Disaster ‘I cried for a long time’: Black hair stylist’s dream crushed by racist neighbor


1679415617621.png


Angel Pittman’s dream was to create a mobile hair salon. So the 21-year-old stylist bought less than an acre of unrestricted land in North Carolina for $10,000 in September and purchased three school buses for $14,000 with money she had saved since she was 17.

“I’ve never seen anybody driving around doing people’s hair,” she said. “But not only did I want to get paid for doing hair, but I wanted to drive around, do a couple of homeless people’s hair and maybe go to some prisons and help incarcerated people.”


Pittman’s plan was to place the buses on the land, transform one into a living space, and turn the other two into mobile salons. She could do hair on her property, set up shop in different locations, or do house calls.

But that goal was crushed before it even began because of where Pittman chose to buy land: Salisbury, a small city in Rowan county, North Carolina.

When she first visited the property, and later during the closing of the land, she felt something was off in the predominantly white neighborhood but forged ahead with her plans. During the closing, Pittman encountered an elderly white man who lived across her property who she said “had already given me weird vibes”, but there were no indications of his intolerance.

About a week after closing, on 23 September, she returned with her mom to drop off the buses. This time, she said, the man approached them and asked, “‘Why are you guys here? Are y’all looking for shade?’”

Rowan county, which is 79% white and 17% Black, is a “sundown town”, a Jim Crow era term used to reference overwhelmingly white neighborhoods known for racial segregation. Katherine Mellen Charron, a history professor at North Carolina State University, said sundown areas remain prevalent in places like Rowan county to limit homeownership from Black Americans. (The Jim Crow saying was: N-word, “don’t let the sun go down on you in this town”.)

“Historically, it functions economically and politically to the benefit of white supremacists,” Mellen Charron said. “It’s a matter of economic insecurity and rising economic inequality, and the sense that white property values will go down if Black people move into the neighborhood and real estate agents blockbusting and taking advantage of that.”

Though demographics of many sundown counties, like Rowan, have shifted slightly, Adriane Lentz-Smith, a history professor at Duke University, said “legacies remain, and memories are long … few towns still post signs that warn Black folks”.

1679415590772.png

Angel Pittman shows photos of her buses that were vandalized on her plot of land in Salisbury, North Carolina. Photograph: Alycee Byrd/The Guardian

When Pittman returned with her parents a week after dropping the buses off, the neighbor’s behavior became more violent. “He sat over there and had his gun out the whole time,” she said. “He was like, ‘Get the fuck off my lawn. And [that] we need to get them fucking buses off his lawn. So basically saying, my land was his.”

She then noticed her buses had been vandalized. The glass windows were broken. Racial slurs were etched. The man prominently displayed Confederate flags, swastikas and KKK signs all over his yard, which Pittman said weren’t there when she previously visited the plot.

Seeing the vandalism, and afraid her land and buses could’ve been wired with bombs or bear traps, she called the police. When the Rowan county sheriff’s office deputies arrived, Pittman and her parents reported what they saw as a hate crime. But the deputies at the scene immediately brushed it off, telling her, “Oh, yeah, they do that all the time,” Pittman said. “The police talked to us for a little bit but they didn’t do anything. They just wrote a report and that was it.”

In an interview with the Guardian, one of the sheriff’s captains, Mark McDaniel, said the officers who went to the scene knew the elderly man and did “observe the damage … the broken windows [and] the stuff that was spray painted on”.

When asked about recourse for the attack, McDaniel said the incident happened before he started at the office. However, he said according to the report filed by the deputies, there is no indication it was a targeted attack because the neighbor always had white supremacy signs displayed.

“It wasn’t like he put it there overnight,” McDaniel said from the information available in the report from that day. “It’s nothing like that. So those items were not just put there after the buses were put there.”

Pittman disagrees with McDaniel’s claim, saying the elderly man’s harassment and racist behavior were explicit and directed toward her. She maintains that the sheriff’s office didn’t do anything to follow up or make her feel welcome on her property.

When pressed about the explicit racist comments, alleged racial hate crimes (which have been rising in the state), and the destruction of property, which led Pittman to flee the county due to safety concerns, McDaniel said Pittman never called back to file another complaint. With no eyewitnesses or video of the vandalism in progress the sheriff’s office closed the case.

“Even if the sheriff were willing to follow up,” Mellen Charron, the history professor, said, “make an arrest, do something, if you don’t have the law to back you up on the books that enables you to do that and to hold people accountable, then you can’t do anything.” (North Carolina has two hate crime statutes that include race.)

At the insistence of her family and fearful for her life, Pittman has now moved back home to Charlotte. She said she would’ve stayed on her land – which is still hers to this day – if she felt safe. But instead, she’s accepted the financial loss and is now trying to rebuild from scratch.

“To have all of that ripped from under me was really hurtful,” she said. “I cried for a long time. For somebody to be hateful because of my skin color makes it even worse. It’s really heartbreaking.”

Pittman is now raising funds to help recoup her losses and to buy unrestricted land in Charlotte. So far, she’s managed to tow two of the three buses to Charlotte, where the storage fees are racking up. The other bus still in Salisbury was so severely vandalized that it no longer runs. Pittman plans to find a way to fix it and bring it to Charlotte.

Her family, she said, has been her anchor through this, especially her dad, who won’t let her go back to her Salisbury property for fear of her life.

