This is the explosive true story they never wanted told.
John D. Garland's journey begins in the South Bronx of the 1970s-a place America tried to erase. Buildings burning. Fire trucks overwhelmed. "Planned Shrinkage" turning whole neighborhoods into ruins. But out of the ashes came hip-hop, a culture that taught young John creativity, survival, and the audacity to imagine more.
Racism wasn't on his mind then. Hope was.
Decades later, inside a prison cell, John built Prints2Prisoners (P2P)-a visionary platform connecting families with incarcerated loved ones while creating real employment opportunities for returning citizens. It was more than a business model. It was a blueprint for dignity, empowerment, and community restoration.
When he partnered with the Distinguished Social Ventures Foundation (DSVF) to bring that vision to the world, he believed he'd finally found allies.
He shared his blueprint.
He shared his model.
He shared his dream.
And they stole it.
Using the very architecture he developed, Scott Potash and Jesse Blockton launched Postable.com, a polished digital-to-print greeting card service built on the bones of John's idea. Meanwhile, DSVF denied his funding, citing "financial concerns," leaving P2P to collapse-and with it, job opportunities and hope for families in the South Bronx.
This memoir exposes the quiet, well-manicured machinery of corporate racism:
the systems that harvest Black innovation while shutting Black innovators out of capital, credit, and recognition.
For more than a decade, John fought for accountability.
He was met with silence, bureaucracy, and dismissal.
But not defeat.
He rebuilt his life-acquiring a Sign Me Up Signs and Advertising franchise and continuing to advocate for equity and opportunity in communities that America still pretends not to see.
A Distinguished Program, Volume One of a two-volume series, is both a visceral personal story of survival and reinvention and a sweeping indictment of structural injustice. It reveals what happens when a Black entrepreneur dares to create something powerful inside a corporate landscape designed to strip him of ownership.
And it is only the beginning.
Volume Two will trace the aftermath-the battles, the revelations, and the larger truths about race, power, and the cost of refusing silence.