Science vs Spook: BPSC 101 — 50 Lessons in Black American Political Science and Culture
"To understand is to go underneath."
In 2021, Jamarlin Martin published an article identifying a fraudulent conflict of interest at the heart of FTX, the cryptocurrency exchange. The general counsel for FTX and its affiliated trading firm personally emailed him, wanting to talk. Martin never responded. The following year, FTX filed for one of the largest bankruptcies in financial history. The general counsel cooperated with federal prosecutors.
This book is built on that same methodology — the conflict-of-interest detection framework Martin learned reading Jack Grubman's emails as a contract paralegal at Paul Weiss — applied to 30 years of Black American politics.
Science vs Spook audits the 1995–2025 period with a single driving question: what does Black America actually get in return for the most reliable voting bloc in American democracy? The answer, tracked across 50 lessons, is a political balance sheet that has never been honestly calculated — the real cost of the Obama presidency, the architecture of how AIPAC systematically recruits and cultivates Black political talent from HBCU campuses, why the Congressional Black Caucus went silent while its own members were targeted and removed, how cabinet appointments predict policy more accurately than any campaign speech, and why the $11.2 trillion racial wealth gap cannot be closed by anything except what Darity and Mullen have calculated it would actually take.
Spook, in this book's framework, is what Elijah Muhammad called it: imaginary belief in people, leaders, and systems that are far from what is real. The opposite is science — pattern recognition, conflict detection, following the money underneath the symbolism until the actual structure of power becomes visible.
The author is not a political scientist. He is a former Paul Weiss paralegal, McKinsey & Company contractor, SEC whistleblower, and digital media founder who built a portfolio to $20 million in revenue without venture capital, then watched the same conflict-detection skills that identified FTX reveal systematic fraud in his own industry — with a $1 billion public company on the other side of the case, fought using $60-a-month AI tools.
For readers who have spent years sensing that something fundamental is being hidden from them about how Black American political power actually works — and are ready to see the architecture instead of the theater.