エピソード

  • The Sabotage of Edison Tech
    2026/03/07

    In this episode, Quintin Dukes examines the dismantling of vocational education at Edison Technical High School and its long term consequences. The removal of trades stripped communities of un gate keepable economic futures and contributed to cycles of poverty and criminalization.

    Dukes introduces the concept of vocational sovereignty, arguing that the ability to produce high value labor is foundational to economic stability and succession.

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    29 分
  • From Crescent to Cage
    2026/02/28

    Quintin Dukes exposes the correlation between historic redlining maps and present day incarceration rates, introducing the concept of the Crescent to Cage Pipeline. He explains how marginalized urban communities are economically extracted while rural towns profit from incarceration.

    This episode challenges listeners to follow the money, confront performative activism, and rethink systems that treat people as commodities rather than contributors.

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    28 分
  • Poverty Theater and the Benefit Cliff
    2026/02/23

    In this episode, Quintin Dukes breaks down poverty theater, a system that promises opportunity while maintaining dependency. He explains the benefit cliff, where small income gains result in major losses of public support, effectively trapping families in survival mode.

    Dukes critiques the nonprofit industrial complex, arguing that poverty has become an industry rather than a problem to solve. Through personal observation and structural analysis, he challenges listeners to distinguish between performative solutions and real economic exit strategies.

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    53 分
  • Brain Drain Is Not an Accident
    2026/02/15

    In Episode Two, Quintin Dukes examines brain drain in Rochester not as an unfortunate trend but as a structural outcome. Building on the economic framework introduced in Episode One, he explains how gatekeeping, racialized hiring practices, and a lack of economic oxygen push educated Black and Brown professionals out of the city.

    Dukes places this reality within a historical context, tracing post 1964 reforms that prioritized pacification over wealth creation. He introduces the Sovereignty Blueprint, urging professionals to move from applicants to owners by reclaiming their value and building independent economic pathways.

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    34 分
  • Rochester’s Hidden Economy
    2026/02/06

    In the premiere episode of Controversial Crucial Conversations, host Quintin Dukes returns to Rochester, New York, to confront the structural realities behind the city's racial income gap. Drawing from lived experience and economic data, Dukes examines how poverty, systemic racism, and exclusionary hiring practices shape outcomes for Black residents.

    This episode introduces education as a tool for liberation while exposing how cultural fit narratives quietly block qualified Black professionals from access and mobility. By unpacking Rochester's Gini coefficient, Dukes reframes inequality as a design feature rather than a coincidence, setting the foundation for a season centered on truth-telling and accountability.

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    25 分