About Us
Love Supreme, founded in 2020, is a local group of educated Black professionals collectively working to show an alternative way of life and love within our community. Love Supreme was formed as a response to hatred targeted at Black people in media, art and advertising. Although systemic and outward racism are Black people’s biggest obstacles, the internalized hatred that disrupts our community must be addressed. Individualism is not the answer. Our community must gather, unify and build, as the only way to counter our circumstance is with Black love.
We believe the first step in fighting injustice is changing the narrative. The system should no longer be allowed to dictate who we are, where our futures can lead or how we feel about ourselves and each other. Through our media productions, we will produce and promote more positive images with uplifting and conscious messaging. Hollywood’s machine can no longer be allowed to program us for self-genocide.
We believe in easily forgiving one another. We encourage and advocate for peace. There is nothing more precious than a Black life.
We believe the Black family is and has always been under attack. We want to protect and preserve Black love and Black procreation. We also believe in protecting Black masculinity.
We believe in prioritizing, promoting and supporting Black owned businesses. Starting now, we strongly encourage all Black shoppers to go out of their way to support and promote at least two Black owned businesses a month. In order to generate substantial revenue within our neighborhoods, we must create jobs for ourselves and build and support new Black owned businesses so that there are various avenues to circulate legal cash flow within our communities.
We believe in equipping our children with the things public schools have never taught such as Black history and Black consciousness. We want to develop Black enterprise and Black entrepreneurship as a way of life. We want our young people to imagine life outside of entertainment, sports and hustling. Our children need to be exposed to more Black CEO’s, scientists, business owners and less entertainers, dropouts and criminals.