At President Trump’s recent dinner with the titans of Silicon Valley, the future of the world economy was laid out in plain language. Apple announced $600 billion in U.S. investments. Google pledged $250 billion. Microsoft added seventy to eighty billion each year. The leaders of Nvidia, OpenAI, and others compared the AI boom to the Apollo program — ten times larger in scale. They spoke of jobs, data centers, semiconductors, and a technological transformation that will define the century. The White House pledged to back them, not fight them.
But amid all the talk of trillions in capital and the race to dominate artificial intelligence, it became clear: Black America is poised for a breakthrough, if we claim our seat at the table. Our presence and leadership are not just overdue—they are the next step forward.
Black Americans are thirteen percent of the U.S. population but only five to eight percent of the tech workforce. Less than two percent of tech companies are Black-owned. Only three percent of executives in Silicon Valley are Black. Yet, we spend $ 1.7 trillion annually as consumers, including $39 billion on tech products, with little to no ownership in emerging technologies.

The contrast is stark. At the dinner, the world’s richest companies celebrated policies and investments that will keep America on top. For Black America, unless we become owners, builders, or leaders in this revolution, we will remain spectators.
This matters because technology is not neutral. Artificial intelligence will decide who gets hired, who receives loans, who is approved for housing, and who is targeted for surveillance. The rules will be written by those who build the systems. If Black America is absent from ownership and decision-making, we will have no say in how these tools shape our communities.
We cannot keep blaming racism if we don’t train for the tech market. Every Black person owns a cellphone or computer, but no Black-owned company makes them. As the U.S. advances in artificial intelligence, we risk being left behind again. When that happens, leaders without solutions will blame racism to hide their failure to prepare us.
The empty seat at that dinner is a warning. No tech giant will give us a seat; it’s our job to claim a future by shifting from consumption to production, from talking equity to building equity. More Black tech ownership, startups, and leadership are needed—or promises of opportunity will pass us by.
That is why it is time for Black leaders to act decisively and lay out a concrete, actionable plan for Black America. Marches and slogans will not solve these challenges. The future will be won by those who build, own, and control the technologies shaping the next century. We must equip the next generation with the necessary skills, capital, and ownership opportunities to secure our stake. The moment to act is now—our future depends on our action, not just our awareness.
Trump’s dinner revealed what’s at stake: global dominance in AI backed by billions from tech giants. The question remains—will Black America stay consumers, or become owners? History warns that delays come at a cost we may not recover from