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Journalist and author Dawn Turner shares her Humble Opinion on why we all need to make a connection between the pandemic and the protests.
 
The dark history of "gasoline baths" at the border. The riots were sparked by the dehumanizing and deadly practices of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, which required Mexicans to "strip naked and be disinfected with various chemical agents. Read More: 1917 Bath Riots
 
Using security footage, cellphone video, 911 calls and police reports, The Times has reconstructed the 12 minutes before Ahmaud Arbery was shot dead in Georgia on Feb. 23. Arbery had been pursued and confronted by two white residents, Travis McMichael and his father Gregory, who were armed and driving a pickup truck. The event was recorded on...
 
Armed groups showed up to scores of racial justice protests since May. Our video shows how police officers at times let them operate freely.
 
Please watch to the end to get the message. Rats in a Cage is a narrative poem, written and narrated by R. Cadell Cook, II, and Illustrated by Sheeba Maya.
 
America policies engineered our segregated homes. But the workplace? That had the chance of being a place where we interact with people of other races — and form meaningful relationships. These maps show that this hasn't exactly happened. In fact, the most personal parts of our lives is still very segregated.
 
The new restrictions on travel to the U.S. from six countries: Eritrea, Kyrgyzstan, Myanmar and Nigeria. It is also barring people from Sudan and Tanzania from participating in the U.S. Diversity Visa Program, which awards green cards to immigrants.
 
A roundtable conversation featuring Jennifer Eberhardt, Gary Segura, Robert Weisberg, JD ’79, Bryan Stevenson, and Katie Couric follows Bryan Stevenson's keynote address. OpenXChange is a year-long, student-focused initiative on campus that aims to encourage meaningful dialogue around tough issues. This is the first in a series of...
 
Roots of racial disparities are seen through a new lens in this film that explores the origins of housing segregation in the Minneapolis area. But the story also illustrates how African-American families and leaders resisted this insidious practice, and how Black people built community — within and despite — the red lines that these...
 
2019 Annual Global Wealth Report released - 0.9 percent now own nearly half of the planet's $361 trillion in wealth - U.S. added 675,000 new millionaires. Overall, the report shows the world's millionaires now own a combined $158.3 trillion, or 43.9 percent of all global wealth. Read More: Credit Suisse ReportDid You Know Report Downloads
 
Black farmers once made up 14 percent of America's farmers. Today, black farmers account for less than 2 percent. One of them, fourth-generation sugar cane farmer Wenceslaus 'June' Provost Jr., is fighting to maintain his family's farming legacy. June and his family were once part of the 1999 Pigford lawsuit, a massive class-action suit brought...
 
U.S. LOCAL Problem: No Shame at School ". . . .a child goes through the cafeteria line, at the end of the line, because they have debt or they don't have cash to pay for the meal, they will take the lunch away and throw it in the trash, because the food cannot be reserved." Many children across the country still cannot afford school lunch....

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