Where Trump's Black Tokens Stand Now

Where Trump's Black Tokens Stand Now

A cautionary update on Stacey Dash. Ben Carson, Herman Cain, Pastor Darrell Scott, and Diamond & Silk.

I’m at a loss to think of a single Black person who is better off because of their association with Donald Trump. Herschel Walker is the Ambassador to The Bahamas after failing spectacularly in his bid to become a U.S. Senator. He is the laughingstock of the Republican Party and is now publicly known for threatening women, lying about being in the top 1% of his class finishing college, being an F.B.I. agent, and more.

Ben Carson was famous and respected before joining Trump; now, he’s just famous.

Newcomers like Byron Donalds have sacrificed their names and have yet to benefit. Trump has publicly supported Donalds in his bid to become Florida’s governor. Donalds was once a drug dealer and is playing with house money.

My advice to any Black person asked to support Trump is to run away and not look back. Any money he promised you probably wouldn’t have gotten paid anyway.


“I was the angry, conservative Black woman.” — Stacey Dash

Stacey Dash achieved popularity/notoriety for a few years, which she hadn’t achieved since co-starring in the movie Clueless. Stacey was a regular contributor on Fox News, supporting Donald Trump and denouncing Black causes. She denied the existence of voter suppression, attacked Black Lives Matter, and came out on the wrong side of every issue involving race.

Stacey looked good until she got fired from Fox News for cursing on-air while talking about former President Obama. I think it was no coincidence Stacey was fired just two days after the inauguration of Donald Trump in 2017. Fox contributors have said and done worse. Hannity and Laura Ingraham aided in an attempt to overthrow the government, and they’re still around. Stacey’s job was done, and Fox no longer needed her.

Stacey went into a downward spiral after that, perhaps hitting bottom when she was arrested in 2019 for domestic assault, physically attacking her fourth husband; this came after a failed 2018 run for Congress, where she withdrew from the race after only a month.

Stacey is currently trying to reinvent herself. In an interview with the Daily Mail, she said she’d had a drug habit costing over $10,000 a month and half-apologized for saying some things incorrectly. Maybe she will take back calling for the end of Black History Month and canceling BET. She was last seen talking about herself in the third person and dancing on Instagram. She's actually entertaining doing the latter.

She had this to say, recently: “There are things that I am sorry for. Things that I did say, that I should not have said them the way I said them. They were very arrogant and prideful, and angry. And that’s who Stacey was, but that’s not who Stacey is now. Stacey’s someone who has compassion, empathy.”

“Herman Cain — He was a very special man, an American Patriot, and great friend’ -Donald Trump

With all sincerity, I liked Herman Cain. Several years before his ill-fated run for President and stint as a right-wing radio personality. I met Herman on the golf course. I was invited at the last second to fill out a foursome, including the then-CEO of Godfather’s Pizza.

My Round of Golf With Herman Cain
Before Running For President, He Was a Humble Man

When I met Herman, he was kind, funny, and humble despite having reached heights in business that few do. We did not discuss politics, but I came away from our interaction with a genuine fondness for the man.

Later, during Trump’s run for the Presidency in 2016, Cain was best known as a Black face, saying Trump wasn’t a racist. Herman attacked the policies and accomplishments of President Barack Obama and made it easier for those who knew Trump’s documented history of racial discrimination to pretend it wasn’t so.

After Trump won, Herman Cain settled in on the right-wing chicken dinner circuit. He was a Black man who supported Trump; Cain was friendly and could get along with anyone. When the time came to support Trump at a campaign rally in Tulsa, Herman Cain answered the call.

During the height of COVID-19, Cain attended a crowded, mostly maskless rally, which resulted in hundreds of people contracting the virus. Herman was diagnosed days later and, after months of treatment, succumbed to the disease. He showed the ultimate measure of devotion, paying an unnecessary price.

We’ll never know if Herman Cain would still support Trump based on everything we know. That support likely cost him his life. He remains a cautionary tale for anti-vaxxers and mask opponents.

If you’re black and you oppose a progressive agenda, and you’re pro-life, and you’re pro family, then they do not even know what to call you. You end up on some watch list for extremists.” — Ben Carson

Ben Carson rose to fame for his achievements in medicine long before he embraced right-wing politics and Donald Trump. He was the first to perform surgery to separate conjoined twins. His story was celebrated in the movie Gifted Hands, starring Cuba Gooding Jr. Carson was a hero in the Black community, and a Detroit school was named after him, the Benjamin Carson High School of Science and Medicine.

Former Godfather’s Pizza CEO Herman Cain Dies of Coronavirus - PMQ Pizza
Cain, who campaigned for the White House in 2012, also served as the president and CEO of the National Restaurant Association from 1996 to 1999.

Ben gained popularity among the right-wing allegedly conservative crowd; I don’t equate the two things. I had a white friend I had to let go keep telling me to read Ben Carson, who would make arguments he didn’t have his own words for. I let my friend go after he encouraged Black people to have abortions to avoid a harsh fate. I gave him a chance to explain, but he stood his ground. Back to Ben Carson, Dr. Carson was a brilliant individual who somehow lost his way.

