Overview:
President Donald Trump's first 100 days in office have been chaotic, with a sweeping attack on institutions, policies, and laws that benefit or protect Black America. The damage done through 139 executive orders could take decades to fix. Black America must resist by organizing and building grassroots power that outlives any one presidency, educating their children, and protecting their history. Black entrepreneurs are re-strategizing, doubling down on community-driven support systems, and finding creative ways to stay afloat. Black folks have created strategies for survival, and every strategy centers around one idea: community.
Given his first term, President Donald Trumpโs second go-round in the White House was expected to be chaotic. With Republican majorities in both houses of Congress โ and the Supreme Courtโs conservative supermajority โ the hard-right, war-on-woke agenda he promised to unleash was expected to strain the countryโs political guardrails, if not smash through them.ย
But few experts anticipated Trumpโs sweeping, rapid-fire attacks on institutions, policies, and laws that benefit or protect Black America to go this far, this fast. And the damage heโs done through 139 executive orders โ and counting โ in just 100 days, they say, could take decades to fix.
Complacency is not an option.
Consider: in just over 14 weeks since taking the oath of office for a second time, Trump has gutted the Department of Education, which guarantees equal access to education for Black children; slashed tens of thousands of federal jobs, which helped build the Black middle class; and fired a highly-decorated general and storied fighter pilot who was just the second Black chairman in the history of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The bedrock of our civil rights isnโt safe, either. Trump is challenging the 14th Amendment in court and signed an executive order rolling back protections enshrined in the Civil Rights Act of 1965.ย
The president threatened to whitewash the Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture. He hollowed out the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, emptying offices that tracked minority health. He canceled teacher training grants for programs that touched on race.
Thatโs just a few of Trumpโs actions in 100 days. He still has three years, 265 days to go.
But Black America has always known complacency is not an option.ย
On Inauguration Day, we at Word In Black published insights from some of Black Americaโs best thinkers, outlining ways to resist what they anticipated was coming. They cautioned Black Americans against hopelessness and despair, and encouraged action whenever possible.
Now that weโre three-plus months into Trump 2.0, โ and after seeing anti-Trump rallies, federal courts pushing back against his agenda, and green shoots of a budding political opposition โ we thought it would be useful to take stock of the situation by talking to our initial group of thought leaders, as well as some new voices doing the work in the community. Taking action, they say, is still sound advice. But the need to do it, they add, is far more urgent. Their responses have been edited for length and clarity.ย
Christopher Bouzyย

Tech Entrepreneur
Founder and CEO ofย Spoutibleย andย Bot Sentinelย
The speed at which the chaos ensued surprised me. I did not think they would put tariffs on imports so quickly without doing the due diligence to understand how this would affect not only markets, but ultimately the economy. They are targeting migrants, going after individuals in terms of trying to deport them โ and being successful. It just seems like, the hell with the rule of law, the hell with due process. In the past, weโve seen Trump insult judges when heโs not happy about a ruling, but this is different. Now heโs targeting judges.ย
I know some people are tired of protesting, but you canโt sit back and allow this.
Christopher Bouzy
We need to protect ourselves. What I mean by that is, have a passport. Have a Plan B if things really go south. I know everyone canโt, if need be, relocate to another country โ and Iโve never thought about leaving America before, even in Trumpโs first administration. But this feels a heck of a lot different than what weโve seen in the past.
Second, be more vocal โ be out there, do all the things that had to be done during the civil rights era. Weโre going to have to pull out that playbook, dust it off, update it, and do those crucial things that need to be done. Part of that is protesting. I know some people are tired of protesting, but you canโt sit back and allow this. What weโre witnessing right now is a rollback of all the gains that weโve made over the last 70 years. So we have to resist.ย
Dr. Bahia Cross (Overton)

Educator and Executive Director, Black Parent Initiative
My initial reaction has been frustration and sadness, but not surprise. The targeting of the Smithsonianโs lunch counter exhibit โ trying to erase our fight for human dignity โ shows exactly whatโs at stake. If they can erase our history, they can erase our childrenโs future, too.ย
We have to educate our own children, and we canโt be lazy about it.
Dr. Bahia Cross (overton)
Theyโve cut initiatives that provided internship opportunities for Black students, especially, and called them divisive. But these programs werenโt divisive โ they existed to correct the division and exclusion already built into the system. Now, theyโre being dismantled under the false claim of fairness. Itโs like blaming the treatment for the disease.
They are coming for our history, our institutions, and our childrenโs dreams. But we know how to survive this โ by remembering our worth, reclaiming our power, and building the educational future our ancestors fought for.
We have to educate our own children, and we canโt be lazy about it. We have to uplift Black businesses, tell our own stories, and teach our kids that their worth isnโt determined by systems designed to exclude them. Our survival has never been passive โ and neither is our education.
Tashawna Gill

Michigan State Lead, Supermajority
Letโs be real clear: Black folks donโt have the luxury of shock anymore. Nothing about the first 100 days of this second Trump administration is surprising, unless youโve been choosing comfort over truth. From day one, weโve seen a full-scale assault on our rights, our bodies, our histories, and our futures. Theyโre not hiding it, so now is not the time for us to be meek.ย
What we need now isnโt more panels or think pieces.
In Michigan, weโre watching working-class Black communities get hit hard. Auto workers and service workers, many of them Black, are being squeezed from every angle, while the rich get richer. Trumpโs policies are a direct attack on Black labor and economic power. Thatโs not just policy failure, thatโs intentional sabotage.
What has surprised me? How many of our so-called allies are still asking what they should โdo.โ If youโre still asking that, youโre part of the problem. What we need now isnโt more panels or think pieces; we need organized, unapologetic action.
If youโre Black in America right now, resistance means organizing and building grassroots power that outlives any one presidency. And it means being unbothered by whether our resistance makes anyone comfortable. Because our liberation has never come from asking nicely.
Monica Delores Hooks

