The more immediate concern of social injustice should explore the significant barriers Black men face in society. Although White America would like you to believe that things have improved, the current climate proves otherwise. The amount of hate toward people of color has been made obvious because of the Donald Trump administration. And one can even make the argument that most whites have ignored the enormity of racial tension escalating right before their eyes. It is easier for them to ignore the reality of racism, than to address it openly and honestly. But the barriers that Black men face are pushed even further to the outskirts of the minds of society to completely devalue their existence. These barriers may be more challenging to uphold if there's a framework like the cloak of racial oppression theory to identify the systemic barriers that exist in educational institutions. The cloak of racial oppression theory will likely generate discussions to encourage White America to consider how they have weaponized their privilege to oppress people of color, particularly Black men. And out of these discussions may come a solution in shifting the mentality regarding racial oppression. However, the problems arise, when those in the know realize that white privilege only works by oppressing other groups, which appallingly justifies their advantage and to admit such that may compromise their iniquitous privilege. As the Harvard Law Professor Derrick Bell states, "Whites simply cannot envision the personal responsibility and the potential sacrifice inherent in the conclusion that true equality for blacks will require the surrender of racism-granted privileges for whites (Bell, 2012)." But even the staunchest supporter of white privilege recognizes the horrendous abuses perpetrated on the Black man. More likely than not, they can at least see that racial oppression is harmful and has unfairly targeted Black men. As a form of oppositional scholarship, the cloak of racial oppression theory challenges the notion that Black men lack value as illustrated by societies' unfair treatment and grounds its conceptual framework in the idea that the Black man possess unique skills that if channeled properly can be and has been influential on a global scale. This theory describes the burden of racism to point out the disparities that Black men face, but also to identify an approach to overcoming the setbacks, specifically in educational institutions. The cloak of racial oppression theory is grounded in the realities of injustice that Black men face daily. The cloak of racial oppression theory therefore accepts that inequities exist but also challenges the notion of those racial barriers as perhaps a minor setback for a major triumph. Through unobtrusive measures like observations and lived experiences the author was able to provide a lens into the ways in which Black men internalize the burden of racism. The methodology used to investigate the theoretical framework was phenomenology, which seeks to understand, explore, describe, and know the meaning of a given phenomenon (Marshall & Rossman 2011). Within the phenomenology research methodology, this theory employs several data collection approaches to generate data relevant to the concept of oppression (Creswell, 2007), including: observation and document analysis, interviews, and survey. In qualitative inquiry, three data-gathering techniques dominate: Observation, interviewing, and document analysis (Glesne 2011, p. 142). By adding the quantitative survey instrument, this allowed the theory to consider the lived experiences of Black men in America and the pressure they feel by simply being Black.