Cover image of show Leave America: Unfiltered

Leave America: Unfiltered

Podcast by Leaving America: Unfiltered

English

Culture & leisure

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About Leave America: Unfiltered

Leaving America: Unfiltered explores what life really looks like beyond U.S. borders — through the eyes of the Black diaspora. From navigating visas and taxes to uncovering the realities of daily life abroad, this podcast delivers honest conversations, global insights, and strategies for building freedom, wealth, and belonging around the world.

All episodes

47 episodes

episode If It’s “Two Parties,” Why Do We Keep Getting the Same Outcomes? artwork

If It’s “Two Parties,” Why Do We Keep Getting the Same Outcomes?

American politics is often framed as a clear choice between two opposing parties. We’re told that different leadership produces different results. But when it comes to outcomes for Black Americans, the numbers tell a more complicated story. This episode examines how both major U.S. political parties have used racial politics to mobilize voters while allowing racial justice to remain conditional. Despite shifts in rhetoric, branding, and coalitions since the Civil Rights era, core outcomes—wealth inequality, incarceration disparities, and education inequity—have remained remarkably consistent across administrations. We explore: • Party realignments since the 1960s • How race became a strategic political tool • Why policy outcomes often don’t match campaign language • What the data says about wealth, policing, and education • How accountability should be measured by results, not rhetoric This isn’t an argument for cynicism or disengagement. It’s a call for clarity. If outcomes don’t change, it’s worth asking whether the politics was ever designed to. The real test isn’t what parties say. It’s what changes.

18 Feb 2026 - 17 min
episode The Black Towns That Existed Before the United States Was a Country artwork

The Black Towns That Existed Before the United States Was a Country

Long before the United States declared independence, free Black communities already existed in North America. These settlements formed under British, Spanish, and French colonial rule—before American citizenship was even defined. This episode explores the early Black towns that developed prior to 1776 and challenges the assumption that Black history in America begins only with enslavement. These were not symbolic communities. They were organized societies with land ownership, churches, trades, social structure, and systems of mutual support. We examine: • How and where these early Black settlements formed • Who lived in them and how they sustained themselves • Why freedom looked different before the U.S. existed • How later American laws restricted rights that had previously existed Understanding these towns forces a reconsideration of American origin stories and raises a deeper question: if Black people were already building autonomous communities, why did freedom become more restricted after the nation was founded? History didn’t start in 1776—and neither did Black self-determination.

18 Feb 2026 - 4 min
episode Black Americans Who Owned Slaves — and Why That History Is Complicated artwork

Black Americans Who Owned Slaves — and Why That History Is Complicated

Slavery in the United States is often taught as a simple Black–enslaved and white–enslaver binary. The historical record is more complex. This episode examines the documented cases of Black Americans who owned slaves and explains the legal, economic, and social conditions that made such situations possible. In many cases, ownership occurred within coercive systems that restricted manumission, forced legal compliance, or made family protection contingent on participation in slavery itself. In other cases, Black individuals participated more fully in slave economies shaped by white-controlled power structures. We explore: • Who these Black slaveholders were • The laws that shaped their choices • The difference between survival, coercion, and participation • Why this history is often misused in modern political arguments This discussion is not about excusing slavery or redistributing blame. It is about understanding how slavery distorted human relationships and eliminated clean choices for everyone trapped inside the system. Historical truth is rarely simple — and avoiding complexity does not make history more honest.

18 Feb 2026 - 3 min
episode Why Sundown Towns Still Matter Today artwork

Why Sundown Towns Still Matter Today

Why Sundown Towns Still Matter Today Sundown towns were communities that excluded Black people after dark through law, intimidation, and violence. Many Americans believe those towns disappeared with the Civil Rights Movement. They didn’t. In this episode, we examine the documented history of sundown towns across the United States and explore how their legacy continues to shape where people live, travel, and feel safe. While explicit signs and ordinances may be gone, patterns of policing, demographic exclusion, and cultural enforcement often remain. We discuss: • What sundown towns were and how they operated • Why they were not limited to the South • How exclusion “ended” on paper but not always in practice • The role of policing in enforcing boundaries • Why this history is rarely taught honestly Understanding sundown towns is not about revisiting the past for shock value. It is about recognizing how systems of control evolve — and how their effects persist long after the laws change.

11 Feb 2026 - 9 min
episode How the GI Bill Built the White Middle Class—and Excluded Black Veterans artwork

How the GI Bill Built the White Middle Class—and Excluded Black Veterans

The GI Bill is often celebrated as one of the most successful policies in American history. It helped millions of returning World War II veterans buy homes, attend college, and enter the middle class. But that story is incomplete. In this episode, we examine how the GI Bill, while race-neutral on paper, was administered locally through segregated institutions that systematically denied Black veterans equal access to its benefits. From redlining and loan denials to overcrowded colleges and restricted job training programs, the policy that expanded opportunity for many also reinforced racial inequality for others. We explore: • How the GI Bill was structured • Why local control mattered • The role of banks, universities, and housing authorities • The long-term impact on generational wealth • How this policy connects directly to today’s racial wealth gap This episode looks beyond intention and focuses on outcomes — and what those outcomes still mean for American society.

11 Feb 2026 - 8 min
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