Chief Experience Officer, Russell Innovation Center for Black Business
The first 100 days of this second Trump administration have brought with them a heavy clarity. For Black entrepreneurs, especially those building in and for our own communities, the message is clear: Weโre going to have to do even more with even less.
At the Russell Innovation Center for Entrepreneurs in Atlanta, we work with hundreds of Black founders who are innovators, job creators, and culture shapers. What weโre seeing right now isnโt new, but it is sharper. Access to capital is drying up even further. Federal programs that were already hard to tap into are becoming even more inaccessible.ย
But hereโs the thing: Black entrepreneurs have never been strangers to challenge. Whatโs happening now is a forced refocus. Our business leaders are re-strategizing, doubling down on community-driven support systems, and finding creative ways to stay afloat โ because weโve always had to.
Resisting in this moment doesnโt always look like marching.
Monica Delores Hooks
Whatโs different this time is the urgency. Thereโs no waiting for a lifeline. Weโre seeing a renewed focus on ownership, on cooperative models, on tech innovation grounded in cultural relevance. And weโre also seeing more Black founders saying, โWe have to work as a collective, because no one is coming to save us. We are our own heroes.โ
Resisting in this moment doesnโt always look like marching. Sometimes, it looks like signing a lease, launching a new product, coming together for important solutions-driven conversations, or mentoring the next entrepreneur in line.ย
Black entrepreneurs understand the political climate is shifting against them, but theyโre shifting too. And theyโre not going anywhere.
Fedrick Ingram

Secretary-Treasurer, American Federation of Teachers
President Trump and his billionaire allies have given us so much to worry about in the first 100 days โ the lawlessness, the cruel deportations, attacking education, and whitewashing our history โ so I understand when people feel hopeless and burned out.
The proof of concept is you.
Fedrick Ingram
The reason I do not despair is because I remember that at every moment in American history, Black folks have created strategies for survival. And every strategy centers around one idea: community.ย
The only way out of this is together, whether that is through a labor union, community groups, your school, or your church โ we must prioritize and then organize. The proof of concept is you. You are here right now, still surviving and thriving when every plot and plan was formed against your existence, let alone success. Today is no different, and neither is tomorrow. If you want to push back with purpose, join hands.
Dr. Faith Ohuobaย

OB-GYN,ย Author, Coach, and Speaker
I have been surprised by the numerous cuts made, in such a short amount of time, to science- and health-based federal programs. The cancellation of critical [medical] training and education programs for college and professional students will discourage top talent and detour training of future researchers and scientists. Such programs include the Summer Opportunities to Advance Research and the National Institutes of Health Summer Internship Program.
Continue to stress the importance of women prioritizing their health
Dr. Faith Ohuoba
Sadly, I was not surprised by the executive orders that were focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion. The nationโs history of racism will always need to be addressed and cannot be ignored. Institutions and organizations who truly understand and are committed to solutions will continue to do the work in some capacity. For now, the [negative] branding of DEI has been solidified in the first 100 days.ย
I would continue to stress the importance of women prioritizing their health, including stress management during these highly stressful times. The only thing that I would add is to consider practicing a stress management technique called โBox Breathingโ that is used to create calm and focus. Of course, it is always best to consult your physician prior to employing the use of any stress management technique.
Dr. Artika Tyner

Founder,ย Planting People Growing Justice Institute
Root our resistance in literacy. Invest our time, talent, and treasure in increasing literacy in the Black community through a combination of engagement and advocacy strategies. The political climate under Trump has been marked by efforts to erase the teaching of Black history, restrict discussions on systemic racism, and ban books that center Black voices. Falling behind in literacy at this critical stage creates barriers to academic achievement and perpetuates cycles of oppression. By focusing on improving our literacy outcomes, we can create new pipelines to success.ย
In a time when anti-Black policies and rhetoric are on the rise, grassroots efforts are just as important. Organizations like our literacy nonprofit, the Planting People Growing Justice Institute, provide a lifeline in combating Black educational censorship. Organizing and mobilizing will be critical to cultivating Black educational resistance โ and literacy is central to the fight for justice.
Our collective power is not optional โ itโs necessary for survival.ย
Dr. Artika Tyner
I would look at not what [Trump] has done, but what he hasnโt. We know that 80% of brain development happens in the first few years of life, but thereโs been no commitment to early literacy. Meanwhile, four out of 10 fourth graders in the U.S. still cannot read. We need national investment, but we also need Saturday schools, music academies, and community spaces where Black children can learn and thrive.ย
Iโve sat down with friends โ doctors, business owners โ and asked, โWhat do you have inย your hands to give?โ Itโs time to gather our resources and ask how we serve our people, together. This is not an either-or; itโs both. Community engagement and national policy must move hand in hand.ย
Thatโs what the past 100 days have shown us. Our collective power is not optional โ itโs necessary for survival.ย You can be outraged, or you can be complacent โ but neither of those alone will move us forward. Now is the time to act.ย
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