@Cynique, you are a talented writer. Not because I agree wholeheartedly with what you wrote but you just have a talent for succinctly expressing yourself, one that I wish I had.
@Pioneer1, technically you're right this is our country, but as Cynique pointed this is really not true. Here is an anecdote, that might help emphasize the point:
I started a web based business, 20 years ago, selling books. The vast majority of other businesses like mine have long since failed or they disappears as quickly as they emerged. As far as I know, my web based business was the only one capable of proving a mostly living for someone. This is not to toot my own horn, but it is to explain that we don't have as many websites selling Black books online. This also means readers will find it harder to discover good books, which means that those books will be read less, and the publisher and authors of those books will make less money, which means fewer good books will be produced and the downward spiral continues.
But why are there fewer web based booksellers? First, Google controls a website's discoverability. Google alone can dictate which sites survive and which sites fail. I've already described how almost 7 years ago Google took 75% of my traffic cut my adsense payments by over $2K a month--over night! I did nothing wrong, but I say this to explain Google's power, who in one day put many websites out of business.
Google also uses the search engine to put the book store in front of organic search results. This had the additional impact of reduce traffic that bookseller websites would normally get if Google were not using their search engine to hijack customers. This is a tactic only monopolist can utilize. They are prevented from doing this in the EU, but in America Google can go buck wild.
Of course Amazon is already effectively a monopoly when it comes to Black books. Has anyone noticed that virtually all the authors who post information about their books here direct people to Amazon? Even the few that link to their own websites, direct readers to Amazon when they get to their websites. This might sound like a minor thing, but it is a seismic shift in our collective behavior and that hurts the Black book economy and will ultimately kill if were it not for the activities of a few folks like myself doing what they can to stop it.
Of course on the horizon is another existential threat to the Black book ecosystem, Net Neutrality which basically prevents internet service providers like Verizon from slowing down or even blocking, access to other websites. This means that if Net Neutrality is repealed on December 14th (you can petition to stop it here) it is almost certain that business like mine will need to pay a lot more for their website to have decent access to the internet. The price for access could conceivably be more than I can afford!
No, Black people do not own the country, but neither do most white folks. The country is owned and controlled by oligarchs, and there is seemingly nothing that we plebs can do about it. People are so dead set in behaving against their own interests. This is a function of our education system, which by necessity, must create a population too ignorant understand why electing a "45" is a grave threat to our way of life... Yes @Delano, we can be our own worst enemy.