#lynching

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#voting-rights-act
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago
US politics

As a supreme court ruling looms, the US is dismantling Black voting power | Carol Anderson

The Louisiana v Callais decision will determine if the Voting Rights Act can still protect Black voters' electoral representation.
fromABC7 Los Angeles
1 month ago
Social justice

Decades after violence in Selma spurred the Voting Rights Act, organizers worry about its fate

Sixty-one years after Bloody Sunday, Selma commemorates the 1965 voting rights march as the Supreme Court considers limiting the Voting Rights Act's protections for minority voting districts.
US politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

As a supreme court ruling looms, the US is dismantling Black voting power | Carol Anderson

The Louisiana v Callais decision will determine if the Voting Rights Act can still protect Black voters' electoral representation.
Social justice
fromABC7 Los Angeles
1 month ago

Decades after violence in Selma spurred the Voting Rights Act, organizers worry about its fate

Sixty-one years after Bloody Sunday, Selma commemorates the 1965 voting rights march as the Supreme Court considers limiting the Voting Rights Act's protections for minority voting districts.
#slavery
Los Angeles Rams
fromDefector
1 week ago

South Carolina Forgets But Doesn't Forgive | Defector

South Carolina's focus is on current performance, exemplified by Joyce Edwards' strong game against TCU despite previous challenges.
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
1 week ago

Nine Black College Students Were Arrested in 1961 for Reading at a Segregated Public Library. Their Contributions to the Civil Rights Movement Have Long Been Overlooked

The Tougaloo Nine staged a sit-in at a segregated library in 1961, significantly impacting the desegregation movement in Mississippi.
US news
fromwww.npr.org
2 weeks ago

At the Legacy Museum, facing America's racist past is a path, not a punishment

President Trump ordered the removal of monuments related to slavery, while Bryan Stevenson works to preserve evidence of America's racial injustices.
LGBT
fromAdvocate.com
2 weeks ago

Black transgender woman shot to death in Virginia misgendered in police & press reports

Misgendering of Shyyell Diamond Sanchez-McCray in initial reports highlights systemic issues in reporting on transgender victims.
Social justice
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Jury Selection in the Black Lives Matter Era

BLM-based juror exclusions disproportionately affect people of color, risking jury representativeness and leading to biased verdicts.
fromNonprofit Quarterly | Civic News. Empowering Nonprofits. Advancing Justice.
3 weeks ago

How the NAACP Is Stopping Dirty Data | Nonprofit Quarterly | Civic News. Empowering Nonprofits. Advancing Justice.

Developers promise "community investments," downtown revitalization, and a new "AI Center." What they don't say is that this development comes tethered to a massive resource-intensive data center that will cost billions, create pollution, and concentrate profits for the corporations and CEOs at the top-not the surrounding communities. This is not innovation, it's exploitation.
Environment
US Elections
fromThe Nation
4 weeks ago

61 Years After Bloody Sunday, We Are Entering a New Era of Voter Suppression

2026 faces voting rights threats through postal service changes and the SAVE America Act, which would require citizenship documents to register, potentially disenfranchising millions of Americans.
Social justice
fromLEVEL Man
3 weeks ago

The Common Thread of 50 Black Lives Lost

Legal systems in America have systematically protected white perpetrators who killed Black people from slavery through the present day, creating a pattern of sanctioned violence and impunity.
Arts
fromwww.npr.org
4 weeks ago

This historian dug up the hidden history of 'amateur' blackface in America

Minstrel shows featuring blackface became mainstream American entertainment in the 1800s, promoted by government during the Great Depression, and were gradually eliminated through civil rights activism and maternal advocacy in the 1970s.
#civil-rights
fromAxios
1 month ago
US news

Civil rights group documents 70 alleged "modern-day lynchings" across 7 Southern states

fromAxios
1 month ago
US news

Civil rights group documents 70 alleged "modern-day lynchings" across 7 Southern states

LGBT
fromAdvocate.com
1 month ago

Many alleged suicides of Black trans women are in fact modern-day lynchings, report finds

Law enforcement in Southern states may be systematically misclassifying deaths of transgender women as suicides to conceal bias-motivated killings that constitute modern-day lynchings.
Education
fromTruthout
1 month ago

We Must Defend Black History - It Fuels Freedom Dreams of Students Under Attack

Teachers must transform curricula to eliminate biases and systems of domination while protecting vulnerable students, particularly Black students and students of color, from contemporary educational injustices.
#civil-rights-movement
Social justice
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Bernard LaFayette, civil rights leader who helped launch Voting Rights Act, dies aged 85

Bernard LaFayette, a civil rights pioneer who organized voter registration efforts in Selma before the 1965 Voting Rights Act, died at 85 from a heart attack.
Social justice
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Jesse Jackson returns to South Carolina to lie in state

Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., a pioneering civil rights leader who desegregated libraries and fought for equality, died at 84 and is being honored with state services in South Carolina before final ceremonies in Chicago.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 month ago

