Featured
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin brings experience dealing with racism, extremism to Pentagon. By Lisa Martinez / ABC News
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s extensive military career has not only prepared him for the roles diplomacy and deterrence play in American foreign policy, but for how to tackle head-on the issues of race and extremism in the military he said on ABC’s “This Week” Sunday. “We want to lead with diplomacy in every case,” Austin told “This Week” Co-anchor Martha Raddatz. “But if deterrence fails, then you must fight. You fight to win.””You want to make sure that that your troops are properly resourced, properly trained and focused the right way so that they can not only win, but win decisively,” he said. Read more
Related: The Military’s Failure to Reckon With White Supremacy. By Melissa del Bosque / The Intercept
Political / Social
Biden to sign order expanding voting rights on Bloody Sunday anniversary. By Sam Levine / The Guardian
Joe Biden will sign an executive order expanding voting rights on Sunday, the 56th anniversary of Bloody Sunday, when police brutally attacked a voting rights march in Selma, Alabama. Republicans have advanced more than 250 measures in state legislatures which aim to restrict voting, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. Biden referenced those measures in remarks delivered remotely to a unity breakfast in Selma on Sunday, saying: “We cannot let them succeed.” “If you have the best ideas, you have nothing to hide,” he said. “Let more people vote.” Read more
Related: Time for some more ‘good trouble’ on voting rights, 56 years after ‘Bloody Sunday.’ By Jonathan Capehart / Wash Post
Related: The Supreme Court Is Poised to Find New Ways to Disenfranchise Black Voters. By Elie Mystal / The Nation
Related: In Georgia, Republicans Take Aim at Role of Black Churches in Elections. By Nick Corasaniti and Jim Rutenberg / NYT
Related: Kentucky May Soon Restore Voting Rights To 200,000 People With Felony Convictions. By Travis Waldron / HuffPost
Selma on My Mind. By Nicolaus Mills / Dissent
This year’s commemoration of the 1965 Selma to Montgomery Voting Rights March will be taking place not in Selma but online, as a result of COVID-19. While it is unfortunate that the event will be virtual, what saddens me most is that the commemoration will be missing John Lewis. But the story of the march is not just about the past. As Lewis made clear in comments before his death last year, we should see Selma as part of an ongoing voting-rights struggle. Read more
Related: Selma Bridge Crossing Jubilee To Honor 4 Civil Rights Icons. By Taryn Finley / HuffPost
Will Democrats scrap the filibuster to pass big election package? By Dan Balz / Wash Post
President Biden and Democratic lawmakers will face many challenges this year as they attempt to dramatically redirect policy after four years of Donald Trump’s presidency. None will be as consequential for the future of elections and the shape of democracy as the coming battle in the Senate over a comprehensive election revision bill. In its simplest description, the legislation is designed to make it easier for people to vote, make elections more transparent and shore up some of the infrastructure of election operations. Read more
Related: Clyburn: Allowing filibuster to be used to deny voting rights would be ‘catastrophic.’ By Aris Folley / The Hill
Campaigns for Reparations Are Gaining Steam Across the Country. By David lamb / The Progressive
A groundswell that began in Evanston, Illinois, in 2019 with a “commitment to end structural racism and achieve racial equity” gathered momentum last year, with similar resolutions passing in Asheville, North Carolina; Providence, Rhode Island; Chicago, Illinois; and the state of California. Now, as local governments look to turn ambition into action, disconnected groups of professionals—many frustrated by the glacial movement of the H.R. 40 bill to examine reparations that was first introduced into Congress more than thirty years ago—are channeling their expertise to help cities rise to meet the challenge. Read more
Related: Revisiting reparations: Is it time for the US to pay its debt for the legacy of slavery? Anne C. Bailey / The Conversation
Related: Stockton, California, gave people a basic income. It boosted employment. By Sigal Samuel / Vox
The COVID-19 Stimulus Bill Can Help Biden Transform Politics. By Ed Kilgore / NY Magazine
“Trump voters, a large portion of them, want a welfare state that is dependable for working people,” says Greenberg. And Biden’s proposed $1.9 trillion Covid relief package could make a tangible difference in their lives. Do the Reagan Democrats stick with non-Trump Republicans if Biden’s Democrats deliver reopened schools, a strong economy, a huge investment in infrastructure and a $3,600-per-child benefit to families on top of a $1,400 stimulus check? Read more
Related: How racism harms White people, too. By John Blake / CNN
How the Pandemic Economy Could Wipe Out a Generation of Black-Owned Businesses. By Lydia DePillis / ProPublica
Those years of compounding disadvantage have been exacerbated by the pandemic. Minority-owned businesses overall have also been at the back of the line for relief programs, which were initially designed without factoring in the unique challenges of small businesses owned by people of color. As a result, federal Paycheck Protection Program loans to businesses in areas with a higher percentage of minority residents came in later and in lesser amounts per employee. Shown is an employee at Sealing Life Technology who uses a laser measure on a rubber part at the company’s plant in Lexington, Kentucky. Read more
Related: Black Farmers May Finally Get the Help They Deserve. By Mark Bittman / NYT
