The Atlantic
May 14, 2018
Communities of color are actually disproportionately likely to report crimes—it’s police themselves who have maintained a corrosive culture of silence.
Read MoreCommunities of color are actually disproportionately likely to report crimes—it’s police themselves who have maintained a corrosive culture of silence.
Read MoreThey’re both blamed for predisposing their members to violent acts, but they’ve sparked radically different public-policy responses.
Read MoreUnderlying much of the media’s fumbled white supremacist coverage is an enduring assumption about where racist ideas comes from: the poor, the uneducated, and the hateful. Dr. Ibram X. Kendi is the founding director of the Anti-Racist Research and Policy Center at American University and author of “Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America.” He tells The Guardian US's Lois Beckett that this prevailing narrative is centuries old and completely backwards.
Read MoreThe antiracist lives by the opposite heartbeat, one that rarely and irregularly sounds in America — the heartbeat of confession.
Read MoreThe White House's fumbling about slavery and the Civil War fits a long pattern in American politics.
The racial story is often told from assuming lips.
The Washington Post
September 6, 2017