Ben’s support of Trump allowed him to try a new career; he was Trump’s sole Black Cabinet Member, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. Carson had no qualifications for the job so he fit right in; he was best known for nepotism and buying expensive furniture during his term. Sadly, the Detroit school board was so ashamed of him that they took his name off of the school building that once honored his accomplishments.

Carson was last seen heading the American Cornerstone Institute, which appears to be fighting the evil of Critical Race Theory. Carson’s group will provide a “true history” devoid of ideology.

“What makes you think black people will vote for you? Word on the street is you’re a racist.” — Pastor Darrell Scott

Unless you lived in Cleveland, Ohio, you might not have heard of Pastor Darrell C. Scott, co-founder of the New Spirit Revival Center in Cleveland Heights. Scott is also the co-founder of the National Diversity Coalition for Trump, along with disgraced former Trump attorney Michael Cohen who went to jail after paying off porn star Stormy Daniels for Trump.

Pastor Scott purported to lead a group of 100 Black Pastors who met with Trump. Scott made it appear as if the group endorsed Trump (they didn’t), and he helped Trump fend off claims of being racist. Scott also formed and headed the Urban Revitalization Coalition. That group received a $238,000 grant from Trump First Policies; Scott used some money to pay Black people to attend Trump-related events to make it look like he had more Black support than he did.

Scott made the rounds on Fox News and other right-wing media. He started his radio network and published articles supporting Trump in those outlets that would have him. Scott was there for any Trump photo-op, hoping it would translate to his prosperity, it did not.

As a result of not filing the IRS forms required of non-profits, the IRS revoked the status of the Urban Revitalization Coalition. A closer look into their dealings revealed dissatisfaction with the group, and there needs to be evidence they engaged in any urban revitalization.

A Martin Luther King Jr. Day giveaway event was planned for Virginia Union University, a historically black school, in Richmond, Virginia. But the event was canceled after the school’s president claimed Scott’s group had engaged in bait-and-switch. Scott had promised an “economic development discussion,” but fliers for the event said it would honor Trump and Jared Kushner.

Controversial organization led by Trump allies has tax-exempt status revoked by IRS | CNN Politics
A nonprofit organization started by two Trump administration allies that stirred up controversy earlier this year for holding cash giveaways in predominantly Black communities had its tax exempt status auto-revoked after failing to provide legally required forms to the Internal Revenue Service for three years in a row.

Things weren’t much better at home either; Scott and his wife were evicted after falling behind over $500,000 in rent. Part of his rationale for missing payments was a reduction of tithes following a conspiracy against himself and other Black conservatives for backing Trump. He claims he now drives a 9-year-old car and has fallen on hard times.

In May of 2022, Scott’s conscience forced him to criticize the right wing for its failure to condemn a mass shooting in Buffalo in a Black grocery store and its failure to condemn Kyle Rittenhouse.

Scott continues to host a Saturday radio show called SmackDown on America’s Voice app.

“Anyone who believes in the power of prayer, please pray for Diamond.” — Silk

I can’t even get mad at Diamond and Silk, and I see them as a couple of Black ladies on their grind, hustling Trump supporters out of their money. They make no pretense of being policy experts, and anyone using them as a reference will have exposed themselves as idiots.

Diamond & Silk made their money off YouTube videos and selling unlicensed merchandise supporting themselves and Trump. I picture them following Twitter and Fox News to determine what they can talk or tweet about.

Diamond & Silk, like Stacey Dash before them, were fired from Fox News for spreading false news about the coronavirus. Imagine all the false statements on Fox News about the coronavirus, and only Diamond and Silk get fired?

Ineitha Lynette “Diamond” Hardaway and Herneitha Rochelle “Silk” Richardson have had fifteen minutes of fame, but it’s almost over. I wish them luck in their next hustle. In a tweet, Silk asked their followers to “pray for Diamond.” We all need prayer, so I won’t begrudge them that, but the prayers of Trump followers didn’t work.

Ineitha Lynette “Diamond” Hardaway died from heart failure. People are desperate to say it wasn’t from COVID-19, a disease that kills more Republicans than Democrats. Ask yourself why? Diamond and Silk claimed that “mask mandates were the new Jim Crow.” Donald Trump did attend Diamond’s Celebration of Life, so there’s that.

There are other Black people who have made themselves the public face of Trump. Omarosa did write a book, marry a well-to-do pastor, and won a $1.3 million lawsuit against Donald Trump over legal fees related to a suit alleging she violated a non-disclosure agreement. She might not get a job hosting a show on a major television network, but others have come away far worse.

Former Trump “Senior Advisor” Katrina Pierson got into a war of words and tweets with Omarosa after the January 6th committee subpoenaed Pierson. Omarosa said,

“Not only was Katrina one of the organizers, but she was behind the money, you know, and every scandal, it’s always ‘follow the money. And because she was so involved with raising money and organizing the events, I believe the committee is right in subpoenaing her. Katrina should be very concerned, and we’ll see what happens, but the committee is on the right track.”

Pierson responded on Twitter,

“Most people with a brain have become skilled with my name in their mouths because I have excellent defamation attorneys. This charade will add more wins to their belts.”

For the Black people looking to jump on the Trump bandwagon, hoping to come away with riches, those who preceded you should prove a cautionary tale.