But the one lesson she said she can’t seem to shake, even now, is the explicit nature of the bigotry that even the police saw as status quo. “People make it seem like racism is over,” she said. “No. Racism is just thrown under the rug.”
 
I can almost imagine what her plan was. Outfit the interior of the mobile buses to be a proper salon. What I don't understand is why she would need 2 of them if she's the only worker, how she planned to work on customers while driving, the logistics of dropping off customers, and where she would park an entire bus. Pulling over on the side of the row to ask random homeless people (who might be dangerous) if they want a haircut doesn't seem very feasible with a bus, not just as a business but for traffic reasons as well.
Don't play dumb. There are plenty of charities that do this. It's not complicated to understand.

Basically a charity organization will announce an event for homeless to get free haircuts. They park the mobile salon in a public area where many homeless can gather safely and conveniently. The girl is supposed to hire hairdressers (which if you didnt already know, hairdressers rent chairs in salons). The buses could work in conjunction or provide the same free haircut event at different locations.

These mobile hairdressers provide their services at nursing homes, senior centers, and hospitals all the time. If a nursing home does not already have a salon, they use rigged vehicles such as this girl's buses.

Also you are fucking retarded if you think it is occuring while the bus is in-motion jesus christ kill yourself.
 
Don't play dumb. There are plenty of charities that do this. It's not complicated to understand.

Basically a charity organization will announce an event for homeless to get free haircuts. They park the mobile salon in a public area where many homeless can gather safely and conveniently. The girl is supposed to hire hairdressers (which if you didnt already know, hairdressers rent chairs in salons). The buses could work in conjunction or provide the same free haircut event at different locations.

These mobile hairdressers provide their services at nursing homes, senior centers, and hospitals all the time. If a nursing home does not already have a salon, they use rigged vehicles such as this girl's buses.

Also you are fucking retarded if you think it is occuring while the bus is in-motion jesus christ kill yourself.
tbh as stupid as her business plan sounds I can easily imagine it includes "and then I drive around and when I find a hobo I pull the bus over and ask if he wants a haircut"
 
America gets labeled as a horrible country; but when it comes to benevolent donations (not ones forced by laws), White Christians are by far the largest donation block; which is why Salvation Army fucking shot themselves in the foot. Given how America has now been brainwashed to worship niggers; yes, the nation is big on marks, at least until all the fucking Mexicans displace us and start with their racism.
Yay for Mexican racism!!
 
Awfully suspect how the video is edited together with the same type of low rent tactics and background "emancipated peoples" music as if she's the next Emmitt fucking Till. Pretty convenient that you can't hear anything of what the guy is saying to her either. 🤔And on that note, I've never seen a supposed "violent racist" calmly walking up and nodding his head in acknowledgement to his supposed enemy.... Also, if this had all supposedly just happened at the time of filming, why do the busses look as if they've been there for weeks on end with grass grown up around them? Did anyone from the media get the guy's side of the story before going to press with this hit piece?
This flickers on the screen at 9 seconds of the video, but it doesn't look like it's the guy's house. In the neighborhood though I guess.

View attachment 4852669
That looks like it was whipped up in MSPaint or photoshop in about 5 seconds and overlayed on the original picture.
 
I had a friend look into the idea of a mobile salon thing once. She promptly dropped the idea once she realized it required:
  • A valid cosmetology license
  • A valid business license
  • Setting up records for tracking sales/payroll and planning for taxes.
  • Ownership of a commercial-zoned location or commercially-licensed vehicle.
  • Maintaining insurance coverage of all locations/vehicles.
  • Purchasing all needed furniture/equipment (Chairs, hairdryers, ect)
  • Purchasing all needed supplies and having a place to store them.
  • Passing health and safety inspections for all locations/vehicles.
It's why most hairstylists just rent a chair at a big salon instead of trying to start their own.

I'm assuming the situation is largely the same where this lady is. There's no way she was going to make that work
 
I had a friend look into the idea of a mobile salon thing once. She promptly dropped the idea once she realized it required:
  • A valid cosmetology license
  • A valid business license
  • Setting up records for tracking sales/payroll and planning for taxes.
  • Ownership of a commercial-zoned location or commercially-licensed vehicle.
  • Maintaining insurance coverage of all locations/vehicles.
  • Purchasing all needed furniture/equipment (Chairs, hairdryers, ect)
  • Purchasing all needed supplies and having a place to store them.
  • Passing health and safety inspections for all locations/vehicles.
It's why most hairstylists just rent a chair at a big salon instead of trying to start their own.

I'm assuming the situation is largely the same where this lady is. There's no way she was going to make that work
The requirements to be a hairdresser or even just a barber are absolutely batshit insane. It’s literally easier to be a plumber or mechanic or truck driver in many states. Completely insane.

But mobile salon vehicles are a thing apparently: https://www.usedvending.com/mobile-business-trucks-mobile-business-trailers/mobile-hair-salon-truck/
 
What is the obsession with living in busses?

Looks cool on social media.

This story makes no sense from about seven different angles, but one I haven't seen mentioned yet is how expensive it is to remodel a van, much less a bus. You can easily blow $100k just making it an attractive, livable space-- much less a functional salon that can pass the no doubt long list of regulatory requirements. She bought THREE buses. And a plot of land. With apparently no water/gas/electric hookup because you generally can't get that until you've got an actual structure built. So what is the land for? Just a means to park vehicles someplace exposed to the elements?

Also, that swastika on some neighbor's screen door looks like graffiti to me. Like someone... spray painted the screen door... huh.
 
Back