Currently…

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by Patrick Rhone, Master Generalist
Currently…

I mean, it is and it isn’t. Owning the land is the “what”. But it’s really about the “why”. It’s about what property ownership allows you to do. Not just for you but for your descendants.
As an example, my great-great-grandfather and grandmother were able to purchase 40 acres of land immediately following emancipation. Because of that land, the ability to farm it and derive other revenue streams from the land, free and clear of any debt or interest payment, they were able to send all eleven of their children to either college or trade school.
Before they passed, they set up a deed that made sure that land, which they also eventually grew to 116 acres, remained in the family and passed down to their heirs.
But what they passed down was not just the land — the “what”. They also passed down a living example and set of values – the “why”. They passed down the example of stewardship to further advancement.
One could use such a resource to fuel education. In a society that could find a way to take anything away from you if they wanted for no reason other than the color of your skin, education was the one thing they could never take or deny.
The result of this lesson is that our family is four generations of college-educated people. Ownership of the land is what allowed that.
People think of inheritance as stuff – money, furniture, property. And, while these things are important, they are simply things. Real inheritance is the freedom owning such things allows.
Our daughter will never have to pay rent or mortgage in her life if she does not want to. She will get one of our houses when she’s of age and inherit our property when we pass, free and clear of any encumbrances. But, it’s not about the what, it’s about the why…
What could any of us do if we never had to worry about a roof over our head? If we never had to think about a mortgage payment or debt? For example (and this is our daughter’s current plan), if you are in college and own a whole house, maybe you could rent out rooms and use the income to pay for school loan free. Perhaps, when you graduate and get a job, you get to net the whole amount without having to pay rent, or a car payment, or college loan debt. How would life be different if this is the “what” all of us had and the “why” we learned and put into action?
That’s what she’s really inheriting. And, if she’s learned anything from us, I hope it is the lessons we’ve learned from our ancestors; that we are simply stewards of this stuff that we’ve been fortunate enough to have passed down to us and her job is to do the same. To take it, grow it, make her life and those of her children better with it and leave it to the next generation better than she found it. But, most importantly, pass down the same set of values to keep the chain going. That’s what a legacy is.
My wife discusses how, and how not to, behave at the theater. “It’s as if we have forgotten how to behave in public after the 3 years we’ve been mainly consuming entertainment at home on the couch.”
Enjoying a nice glass of sherry on a snowy winter night.

A Black family got its 40 acres — and turned them into intergenerational success – MarketWatch
‘Patrice is a steward of the land, and she wants to use that land to give others the vision of being stewards of their own.’
The story of Handy Heights is featured on MarketWatch.
Kissinger’s Betrayal by Stephen B. Young
What really happened in Vietnam? A new book from nationally-recognized historian, professor, and a Vietnam War MACV/CORDS Officer.
A new book on the way from my colleague and friend, Steve Young. It’s a doozy.
Finished reading: Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin 📚
Simply sublime. I have so much more to say but will need a while to sit with it a bit.
Seriously, make this your next read.
This is important.

I’d rather be in NOLA right now.
Happy Mardi Gras Y’all!
Sometimes a solution comes from just doing the problem in reverse.