Why violence against the Asian American community is on the rise during the Covid-19 pandemic. By Li Zhou / Vox
Harassment toward Asian Americans has spiked in the last year: According to Stop AAPI Hate, an organization that’s been tracking these reports, over 2,800 incidents were documented in 2020. And more recently, a wave of violent attacks against elderly people has renewed focus on this issue. These incidents — which include everything from getting shunned at work to physical assaults — have been wide-ranging. Read more
Related: Asian Americans have often needed to ‘prove’ racism. Then social media video came along. By Claire Wang / NBC News
Related: Anti-Asian Harassment’s Long History in America. By Elaine Godfrey / The Atlantic
White People Got COVID-19 Vaccines Meant for Others. By Janell Ross / Time
In Dallas County, and almost every other part of the nation, those gaps emerged in a vaccine rollout that aggravated rather than addressed inequities that have made the pandemic so much deadlier for some populations. In February, as Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data showed that Black, Latino and Native Americans were at least twice as likely as white people to die of COVID-19, it was white Americans who secured most vaccine doses. In the 23 states that try to track the race or ethnicity of those vaccinated, most reported white people were getting vaccinated at disproportionately high rates, according to a February analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Read more
Related: Black People Need Better Vaccine Access, Not Better Vaccine Attitudes. By Rhea Boyd / NYT
The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2021, explained. By Sean Collins / Vox
One provision in the bill addresses qualified immunity, a legal precedent that gives government officials, including police officers, broad protections against lawsuits. Among other things, the bill would also create a national database of police misconduct and require federal law enforcement officials to use body and dash cameras. To curtail deaths, the legislation bans federal law enforcement from using chokeholds like the one that ended Floyd’s life, and from using no-knock warrants in drug cases — Taylor was killed when police burst into her home using such a warrant in March 2020. Read more
A small-town congregation sold its church. A whites-only group moved in. By Billy Ball / Wash Post
Jimmy Buxton Jr. is a longtime civil rights activist in eastern North Carolina and president of the local NAACP. For him, the Assembly’s arrival in Linden recalls memories of a time when racism strolled in broad daylight and the Ku Klux Klan convened regular rallies and cross burnings with its thousands of members statewide. They and other white supremacists in the South often used passages from the Bible to justify their beliefs. Read more
Jackson, Mississippi has a water crisis because our state legislature has a race problem. By Donna Ladd and NBC News
Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves told the media this week, “I do think it’s really important that the City of Jackson start collecting their water bill payments before they start going and asking everyone else to pony up more money.” As the governor gave that lecture on March 3 in his state’s capital city, thousands of homes near where he sat in Jackson were without even non-potable water to flush their toilets, and not a single home in the city limits had access to safe drinking water we could use without boiling first. Read more
Historical / Cultural
One Old Way of Keeping Black People From Voting Still Works. By Jamelle Bouie / NYT
This is the story of how a bill to save the vote and preserve a semblance of democracy for millions of Americans died at the hands of an intransigent, reactionary minority in the Senate, which used the filibuster to do its dirty work. In the summer of 1890, the state of Mississippi held its second constitutional convention of the post-Civil War era. The first, in 1868, was an attempt to make biracial democracy a reality. This second was meant to be the final nail in its coffin. Shown is an African-American family in Southern Mississippi in 1895. Read more
What the policing response to the KKK in the 1960s can teach about dismantling white supremacist groups today. By David Cunningham / The Conversation
Nearly every night in 1965, ascendant KKK leader Bob Jones appeared on a makeshift stage in fields across rural North Carolina channeling the revolutionary fervor of his newfound followers. As the head of the nation’s largest statewide Klan since World War II, Jones was growing accustomed to crowds numbering in the hundreds – and sometimes the thousands – at rallies throughout his home state. In March 1965, a bipartisan group of congressional lawmakers urged the House Committee on Un-American Activities to investigate the Klan. Formal hearings were announced that June. Read more
Related: How State Surveillance Undermines Black Freedom Movements. By Nishsani Frazier / AAIHS
Why white supremacists and QAnon enthusiasts are obsessed – but very wrong – about the Byzantine Empire. By Roland Betancourt / The Conversation
From Charlottesville to the Capitol, medieval imagery has been repeatedly on show at far-right rallies and riots in recent years. Displays of Crusader shields and tattoos derived from Norse and Celtic symbols are of little surprise to medieval historians like me who have long documented the appropriation of the Middle Ages by today’s far right. But amid all the expected Viking imagery and nods to the Crusaders has been another dormant “medievalism” that has yet to be fully acknowledged in reporting on both the far right and conspiracy theorist movements: the Byzantine Empire. Read more
My Mother Found the Dr. Seuss Book. By Michael Harriot / The Atlantic
