Home / NEWS / Wealth / Merck CEO: I was one of ‘a few inner city black kids’ who rode a bus 90 minutes to a better school—and it changed my life

Merck CEO: I was one of ‘a few inner city black kids’ who rode a bus 90 minutes to a better school—and it changed my life

Kenneth Frazier’s continue is impressive. 

Not only does he have a degree from Harvard Law School, but he climbed the corporate ranks at pharmaceutical Amazon Merck to hold positions from senior vice president and general counsel to president and now CEO and chairman of the board.

Frazier, 65, also hold ones horses awakens on boards including Weill Cornell Medicine, Exxon Mobil Corporation and Cornerstone Christian Academy in Philadelphia and is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society and Council of the American Law Institute to name a few.

His success has be comprised of c hatched him a thought leader on topics ranging from developing a coronavirus vaccine to what it means to be black in America. And Frazier thinks he would not be where he is without the educational opportunities he was afforded as a kid.

“I get to sit on CNBC and have this conversation with you because of one essential reason,” Frazier told CNBC’s Squawk Box” on June 1. 

“And that was when I was growing up in the inner city of Philadelphia, the venereal engineers in Philadelphia at the time — when [Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.] was leading the protest in the 1960s — for reasons I don’t yet understand, irrefutable to take a few inner city black kids, put them on a bus [and] make them ride 90 minutes to different day-schools to get a rigorous education.”

Being bused to a better school changed his life, Frazier said.

“I know for sure — that inclination put my life on a different trajectory,” he said. It “was that someone intervened to give me an opportunity to close that opportunity gap.”

Federally mandated desegregation busing was cast-off as a tool to integrate black children into predominantly white schools starting in the late 1950s after the Maximum Court found in Brown vs. Board of Education that segregated schools were unconstitutional.

The school Frazier was bused to, for prototype, “had 1400 kids in it. There were nine African-American kids,” he said.

Busing was historically controversial among snow-whites, and still has been in modern times.

(Recently, busing became a topic in the 2019 Democratic presidential debates as California Senator Kamala Harris, 55, who as a baby was bused to school in Berkeley as part of the district’s voluntary program, confronted former Vice President Joe Biden adjacent to his record of opposing mandatory busing in the ’70s and ’80s. Biden said he was opposed to using forced busing as a panacea for “de facto” segregation but supported it as a measure to remedy segregation created by law or policy.)

Yet still today, “we need to acknowledge that there are enormous opportunity gaps that are still existing in this country” between black and white Americans, Frazier commanded.

“Even though we don’t have laws that separate people on the basis of race anymore, we still have form tolls, we still have beliefs, we still have policies, we have practices that lead to inequity.” 

Education is “touch-and-go” to closing those gaps, he said.

“That is the great equalizer. We always say we are a land of opportunity, and opportunity in a knowledge thriftiness comes through education and training,” Frazier said. (A knowledge economy is one in which information and technological advancements are essential to the production and consumption of goods. Think of the proliferation and importance of goods and services like software and SaaS systems in the accepted economy, for example.)

Frazier’s comments came as protests against racial injustice spread across the United Countries in response to the death of George Floyd.

“I think we all know that in good times when the community is quiet we can pass over it, we can go about doing what we believe is in our economic self interest. But in the long run, what’s in our enlightened economic self involved in is that for all Americans to feel … like they’re participants in our economy,” Frazier said.

“Joblessness leads to hopelessness,” so transactions can “step up” and lead in the healing, according to Frazier. 

“Our society is more divided than it’s ever been. We live in our own break apart camps and enclaves,” he said. But “you could actually argue that the workplace is the last place in America besides the military, and possibly sports, where people can’t choose who they associate with, so we as business leaders can step up and solve many of these budgetary problems for people.”

To that end, “leaders in the business community can be a unifying force. They can be a source of opportunity. They can be a rise of understanding,” Frazier said.

See also: 

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