Racial Socioeconomic Relations

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David Simon on Baltimore’s Anguish

David Simon is Baltimore’s best-known chronicler of life on the hard streets. He worked for The Baltimore Sun city desk for a dozen years, wrote “Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets” (1991) and with former homicide detective THE CORNER: A YEAR IN THE LIFE OF [...]

David Simon on Baltimore’s Anguish2016-11-29T17:37:14-05:00

In Baltimore, We’re All Freddie Gray

BALTIMORE — AT the moment, what’s going on in Baltimore seems to be all about Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old black man who was viciously attacked by police officers on April 12 more or less because he looked at them. They subdued him; his spine [...]

In Baltimore, We’re All Freddie Gray2016-11-29T17:37:15-05:00

America’s Real State of Emergency: Baltimore and Beyond

By Heather Ann Thompson | Originally Published at Huffington Post. April 28, 2015 2:18 PM EDT Updated: April 28, 2015 2:59 PM EDT | Photographic Credit; Unknown Source/Social Media As most Americans were sitting down to dinner Monday night, Maryland's Governor Larry Hogan was declaring a state [...]

America’s Real State of Emergency: Baltimore and Beyond2016-11-29T17:37:15-05:00

A Black Mother’s Love (or What Love Looks Like in Public)

By rboylorn | Originally Published at The Crunk Feminist Collective. Photograph; A Baltimore mom, her only son, love, and Freddie Gray. I planned to write a blog about the unconscionable inconsolable injustice that is plaguing the black community right now. I was going to write about how [...]

A Black Mother’s Love (or What Love Looks Like in Public)2016-11-29T17:37:15-05:00

Chicago Is About to Offer the Nation’s First Reparations Program for Victims of Police Violence

Local advocates are poised to win a campaign for justice that’s broader than individual civil suits can offer. By Zach Stafford | Originally Published at The Nation. April 22, 2015 | Photographic Credit; Stanley Wrice speaks with the media after being released from prison after [...]

Chicago Is About to Offer the Nation’s First Reparations Program for Victims of Police Violence2016-11-29T17:37:15-05:00

Why We Should Keep Harriet Tubman and Rosa Parks Off the $20 Bill

Harriet Tubman or Rosa Parks may be the next face featured on the U.S. $20 bill—that is if WomenOn20s (W20), a grassroots organization committed to the realization of female representation on the nation’s currency, has anything to say about it. After a “robust” voting process spearheaded [...]

Why We Should Keep Harriet Tubman and Rosa Parks Off the $20 Bill2016-11-29T17:37:15-05:00

This Unarmed Black Woman Was Shot by the Police, So Why Aren’t We Marching for Her?

On March 21, 2012, 22-year-old Rekia Boyd was fatally shot in the back of the head. Chicago Police Detective Dante Servin had been off-duty when, around 1 a.m., he approached a group that included Boyd in his car. After one of the individuals present, 39-year-old [...]

This Unarmed Black Woman Was Shot by the Police, So Why Aren’t We Marching for Her?2016-11-29T17:37:16-05:00

White America’s Silence on Police Brutality Is Consent

By Donovan X. Ramsey | Originally Published at Gawker. April 10, 2015 11:45AM | Image by Sam Woolley; Photographic Credit; Shutterstock Late Tuesday, news broke that yet another unarmed American, a black man named Walter Scott, was killed by a white police officer. As with Tamir Rice, [...]

White America’s Silence on Police Brutality Is Consent2016-11-29T17:37:16-05:00

Poverty is Not a Crime, So Stop Trying to Punish Poor People

By Altheria Gaston | Originally Published at ForHarriet. April 9, 2015 | Photographic Credit; Shutterstock I am in the early stages of writing a dissertation that focuses on the realities of single, Black mothers experiencing poverty. One of my goals is to reveal the extent to which [...]

Poverty is Not a Crime, So Stop Trying to Punish Poor People2016-11-29T17:37:16-05:00
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