as honest a starting point as this country has.

AFRO black history double standard emancipation Frances Draper January 6 Juneteenth op-ed racial justice reparations
Gesi Lloyd

Keep Reading

Mike Pence raises the alarm on Trump’s Republican Party

Haitian Flag Day brings Chicago to a powerful standstill

60 years of broken promises: the war on Black voting rights

Aaron Mair exposes how the Sierra Club sidelines Black leaders

Obama Presidential Center opens on the South Side June 19

Tiffany D. Cross pens Love, Me in a Defiant Voice

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Our Picks
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss

“Power: Legacy” brings Tommy and Tariq back together

TV June 6, 2026

The Power franchise is not done with New York. Starz announced June 4 that it…

How Juneteenth exposes America’s racial double standard

June 6, 2026

How Taylor Swift’s Disney news became about Lizzo too

June 5, 2026

How Taylor Swift built a two billion dollar empire

June 5, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Editors Picks
Latest Posts

Subscribe to News

Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • Culture
  • Money
  • Sports
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

wpDiscuz