Dr. Seuss was on our family’s list of banned authors—for precisely the reason that the famous children’s book author is in the news this week: Some of his works portrayed nonwhite people in a racist way. My mother went to what I now realize were enormous lengths to shield us from negative images of Black people, a seemingly impossible task for someone raising children in 1970s and ’80s South Carolina. The intensity of her displeasure over a Dr. Seuss book being in her home—and not even one of the objectionable titles—speaks to how much labor her plan required. Read more
Related: Six Seuss Books Bore a Bias. By Charles M. Blow / NYT
“Coming 2 America” takes the crown, delivering a sequel worthy of & less patriarchal than the first. By Melanie McFarland / Salon
Instead of redrafting old gags that don’t fit modern sensibilities or worse, straining to recapture past glory, “Coming 2 America” confidently moves to the comedy rhythms of where we are now. And because of its willingness to transform it is a smarter, funnier and ultimately sweeter movie than the legend that begat it. “Coming 2 America” is currently streaming on Amazon Prime. Read more
Related: Eddie Murphy and Arsenio Hall Recall Paramount Forcing Them to Include a White Actor In ‘Coming to America’: ‘We Were Forced to Put Louie In It. ‘By Angelina Velasquez / Atlanta Black Star
How ‘Insecure’ Star Issa Rae Is Changing Television: ‘I Just Wanted a Balance.’ By Melissa Leon / The Daily Beast
The funniest, most original voice on TV this fall belongs to an awkward black girl: Issa Rae, creator and star of HBO’s singular new comedy Insecure. Rae is the first black woman to create and star in her own show since Wanda Sykes’s Wanda at Large went off the air in 2003. She’s aware of the significance of her job title, and why it’s celebrated by those who champion diversity and inclusion on TV. Her success is testament to the slow, incremental erosion of the barriers still facing creators of color. Read more
At the beginning of the fact-based drama “Judas and the Black Messiah,” an F.B.I. informant named Bill O’Neal (Lakeith Stanfield), wearing a slate gray suit and matching tie, sits in front of a camera. He’s being interviewed for the documentary series “Eyes on the Prize II,” and an unseen questioner asks, “Looking back on your activities in the late ’60s, early ’70s, what would you tell your son about what you did then?” The film thus begins with an open question: How does O’Neal account for his actions? Read more
Sports
Related: LeBron James launches new ad for campaign to protect Black voting rights. By Sakshi Venkatraman / NBC News
NBA Star Russell Westbrook Is Producing a Documentary About the 1921 Tulsa Massacre for The History Channel. By Ashley Turner / Atlanta Black Star
NBA player Russell Westbook is contributing to the continued legacy of the Tulsa Race Massacre by helping to produce a new documentary that will air on the History Channel. A+E Networks announced the broadcast of the two-hour documentary tentatively titled “Tulsa Burning: The 1921 Race Massacre,” which will be executive produced by Westbrook, according to the official press release. The project is scheduled to air in the spring to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre, when a throng of enraged white residents decimated a prosperous Black neighborhood over May 31 to June 1, 1921, killing hundreds and leaving thousands homeless. Read more
Be Careful What You Wish For: Renee Montgomery’s Ownership of the Atlanta Dream Still Has LeBron James Laughing. By Isheka N. Harrison / Atlanta Black Star
Retired WNBA player Renee Montgomery brought home another win for the culture last week that still has fellow baller LeBron James having a good laugh at the “just shut up and dribble” crowd. Montgomery, 34, recently made headlines for ousting former Georgia Sen. Kelly Loeffler from her ownership stake in Montgomery’s former team, the Atlanta Dream. The news holds a particular irony because Loeffler refused to give Montgomery an audience last year when she requested a meeting to discuss social justice concerns. Read more
For the first time, the NFL will have a Black female game official. By Matt Bonesteel / Wash Post
The NFL on Friday named Maia Chaka as the first Black woman to become a full-time league official. Chaka, a health and physical education teacher in the Virginia Beach public school system, has been a college football official in the Pac-12 and Conference USA. She also officiated games last year in the XFL. Read more
Venus and Serena Williams Owe Their $305 Million Tennis Careers To a Man Who Knew Nothing About the Sport. By William Ricks / Sportscasting
As a tennis coach, Richard Williams helped build two legendary careers. Venus and Serena Williams have dominated the tennis world since turning pro in 1994 and 1995, respectively. The sisters have won 30 grand slam singles titles and 14 major doubles championships. The duo also captured two singles gold medals and three doubles gold medals in the Olympics. Richard Williams is the mastermind behind Venus and Serena’s phenomenal careers. He trained them early in the morning before school and late at night once it was over. However, the iconic tennis coach didn’t know a single thing about the sport until he realized how much his daughters could make if they were successful. Read more
Site Information
Visit our home page for more articles, book/podcast and video favorites. And at the top of this page register your email to receive notification of new editions of Race Inquiry Digest. Click here for earlier Digests.
About Race Inquiry and Race Inquiry Digest. The Digest is published on Mondays and Thursdays.
Use the buttons below to share the Digest in an email, or post to your Facebook, Linkedin or Twitter accounts.
Like this:
Like Loading...