Race Inquiry Digest (Aug 31) – Important Current Stories On Race In America

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More schools that forced American Indian children to assimilate revealed. By Dana Hedgpeth and Emmanuel Martinez / Wash Post 

Ione Quigley, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe’s historic preservation officer, returns to her seat after speaking during a ceremony at the U.S. Army’s Carlisle Barracks, in Pennsylvania, in 2021. The site is the former home of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School. (Matt Rourke/AP)

A nonprofit group has identified 115 more Indian boarding schools than has been previously reported, offering new insight into the role of religious institutions in the long-standing federal policy to eradicate Native Americans’ culture through their children.

For more than a century, generations of American Indian, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian children were forced or coerced from their homes and communities and sent to live at schools where they were beaten, starved and made to abandon their Native languages and culture. The U.S. Department of the Interior announced last year that the federal government ran or supported 408 such schools in 37 states, including 21 schools in Alaska and seven in Hawaii, from 1819 to 1969. Read more 

Related: War Against the Children.’  Zach Levitt, Yuliya Parshina-Kottas, Simon Romero and  / NYT

Political / Social


An American Tragedy at the Dollar General. By Esau McCaulley / NYT

A memorial for the victims of a shooting at the Dollar General in Jacksonville, Fla.Credit…Cristobal Herrera-Ulashkevich/EPA, via Shutterstock

I do not know what took three African American people to the Dollar General in Jacksonville, Fla., on Saturday. It could have been toys, food, medicine, cleaning supplies or some other low-cost item. I do know they were brutally killed there, and I know that the suspect in their killing was a white man who reportedly had swastika markings on his AR-15-style rifle. Read more 

Related: Grief and Anger Continue to Reverberate From Jacksonville Shootings. Anna Betts and 

Related: Jacksonville shooting is the latest incident of fatal violence driven by white supremacy. By Daniel Arkin / NBC News


After Jacksonville, Tensions Flare Between DeSantis and Black Floridians. Nicholas Nehamas and 

Days after being sworn in as Florida’s governor in 2019, Ron DeSantis pardoned the Groveland Four, a group of Black men who had been wrongfully accused of sexually assaulting a white woman decades earlier.

Four years later, Mr. DeSantis’s relationship with Black Floridians could hardly be worse. As he moved increasingly to the right ahead of his run for president, Mr. DeSantis pushed an agenda that cemented his status as a rising conservative star nationally but that has outraged many Black voters and leaders in his home state. Read more 

Related: Ron DeSantis’s Florida is a dangerous and hostile place for Black Americans. By T Anansi Wilson / The Guardian 

Related: Racist killings in Florida stoke outrage at state’s loose gun laws. By Joan E. Greve / The Guardian 

Related: Jacksonville Shooting: Rep. Maxwell Frost Blasts DeSantis for Pushing Bigotry & Ignoring Gun Violence. By Amy Goodman / Democracy Now 


The racist Florida shooter’s ideology extends to ordinary people. By Jason Stanley / The Guardian 

It’s not just extremists who hold the views expressed in Ryan Palmeter’s manifesto

In less than two years, two young white men have committed two mass murders of Americans motivated by an explicit desire to kill Black people. This shooting comes on the heels of an even larger mass shooting of Black Americans last year, in Buffalo, New York, where 18-year-old Payton Gendron murdered 10 people. In the manifesto Gendron published online, which revealed in detail his motivations and thinking, the very first goal he listed was “kill as many blacks as possible”. Read more 

Related: Jacksonville, Florida shooting: What we know about the racially motivated attack at Dollar General that killed 3. By  and 

Related: Jacksonville shooting’s larger trend: Hate crimes rise across US. By Will Carless / USA Today 


“We call that kind of love a cult”: Experts on the latest disturbing poll of Trump supporters. By Chauncey Devega / Salon 

New poll reveals that members of the MAGA cult trust Trump most: He “provides the kind of love they crave”

As I have previously explored in a series of conversations with cult and mind control expert Steven Hassan, Donald Trump meets most if not all the characteristics of a cult leader. Trump holds extreme power over his followers, who subsume their own identities and will to him. He persuades them to reject their own perceptions of reality and to trust only him and his approved messengers. To a large degree, they have lost the ability to engage in what psychologists describe as “reality testing.” Read more 

Related: If Trump falls, will MAGA vanish? It won’t be that easy. By Chauncey Devega / Salon 

Related: Don’t look away: It’s a mistake to ignore Donald Trump’s interview with Tucker Carlson. By Chauncey Devega / Salon 

Related: Trump Taps into the Forgotten Man.  Why? Because, the argument goes, Black Americans reflexively identify with someone who has been arrested. By Phillip Bump / Wash Post 


14th Amendment, Section 3: A new legal battle against Trump takes shape.  ByHannah Demissie and Laura Gersony / ABC News

Efforts to disqualify Trump from state ballots are starting to materialize.

