This Friday, Jan. 17, 2014, photo, shows Starbucks mugs in a cafe in North Andover, Mass. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

While many Blacks are takinโ€™ it to the streets, Donte Robinson and Rashon Nelson went to the suites at Starbucks and are nearing the fruition of a real estate opportunity theyโ€™d come to a Philadelphia Starbucks to discuss with White business partner Andrew Yaffe.

The treatment Robinson and Nelson received at the coffeehouse prompted outrage and accusations of racism against both the coffee chain and city police and galvanized people around the country who saw the exchange as modern-day racism.

Rather than pretending it was an isolated event and sweeping it under the rug, the people at Starbucks are drawing awareness to the thorny issues that underlie the incident. The incident shows โ€œAmericaโ€™s problemโ€ as the storeโ€™s White female manager called police on Robinson and Nelson, claiming they were loitering. Her actions sparked outrage and protests that closed the Rittenhouse Square Starbucks down.

Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson issued a public apology and met with the two, who were detained but ultimately not charged.

โ€œThe video is very hard to watch and the actions in it are not representative of our Starbucks mission and values โ€ฆ to create an environment that is safe and welcoming for everyone,โ€ Johnson said in a statement. โ€œRegretfully, our practices and training led to a bad outcome โ€” the basis for the call to the Philadelphia police department was wrong. Our store manager never intended for these men to be arrested and this should never have escalated as it did.โ€

Johnson has ordered company managers to undergo training on โ€œunconscious bias.โ€

Under Johnson and company founder Howard Schultz, Starbucks is setting an unusually good example. Polls consistently show โ€œunconscious biasesโ€ run rampant, yet more than three-quarter of Americans donโ€™t believe America has any race problem. Fewer Americans admit that theyโ€™re racist and need leadership to overcome the issue.

Itโ€™s time Americans recognize and acknowledge what happened in Starbucks isnโ€™t really about Starbucks as much itโ€™s about American racism and Blacksโ€™ and Whitesโ€™ continual denials of need for dialogue.

Nearly every White in America carries an implicit racial bias that subconsciously prefers White people over Blacks in social, professional and educational settings. The nation needs a national conversation about race as soon as possible.

It will take a leader like Schultz to help move Americans toward genuinely talking about issues of racial bias in the countryโ€™s criminal justice system, educational settings and workplace hiring. Schultz has my permission to fill the breach on racial leadership as he works to better his brandโ€™s position in the marketplace.

Schultz has faced this sort of drama before. In 2015, the former CEO took on race relations with a full page ad in the New York Times with a tiny caption โ€œShall We Overcome?โ€ in the middle, and the words โ€œRaceTogetherโ€ on the bottom right. The ad was an initiative Starbucks can use again to stabilize market position and stimulate conversation and debate about race in America.

We invite Starbucks executives to โ€œcome this wayโ€ again. But Schultz should be cautious about primarily trying to sell the โ€œdialogueโ€ concept though mainstream media. By utilizing Black Media platforms this time at national and local levels, โ€œconversationsโ€ on race could move forward.

Schultz says Starbucks โ€œis committed to making it rightโ€ and has called in the NAACP Legal Defense Fundโ€™s Sherrilyn Ifill and Bryan Stevenson of the Equal Justice Initiative to guide efforts to reduce unconscious bias. Johnsonโ€™s meeting Robinson and Nelson could yield jobs for both, or result in the two getting their real estate deal.

William Reed is publisher of โ€œWhoโ€™s Who in Black Corporate Americaโ€ and available for projects via Busxchng@his.com.

William Reed is President and Chief Executive Officer of Black Press International. He has been a Media Entrepreneur for over two decades. A well-trained marketing and communications professional, Reed...

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