Today in History: February 26, Trayvon Martin shot to death

On Feb. 26, 2012, Trayvon Martin, 17, was shot to death in Sanford, Florida, during an altercation with neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman, who said he acted in self-defense. (Zimmerman was later acquitted of second-degree murder.)
World news
US politics
fromTruthout
1 month ago

Robin D. G. Kelley: It's Not Enough to Abolish ICE - We Have to Abolish the Police

ICE operates with brutal violence and loyalty to Trump, resembling fascist paramilitary forces, while Black Americans recognize this as continuation of historical systemic oppression rather than a new phenomenon.
US politics
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Civil rights leaders say the racial progress Jesse Jackson fought for is under threat

Rev. Jesse Jackson, a civil rights icon who transformed Black political power through groundbreaking 1980s presidential campaigns, died at 84, leaving a legacy of expanding political possibilities for Black Americans and people of color.
fromThe Conversation
1 month ago

Revisiting the story of Clementine Barnabet, a Black woman blamed for serial murders in the Jim Crow South

From November 1909 until August 1912, an unknown assailant - or assailants - zigzagged across southwestern Louisiana and southeastern Texas. Many Black families were slaughtered in their homes under the cover of darkness. An ax - the telltale weapon - was almost always found in the bloody aftermath. All but one of the scenes were located within a mile of the Southern Pacific Railroad's Sunset Route. In each case, a mother and child were always among the victims.
Philosophy
#historical-anniversaries
fromThe American Conservative
2 months ago

Relive The Civil Rights Era. Send in The Troops

In any liberal morality play, Democrats always get to be the shivering, oppressed black people, while Republicans have to play the part of Bull Connor, Birmingham, AL's racist commissioner of public safety. Except the facts are exactly the opposite. I'm sure you're bored of hearing this, but Connor was a Democrat, as were all the politicians promising "massive resistance" to racial integration. Republicans were the ones forcing Democrats to abide by federal law, along with a few John Fetterman- style Democrats.
Right-wing politics
fromwww.npr.org
2 months ago

Martin Luther King Jr. had a dream ... about health care

They offered a rare window into the lives, struggles and aspirations of African Americans, and a way for me to feel connected to a community far beyond my immediate environment. Through Ebony, I was introduced to towering figures such as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. Their courage, moral clarity and commitment to justice shaped how I thought leadership and service.
Public health
#jesse-jackson
fromFortune
1 month ago
Social justice

Jesse Jackson turned down a pro baseball contract that paid 6x less than a white player. Here's how segregation shaped him | Fortune

fromFortune
1 month ago
Social justice

Jesse Jackson turned down a pro baseball contract that paid 6x less than a white player. Here's how segregation shaped him | Fortune

fromJezebel
1 month ago

Trump Admin Doesn't Want Us to Call the Klansman Who Murdered Medgar Evers a Racist

On Thursday, Mississippi Today reported that several officials, who requested anonymity out of fear of retribution, said NPS told them to remove visitor brochures from the Medgar & Myrlie Evers Home National Monument and edit out details about Beckwith. Among the details reportedly flagged for removal: that Evers was found lying in a pool of blood after he was shot. The brochures referred to Beckwith as "a member of the racist and segregationist White Citizens' Council."
History
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Martin Luther King Jr. in Art and Memory

Martin Luther King Jr. Day honors King's legacy through commemoration, cultural programs, a 40-year mural, and the activism that secured the federal holiday.
fromAdvocate.com
1 month ago

6 Black activists who changed the HIV/AIDS response in America

By the mid-1980s, the AIDS epidemic had completely gripped the nation. Its victims, primarily queer men, were dying by the thousands. Fear and misinformation reigned supreme, and our government refused to respond to the crisis. Reverend Charles Angel, a community leader and activist who was living with HIV himself, recognized that queer men of color faced additional disparities due to cultural norms and societal inequities.
Public health
History
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

The Power of Private Museums

Belzoni, Mississippi, known as the 'Catfish Capital', was the site of a civil‑rights‑era lynching of Reverend George Lee after he registered Black voters.
Social justice
fromTruthout
1 month ago

The Black Anti-Fascist Tradition Recognized Fascism Didn't Begin in Europe

White supremacist state power and violence manifest as anti-Black fascism, linking prison abolition, historical uprisings like Attica, and enduring systemic bodily and social harm.
fromTruthout
1 month ago

"Reforms" Didn't End Police Violence in 2020 and They Won't End ICE Violence Now

Yet while "Abolish ICE" serves as a unifying chant in the streets, Democrats are once again seeking to temper and co-opt people's demands into a narrow version of reform. The demands outlined by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer could not be more toothless: requiring ICE agents to unmask, wear body cameras, and to follow a code of conduct modeled on other law enforcement agencies.
US politics
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 months ago

Today in History: February 5, White separatist convicted of murdering civil rights leader 31 years later

