A scene from a Walmart store (Courtesy photo)

Letโ€™s be clear: Walmart needs Black America a heck of a lot more than Black America needs Walmart. 

Wielding roughly $1.8 trillion in spending power this year, Black folksโ€™ economic clout is undeniable. We get to choose where we spend our hard-earned cash during the holiday shopping season and beyond. 

But Walmart โ€” one of many companies that made lofty promises about fighting systemic racism after George Floydโ€™s murder โ€” just pulled the plug on its diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. Now, three weeks after Donald Trumpโ€™s election, they claim they want to be โ€œa Walmart for everyone.โ€ And the anti-woke bros on the right are trading high-fives, claiming they forced the retail giant to abandon its DEI initiatives.

Yes, DEI, the root of all so-called reverse racism in America. Because for some folks in this nation, DEI is code for anything that gives the appearance of supporting Black people, communities, or businesses.

Itโ€™s not that Black folks thought the post-George-Floyd-murder racial reckoning would last forever. Our ancestors lived through Reconstruction, so we know better. 

But back on June 12, 2020, just days after Floydโ€™s murder, Walmartโ€™s CEO Doug McMillon emoted in a blog post about how the companyโ€™s goal was โ€œto help replace the structures of systemic racism, and build in their place frameworks of equity and justice that solidify our commitment to the belief that, without question, Black Lives Matter.โ€

McMillon pledged to examine every aspect of Walmart to ensure the company was prejudice-free. He waxed poetic about a conversation he had with a Black woman employee about racial microaggressions. He pledged $100 million to a Center for Racial Equity that would โ€œaddress the root causes of gaps in outcomes experienced by Black and African American people in education, health, finance and criminal justice systems,โ€ according to Walmartโ€™s website. 

Walmart, he vowed, was on a โ€œjourney in support of racial justice and equity.โ€ 

One thousand, six hundred twenty-eight days later, that journey is over. 

The Center for Racial Equity? Closing. Racial equity training for employees? Not today, Satan. Using the phrase โ€œDEIโ€ in corporate communications? Axed. 

Walmart now says it wants to foster โ€œa sense of belonging.โ€ Apparently, as journalist Judd Legum quipped on Bluesky, โ€œWalmart has solved racism.โ€

Right-wing anti-DEI activists like Robby Starbuck are popping champagne, claiming they pressured the company into ditching its โ€œwokeโ€ policies. Starbuck, a former music video director, regularly posts lines like โ€œItโ€™s a fact that DEI is antiwhite,โ€ and โ€œDEI IS racism and deserves to die,โ€ on X.

In a lengthy post on the social media platform, Starbuck insinuated that his conversations with Walmart โ€” the nationโ€™s biggest, most influential retailer โ€” led to this rollback, a move that will โ€œsend shockwaves throughout corporate America.โ€

โ€œThis is the biggest win yet for our movement to end wokeness in corporate America,โ€ Starbuck posted on X.

Walmart touts itself as Black Americaโ€™s biggest private employer and has long been a retail giant in the Black community. A 2023 analysis by Collage Group identified Walmart as our favorite brand, due to the companyโ€™s investments โ€œin Black enrichment, and taking a stance on social matters.โ€ 

But hereโ€™s the other side of the coin: research revealed that Walmart stores in Black and Latino neighborhoods consistently get worse reviews for service quality. Walmartโ€™s been hit with multiple discrimination lawsuits. Remember that $17.5 million class-action lawsuit? Yeah, the 2009 one where Walmart settled claims that it discriminated against Black folks trying to get truck driving jobs? That was a thing.

Just two years ago, an Oregon jury ordered Walmart to pay $4.4 million to a Black man after a white Walmart employee racially profiled and harassed him in one of their stores.

A quick internet search nets plenty of other examples of people suing Walmart over shopping while Black experiences, Black employees suing for being repeatedly passed over for promotions, and Black employees suing because they were being called racial slurs in the workplace.

Letโ€™s call Walmartโ€™s abandoning DEI efforts what it is: a slap in the face to the Black folks whoโ€™ve kept their registers ringing for decades.

This isnโ€™t just about Walmart, though. Across corporate America, anti-DEI crusaders are attacking anything and everything related to leveling the playing field for Black folks, the Latino community, women, and the LGBTQ+ community. And companies are nervous about Trump 2.0, as well as a Supreme Court thatโ€™s overtly hostile to anything that smacks of affirmative action.

But hereโ€™s the kicker: Black America is not powerless. Walmart, like every other company, runs on dollars. And Black dollars matter โ€” a lot. If Black shoppers took their spending power elsewhere, the fallout for Walmart would be seismic.

Starbuck, though, doesnโ€™t think Black folks have a choice.ย 

โ€œIโ€™m happy to have secured these changes before Christmas when shoppers have very few large retail brands they can spend money with who arenโ€™t pushing woke policies,โ€ he gloated.  Amazon and Target, he said, โ€œshould be very nervous that their top competitor dropped woke policies firstโ€ and should brace themselves for losses. 

Which begs a simple question: Should Black America keep shopping at Walmart when it seems Walmart might have forgotten who helps keep its lights on? 

โ€œI think America has figured out that if you dish out racism and bigotry subtly one drop at a time and not in a direct overt manner the Black community is OK with it,โ€ Isaac Hayes III wrote on X about the situation. โ€œKneel on their necks and kill one of them they get mad. Dismantle systems that level the playing field for them and they just accept it and still continue to spend money with us.โ€

A company that caves to racist attacks coded as โ€œanti-wokeโ€ does not respect Black America. It doesnโ€™t deserve our loyalty. Because loyalty isnโ€™t free โ€” and $1.8 trillion in purchasing power can go a long way somewhere else.

This story was originally published online with Word In Black, a collaboration of the nationโ€™s leading Black news publishers (of which The Informer is a member).

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