Sounds like you've surrounded yourself with c00ns breh
I cut my circle down to about 3 people, including my girl
I'm not surprised that they reacted that way to him bringing this up. I'm guessing breh is in his 20s or 30s. I'm in my mid 20s and if i were to bring up Dr. Anderson or black economics a lot of dudes probably wouldn't even know who i'm talking about

but these ppl know certain black entertainers/rappers/athletes and many love to gossip about shyt like who's the best player on the team, who somebody's dating, what club/concert they're going to be at, reminisice about shyt that doesn't even matter in life, etc ol "back in the day" ass nikkas.
Thing is, there's nothing wrong with liking this stuff that some of us like, but when these very trivial things are discussed more than economics, ownership, etc then

We are the most disenfranchised group, we should be just as ,if not more, interested in group economics as others we see coming into our neighborhoods are. But see a lot of black ppl don't see ourselves as being apart of a group, we see ourselves as being black individuals, and that's just not effective for the collective.
Also, when i go to the barbershop, what's mostly discussed is trivial shyt. These are men of all ages. It's not just the one i go to either, i've lived in a lot of diff places (i'm former military) and it was pretty much the same. And some of these bros who frequent these places have good careers, educated, etc it's just they don't seem to get the reality of the situation black ppl are in. It's like they think that since they're employed that everything's ok (except for "occasional" racism in the workplace or other instances). They don't seem to get that it's going to take more than just having a job to fix this situation we're in. The paradigm needs to shift.
Dudes spend hours (maybe not consecutively in a row, but as a total) discussing Cam Newton/NFL, rappers, shoes, video games/electronics, car accessories etc and other trivial matters but do not even want to spend 1 second discussing business ideas/plans together, group economics, investments etc. That's not 'fun' enough
Always thinking like consumers and never like owners (or potential owners).
Like I said there's nothing wrong with liking or talking about those things but there's something wrong when that's about as serious as we get as a collective. Some ppl claim it's just the "hood" black ppl and it's not, i'ved worked with professional white collar black men and many of them aren't thinking about building or doing business with other blacks either, just working their job and spending their check on toys and bullshyt.