Mojo Jojo Morpheus
Dap Distributor
Agreed.Not sure where you are going with this but it has nothing to do with my comments or running businesses in general.
People who are insecure do not need to be running businesses and they, for the most part, are not.
But then why do you expect the women of a group, who are typically far more riddled with insecurities and the need for outside validation, to be the business moguls?
Okay.There are black women who run businesses, but these businesses do not employ anyone, these businesses tend to serve as a replacement for a job for these women.
You acknowledge that while Black women are business owners, those businesses do not tend to be major employers.
So?
That shouldn't be a problem to anyone.
Unless you were depending on those businesses to employ a large margin of your workers.
And since, by your own admission, women aren't the best at business, that should most definitely NOT be your goal.
So what's the problem?
Question: Is there any group of women who are the captains of industry and commanders of business for their respective race/ethnicity?My point is, in 2017 it is pathetic that women have not focused on growing their businesses into multinational organizations. Many of these businesses end up being sold to white companies, and the owners take that cash and retire. Nothing wrong with that and I`m not here to tell people what to do with their money, but for a group who lives or dies by what people thinks about them, it's pathetic that none of them are pioneering the companies to fill the voids they talk about.
Do you know what the CEOs of Estee Lauder, L'Oreal, Unilever, Proctor & Gamble, Shiseido all have in common?
They're all White men, who together are netting a minimum of 70 Billion a year worldwide.
But according to your piss-poor logic, because women are the primary consumers of cosmetics and beauty supplies, the business/supply side of that market should also be dominated by women.

Men don't care about beauty standards because society doesn't value men for their beauty. Hence, it's not a major concern for us.Men don't care about representation. Men open businesses because nobody will ever give a man a chance, and there is no system to provide welfare to a man. So this situation has nothing to do with why "black men arent doing something." Black women are fully capable of running their own businesses and it is insulting to insinuate they are not capable.
Men open businesses because society requires that they add value to their communities by being productive, business is one of the ways to do that.
There is no system of welfare set up to cater to men, because to society men are disposable and hold no inherent value.
Your complaints have everything to do with what Black men are NOT collectively, collaboratively doing.
You made mention of Black women selling out earlier but actually a good deal of Black male owned cosmetics companies sold out to the L'oreals of the world long before Black women came along to try their hand at it.
The documentary Good Hair has an excellent segment detailing that very process.
And despite your attempt to shyt on Black women for engaging in it, it is a trend that will continue with successful Black businesses, regardless of gender, until Black men, collectively, form an economic network with the express intent of protecting our share of the market until we can compete with the multinationals.
You can continue to complain about what Black women are not doing.
But what kind of man waits for his woman to take the lead, instead of doing what he needs to do to get them where he wants them to be?




How pathetic is your life if you caught feelings over a cosmetic company expanding their brand? Like you own stock in the company 