That disqualification argument boils down to Section 3 of the U.S. Constitution’s 14th Amendment, which says that a public official is not eligible to assume public office if they “engaged in insurrection or rebellion against” the United States, or had “given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof,” unless they are granted amnesty by a two-thirds vote of Congress. Read more 

Related: How secretaries of state could keep Trump off the ballot. By Jennifer Rubin / Wash Post 

Related: Trump cited the ‘Scottsboro Boys’ case when he asked for a 2026 trial. Judge Chutkan rejected any comparison. By Devan Cole / CNN


Fani Willis proves the skeptics wrong: 18 co-defendants is a big problem for Donald Trump. By Amanda Marcotte / Salon

Yes, a RICO case is tangled and difficult, but one big advantage is emerging: Defendants are fighting each other

As soon as it became apparent that Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis was likely to charge Donald Trump under RICO statutes for his efforts to steal the 2020 presidential election in Georgia, the hand-wringing began. Many observers feared that charging a whole bunch of people — in this case, 19! — for an alleged conspiracy typically described as “sprawling” would make things needlessly complicated, creating multiple legal pitfalls and potential failure points. Read more 


Vivek Ramaswamy’s Loud Voice Doesn’t Echo Young Indian Americans. By Kaivan Shroff / HuffPost

Ramaswamy, an Indian American millennial, doesn’t represent the core values of the demographics invoked for his deeply cynical campaign.

Though I had already done a deep dive into the right-wing tech bro and culture warrior, I watched Ramaswamy’s debate performance with a unique sense of dread. I hoped the people watching at home knew this was no representation of either my generation or the Indian American community. Ramaswamy, 38, is one of the few high-profile young Indian American political voices, but nearly every word out of his mouth betrays the core values of the demographics he’s invoking for his deeply cynical campaign. Read more 


Tennessee State House votes to ‘silence’ Rep. Justin Jones, 1 of 2 Democrats expelled earlier this year. By  and 



State attorney says DeSantis fired her because she was ‘prosecuting their cops.’ By Martin Pengelly / The Guardian

Law enforcement agencies in central Florida were “all working against me”, Monique Worrell told the Daily Beast, “because I was prosecuting their cops, the ones who used to do things and get away with them”. 

She added: “They thought that I was overly critical of law enforcement and didn’t do anything against ‘real criminals’. Apparently there’s a difference between citizens who commit crimes and cops who commit crimes.” Read more 



By Emma Brown  and Peter Jamison / Wash Post 

On a private call with Christian millionaires, home-schooling pioneer Michael Farris pushed for a strategy aimed at siphoning billions of tax dollars from public schools


Attendees watch a performance by the Tai Ji Men community during the opening ceremony of the Parliament of the World’s Religions in Chicago, Aug. 14, 2023. Photo by Lauren Pond for RNS. 

As religious leaders gather this week for the Parliament of the World’s Religions in Chicago, we ought to reflect on the ways that our shared belief in the equality of human beings demands that we defend democracy. We should also understand the pivotal role that people of faith must play to preserve the freedoms — including religious freedom — that democracies protect. Religious people have a rich history of calling the United States to live up to its founding ideals. In her own time, civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer took on the entrenched white power in Mississippi’s Democratic Party by quoting Scripture and the U.S. Constitution, telling the brutal stories of voter suppression facing Black Americans and ultimately posing the question: “Is this America?” Read more 


Specifically, one of the challenges Du Bois faced when writing about World War I was his proximity to it. He was part of the history that he was trying to make sense of.  He made the controversial decision to support the war, a decision that he would come to regret throughout the rest of his life.

One of the main objectives of my book is to demonstrate the significance of World War I in African American history. In the history of the broader African diaspora, World War I was a pivotal moment in the growth of Black internationalism, in diasporic movements for social political economic change as well. Read more 


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A white gunman on Saturday killed three Black people at a Dollar General in Jacksonville, Florida — after he’d been chased from the campus of nearby Edward Waters University. But the historically Black school is much more than a stop on the way to the site of a murderous rampage: Edward Waters looms large in Jacksonville because it’s nourished the city’s Black community for more than 150 years. “Let me say for the record that this white supremacist presence at EWU didn’t happen by mere happenstance,” University President A. Zachary Faison Jr. said at a press conference on Monday. “He well knew where he was and what signal and message he might send had he been successful in his aim to commit this heinous act at the bastion and birthplace of Black higher education in this state.” Read more 


Deemed one of Arkansas’ greatest mysteries, the history of the 1959 fire at the Negro Boys Industrial School is still an enigma. 

Who would lock innocent Black teenage boys into a building and set it on fire? The thought seems unimaginable, but it happened. On March 5, 1959, at 4 a.m. when the school was asleep, 69 Black students ages 13 to 17, were padlocked inside the dormitories of the Negro Boys Industrial School and the dorms mysteriously set ablaze. The boys fought and struggled to survive the burning building, clawing their way to safety by prying off mesh metal screens from two windows. The next morning, the bodies of 21 Black boys were found piled on top of each other in the corner of the burned dormitory. Read more 

Sports


The Simone Biles Revolution. By Meghan O’Rourke / The Atlantic


The Lakers on Thursday announced their plans to recognize Bryant, who died in a January 2020 helicopter crash at the age of 41, with the statue during a ceremony before their game against the Denver Nuggets on Feb. 8, 2024. The date — 2/8/24 — is a composite of the jersey numbers worn by Bryant and his teenage daughter Gianna, who also died in the crash. Bryant’s statue will join similar monuments to Lakers greats outside the downtown Crypto.com Arena, including tributes to Johnson, O’Neal, Jerry West, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Elgin Baylor and broadcasting legend Chick Hearn. Read more 


US Open rout shines harsh light on Venus Williams despite admirable fire. By Bryan Armen Graham / The Gaurdian


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