• Dyson’s Cornel West Essay Was a Hit Piece Wrapped in Scholarly Words

    I began reading Michael Eric Dyson’s lengthy essay for the New Republic, “The Ghost of Dr. Cornel West,” with some trepidation. By the time I finished it, I was sickened. Framed as an impartial assessment of West’s so-called steep decline as a scholar, public intellectual, thought leader and writer, Dyson backdoors into a scathing critique…

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  • 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 Women on 20s (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 by W20, the civil rights icons, along…

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  • Black Death as Reality TV: Is Watching the Videos Too Much?

    The state-sanctioned desecration of black bodies by police officers is a reality that plays on a haunting loop throughout the United States. We learn their names. We tweet their hashtags. We watch them publicly executed in grainy surveillance or cellphone recordings. Then we wait for another judge, cop or politician to tell us that we…

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  • Celebrating Pioneering Black Trans Women

    Thanks to the groundbreaking work of Emmy-nominated actress Laverne Cox and cultural critic and author Janet Mock (both The Root 100 honorees), the stigma and ignorance surrounding both the exterior and interior lives of trans women is slowly being chipped away. The work of such organizations as the Human Rights Campaign Foundation and the Trans…

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  • George Zimmerman Says God and Justice Are on His Side

    If the moral arc of the universe really did bend toward justice, I would be reporting on George Zimmerman’s incarceration for one of the numerous crimes he’s committed since he gunned down unarmed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin on that rainy night in Sanford, Fla. Instead he’s in the news for a disturbing interview in which he…

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  • ‘I Go to UVA,’ Martese Johnson’s Cry of Millennial Disbelief

    Earlier this week I participated in a PBS NewsHour Twitter chat on race and millennials. We discussed members of the University of Oklahoma’s Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter, a white fraternity founded in the antebellum South, being caught on video singing one of their traditional songs about hanging “niggers” from trees. The chat was partially built…

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  • $65,000,000 for a New Private Jet, Creflo Dollar? Negro, Please

    On the streets of any hood in the United States, Creflo Dollar, the kingpin behind World Changers Church International, would be called a hustler. Behind the pulpit, however, he’s called pastor, and if that’s not a sin, I don’t know what else to call it. Dollar, who made headlines in 2012 for allegedly assaulting his…

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  • Blame It on Hip-Hop: Why Morning Joe Came to SAE’s Rescue

    As MSNBC continues its obvious attempts to draw conservatives away from Fox News, Morning Joe co-hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski have fully embraced their roles as the Rush Limbaugh and Sarah Palin of the network. Mocking rapper Waka Flocka Flame for canceling a scheduled performance at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon frat house at the…

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  • SAE, White Thugs and American Traditions

    The Klansmen of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity have exposed to the world what many of us already know: Racism is part and parcel of white America’s most beloved traditions. By now, most people have read about SAE’s University of Oklahoma chapter and its little diddy about hanging “n—gers from trees.” There has, of course, been…

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  • The Contradictions of #Selma50

    My pilgrimage to Selma, Ala., began at 2:30 Saturday morning. After loading up my tiny rental car, I traveled five-and-a-half hours on zero sleep to be among the number of people bearing witness to the commemoration of one of the most bloody, transformative events in civil rights history. Fifteen miles outside town, I stopped at…

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