Feb. 5 marks historical events: a civil-rights murder conviction, immigration restriction, WWI and WWII losses, Apollo 14 moonwalk, FMLA signing, tornado outbreak, Super Bowl comeback.
#black-history
fromAxios
1 month ago
US politics

America's 250th anniversary collides with a renewed fight over Black history

fromAxios
1 month ago
US politics

America's 250th anniversary collides with a renewed fight over Black history

Social justice
fromTruthout
2 months ago

Mamie Till-Mobley Refused to Let Her Son, Emmett Till, Be Forgotten

Open Casket confronts Emmett Till's lynching, centers Mamie Till-Mobley's public grief as Black maternal resistance, and links historical anti-Black violence to present injustice.
US politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

State violence against Black Americans laid the groundwork for fascism | Jason Stanley

Expansion of racially targeted, arbitrary state violence into broader populations exemplifies an imperial boomerang, where colonial tactics return domestically and risk fascist normalization.
US news
fromCurbed
2 months ago

The First Alexander Brothers Accuser Has Died

Kate Whiteman, who accused Oren and Alon Alexander of rape in 2024, was found dead in Australia and her death is under investigation.
#martin-luther-king-jr
US politics
fromThe Nation
2 months ago

The Trump Administration Arrested Don Lemon Like He Was a Fugitive Slave

The DOJ arrested two Black journalists and two Black activists for a church protest, actions that violate the First Amendment and defied prior court denials.
#claudette-colvin
Social justice
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Running Down the Clock on Justice

Delayed governmental responses and failure to enact reparations deprived Greenwood survivors of justice and rendered centennial recognition insufficient to repair lasting harm.
US politics
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 months ago

Mathews: Trapped in a 50-year-old chokehold

A 1976 LAPD chokehold case and the Supreme Court's ruling barred injunctive relief, enabling ongoing limitations on legal prevention of police abuse.
#ice
Social justice
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

Black History Month Is Radical Now

America elevates Founding figures to faultless heroes despite their roles as enslavers; efforts to erase those truths distort national memory.
US politics
fromAbove the Law
2 months ago

It's 'Flood The Zone Friday' As DOJ Arrests Black Journalists Under KKK Act, Probes Criminal Charges For Minneapolis, And Drops (A Sliver Of) The Epstein Files - Above the Law

Trump sued the federal government for $10 billion over leaked tax records he had promised to release, while DOJ pursued a contested arrest of journalist Don Lemon.
US politics
fromTruthout
2 months ago

We Can Honor Renee Nicole Good's Life by Abolishing Death-Making Institutions

ICE agents have killed civilians, including Renee Nicole Good, revealing systemic violence and prompting grief-driven abolitionist organizing, solidarity, and labor activism.
US politics
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 months ago

Mihm: ICE enforcement is echoing the Fugitive Slave Act

Federal overreach can backfire politically, provoking civil disobedience and accelerating the collapse of unpopular institutions and policies.
US politics
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

What ICE Should Have Learned from the Fugitive Slave Act

The Compromise of 1850 admitted California as a free state, banned the slave trade in D.C., and enacted the Fugitive Slave Act with federal enforcement.
fromInside Higher Ed | Higher Education News, Events and Jobs
1 month ago

We Must Teach Young Americans That Associating Black People With Apes Is Racist

U.S. president Donald Trump shared a racist video on his Truth Social account in which former American president and first lady Barack and Michelle Obama were depicted as apes. I was unsurprised, yet nonetheless disgusted. U.S. senator Jon Ossoff also found the video unacceptable. He said during a rally in Atlanta that Donald Trump was "posting about the Obamas like a Klansman."
US politics
Social justice
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

The struggle continues': MLK Day celebrated amid tense political climate

Martin Luther King Jr Day events combined commemoration with protests over racial injustice, immigration enforcement actions, and stark economic inequality.
US politics
fromLEVEL Man
1 month ago

America Should Also Demand the Release of the Malcolm X Files

FBI, CIA, DOJ, and NYPD withheld and heavily redacted records that could reveal their knowledge and actions surrounding Malcolm X's assassination, obstructing transparency and accountability.
US politics
fromEsquire
1 month ago

Remember When the FBI Actually Protected Civil Rights?

Senior federal officials, including FBI Director Kash Patel, ordered agents to halt a civil-rights–based warrant in Ms. Good's shooting investigation, prompting prosecutor resignations.
Social justice
fromBusiness Insider
2 months ago

Martin Luther King Jr. was talking about a universal basic income before it was cool

Martin Luther King Jr. advocated a guaranteed basic income in 1967 to create economic security, an idea now echoed by tech leaders.
US politics
fromLGBTQ Nation
2 months ago

White people are increasingly protesting oppression. The interest convergence theory explains why. - LGBTQ Nation

An armed, masked ICE officer in Minneapolis fatally shot Renee Nicole Good at point-blank range as she moved her car away from an ICE operation.
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