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Should Black Americans Care That Trump Is Targeting African Nations For Deportation After Years of Africans Being So Damn Disrespectful To Us?

Should Black Americans Care That Trump Is Targeting African Nations For Deportation After Years of Africans Being So Damn Disrespectful To Us?

There historically have been tension between Black Americans and African immigrants. Can we put that to the side to stand together against a man who is targeting both communities?
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This Alabama City’s First-Ever Black Councilwoman Receives Letter Calling Her N-Word, and That’s Not All

To be expected, the act sparked outrage from civil rights activists, Black residents and even
New Development for White Michigan Karen Who Lied and Said Two Black Men Assaulted Her

New Development for White Michigan Karen Who Lied and Said Two Black Men Assaulted Her

Madison Mackenzie Wright’s alleged assailants… weren’t real?
Photo by Benjamin Krain/Getty Images, KLRT Reporter Neal Zeringue

Arkansas Deputy Gets His Karma After Racist Video Spreads Online

A Yell County resident said, "As a brown guy, it’s pretty scary. I just want
  • Palin's New Jack Pity

    Maybe Sarah Palin is just tired of it all in a “stop the bus, I want to get off” kind of way. Probably not. Yesterday, Double X’s Emily Bazelon took a charitable stab at taking Palin at face value by asking, “does Sarah Palin have a point?”—maybe there’s no way she can push a legislative…

  • Obama's Russian Drive-By on the Public Health Plan

    As anyone following the health care debate knows, the next several decades of interaction between patients, doctors, insurers, and the government are being hashed out furiously behind the scenes in Washington. In this volatile environment, the slightest hint of a weakness or a concession among congresspeople, or a new study on savings, is treated as…

  • VIDEO: Bill O'Reilly Raises a Reasonable Question

    More amazing than the reasonable question is his defense of Michael in the face of slander. That sound you hear is the approaching locusts.

  • Mulatto Lit: Asking the Hard Questions on Race in America

    Starting with “Dreams from my Father”, the president’s 1995 memoir, and perhaps before, bookstores have embraced a literature of interracial family mysteries that explore both America and identity—and frequently return to race. I recently sat down with Ralph Eubanks, a fantastic writer and a great wit, about this phenomenon, and his new book “The House…

  • My Eulogy to the King of Pop

    A Eulogy for Michael. I never wrote to you as a kid.  I didn’t take the moment to stick a letter in the mail week after week like my cousin Mechell.  I was never pulled into the kitchen by my parents and sat down and told you would never respond to any of those letters. …

  • The Two Childhoods of Michael Jackson

    When Michael Jackson gave up the ghost recently, we may have witnessed an eerie embodiment of The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. In both F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel and in the Oscar-nominated film version starring Brad Pitt, Benjamin Button ages in reverse: Born a shriveled old man, he dies a newborn baby. As an 11-year-old…

  • Losing "Vibe"

    When I heard about the shuttering of Vibe Magazine, it took me back to my time at Vibe Magazine, in its heyday. It wasn’t long after the magazine got started that it captured the imagination and other black people like me not easily categorized or filed away. The kind of people who had to buy…

  • Welcome Back, Maxwell!

    Two weeks after the untimely death of Michael Jackson and the embarrassing coonery that became the 2009 BET Awards, which in part gave a cringe-inducing tribute to the King of Pop, and, to a lesser degree, the demise of Vibe magazine—all of which occurred eerily during Black Music Month—the R&B world is in great need…

  • Bailin’ Palin

    For now, the great Republican joke of 2008 has decided to step off the public stage. At least that’s how I read this weekend’s announcement from Alaska governor and former Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin. What will late-night comedians do? Will Tina Fey still have a job? Of course, some time ago, I concluded that…

  • The Untouchable Michael Jackson

    I met Michael Jackson in 1984. We were both guests of Quincy Jones and Steven Spielberg at Amblin, Spielberg’s production company on the Universal film lot. Whoopi Goldberg was preparing to play Celie, the protagonist in the film version of The Color Purple, a book written by my mother, and was giving a private stand-up…