Hiding Cash Is A Black Thing?

Hiding Cash Is A Black Thing?

Hiding Cash Is A Black Thing?

“Excuse me, your honor. I’m not trying to be racist, okay. It’s a Black thing.

–John Floyd
–Father of Fani Willis, District Attorney
–regarding keeping a stack of cash

Yesterday’s testimony by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis was fascinating for more than its Jerry Springer-like qualities, Fani Willis’s, at times, child-like patois and her dress on backwards. It confused me when she talked about keeping cash at home in a safe place and making sure you have plenty of cash on dates.

I learned hiding cash was a Black thing. I thought it was an “everybody” thing. According to the Daily Beast:

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ father testified Friday that there was nothing strange about his daughter keeping cash on hand and using it to pay back special prosecutor Nathan Wade for their vacations.

“I‘m not trying to be racist, but it‘s a black thing,” John Floyd said during a hearing that will determine if Willis’ should be disqualified from prosecuting Donald Trump and his associates.

“I was trained, and most black folks, they hide cash or they keep cash, and I was trained you always keep some cash,” he added. “I gave my daughter her first cash box and told her, ‘Always keep some cash.’”

Coulda fooled me. I thought everyone did it.

For instance, I always knew my paternal grandparents, Depression babies, had coffee cans of coins stacked around the house. Probably $1000.00+ total. I knew that there was cash folded in sheets in a drawer. I had no idea it was about $30,000. My Mother and Aunts added it up after my Memo, my Dad’s Mom, died of a massive heart attack. There was money in the bank, but you can’t trust bankers or the government. Memo also kept a roll of money in her purse in case of emergency. Folks from Hazard, Kentucky had a mistrust of anyone outside the family.

My husband’s Dad and Grandfather were the same way both R.D. and William Walter were known to keep a roll of cash in their blue jeans. No banks. Real Estate and cash. Cosby, Tennessee thinking.

What if, hear me out, what if hiding money is not a Black thing? What if it is a cultural thing born of time and place? Appalachians are not known for trusting banks, or bankers, or anyone representing the government. Based on experience. Black folk have a similar experience, but I guarantee that there are Italian and Irish immigrants from back in the day who feel the same. Korean, Japanese and Chinese immigrants have historically had tenuous relationships with the government. I bet they all keep a stash of cash at home.

I was taught in school to have a backup of six months of bill money. Not in my linen drawer, but in a safe or savings and loan.

Before I went on my first date, my Marine Dad told me to always have my own money on a date. Never be at anyone else’s mercy.

These are not Black things. Never trust the government. Always have back up money. Be able to take care of yourself in any situation. I will bet a lot of French people of any race feel the same way.

Featured Image: Schuylertowne/flickr.com/cropped/Creative Commons

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7 Comments
  • My very white Kansas grandparents and parents did the same. As did my wife’s Polish and Lithuanian grandparents and parents. As did my brother-in-law’s Hispanic grandparents and parents.

    Now, Georgia still uses civil asset forfeiture. Where a large sum of cash found on your person, or your property, is ASSUMED to be criminal proceeds, UNTIL you can prove that the money is not guilty.

    But I’m sure that if Fani is stopped on the road with a few thousand dollars on her, it won’t be confiscated – or if it is, very PROMPTLY returned (and the cop fired).

  • kamas716 says:

    It’s human thing, or at least an American thing. Anyone who has lived through or heard stories about hard times in the family keeps cash on hand. But it’s always been an, “In case of emergency,” thing, rather than just grab a few grand to pay back your sugar-daddy thing.

  • GWB says:

    I thought it was an “everybody” thing.
    It’s more a poor person thing than a ‘black’ thing.

    But if you’ve got 6 months of cash in your mattress… why should you be paying anybody back? Shouldn’t you be able to pay your way to begin with? Why is anyone giving you loans?

    Appalachians are not known for trusting banks, or bankers, or anyone representing the government.
    If you know what Thomas Sowell says about blacks (some of them) being rednecks, then the association makes sense.

    (All of this is why preppers get silver. I’m investing in gunpowder, brass, and lead.)

    • Kevin says:

      I did the exact same thing with a friend … She paid for everything (we went to Vegas to a concert) and then sent me an email with the total amount and we split it (hotel/meals/cabs/concert tickets/etc.). We didn’t have to keep track of who paid for what, who owes who, how much did you pay for that and here’s what I paid for this, etc. It was simple. Aside from my flight, everything was split 50/50. It’s not rocket science or something sinister.

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