Politics

  • Is South Africa Putting a Gag on Its People?

    It’s a cruel irony that many who fought against South Africa’s white-minority regime and its harsh apartheid laws are now accusing the black-led African National Congress government — many of whom also fought the same battle — of instituting a law that is a throwback to those oppressive days. And what falls into the same…

  • Occupy Wall Street and Affirmative Action

    The Occupy Wall Street phenomenon has a thing or two to teach us about, of all things, affirmative action. One of those affirmative-action-all-the-time spells will most likely be on us again — soon. Abigail Fisher has appealed to the Supreme Court in her 2008 case against the University of Texas at Austin — denied by…

  • Grading Obama: Marc Lamont Hill

    Has President Barack Obama’s first term embodied the idealism of the 2008 campaign? The answer is debatable, according to interviews with nine prominent black academics in the run-up to next year’s presidential election. For the last in the series, The Root Interviewed Marc Lamont Hill, associate professor of English education at Teachers College, Columbia University.…

  • Grading Obama: Imani Perry

    Has President Barack Obama’s first term embodied the idealism of the 2008 campaign? The answer is debatable, according to interviews with nine prominent black academics in the run-up to next year’s presidential election. For the eighth in the series, The Root interviewed Imani Perry, professor of African-American studies at Princeton University. Read the other interviews…

  • Grading Obama: Richard Thompson Ford

    Has President Barack Obama’s first term embodied the idealism of the 2008 campaign? The answer is debatable, according to interviews with nine prominent black academics in the run-up to next year’s presidential election. For the seventh in this series, The Root interviewed Richard Thompson Ford, the George E. Osborne Professor of Law at Stanford Law…

  • Racial Politics Did In the Super Committee

    The highly anticipated, totally predictable failure of Congress’ so-called super committee is but the latest highly anticipated, totally predictable failure of our political system to address America’s economic crisis. And though many analysts will strive for a balanced assessment of who is to blame, there really is only one villain: fanatical right-wingers so determined to…

  • Grading Obama: Hugh B. Price

    Has President Barack Obama’s first term embodied the idealism of the 2008 campaign? The answer is debatable, according to interviews with nine prominent black academics in the run-up to next year’s presidential election. For the sixth in the series, The Root interviewed Hugh B. Price, former head of the National Urban League and a senior…

  • Your Take: The Fair Way Back From Recession

    One of Occupy Wall Street’s greatest achievements thus far has been its aggressive — and very public — underscoring of what we have all known for a long time: America is a nation of tremendous, heartbreaking inequality. But in the midst of the public debate over whether the movement’s aims are always crystal clear, what…

  • Grading Obama: Mark Anthony Neal

    Whether or not President Barack Obama’s first term embodies the idealism of the 2008 campaign is debatable, according to interviews with nine prominent black academics in the run-up to next year’s presidential election. For the fifth in the series, The Root interviewed Mark Anthony Neal, professor of African and African-American studies at Duke University. Read…

  • Cain Tears Up Over His Wife at Debate

    The Des Moines Register is reporting that the six GOP presidential candidates on Saturday participated in an emotional forum, confessing to foibles, failures and hardships in Iowa. The two-hour Family Leader event seemed more like a gossipy television talk show, the site says, with tears and emotions overflowing. The influential Iowa-based evangelical Christian advocacy group…