Posts Tagged ‘ media ’

Why Blacks Didn’t Celebrate Bin Laden’s Killing

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By Stacey Patton
Our quiet response speaks to our long-held understanding of what struggle is – our domestic struggle as a marginalized community is ongoing. We know that the war is not over and that neutralizing Osama bin Laden was a goal but only as part of a war that is not over.



The Birthers: Déjà vu All Over Again

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By Lee A. Daniels
If you think the Birthers have been chastened into silence, think again – and look to the past.



Obama got Osama – But Gets Little Credit for Doing It

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By George E. Curry
Judging by his critics, Obama won’t have support even when he accomplished something George W. Bush couldn’t.



On the Road Again: Students and Freedom Riders Retrace Route—and Explore Roots—of Historic Bus Movement

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By TaRessa Stovall
May 1961: Between May and December , 436 black and white civil rights activists, many of them students, known as Freedom Riders rode more than 60 bus rides to fight segregated travel facilities in the South and raise the nation’s consciousness about racial injustice.

 



The Monkey on the Tea Party’s Back

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By Lee A. Daniels and Stacey Patton
Another day. Another outrageous example of how deeply the election of a black American of mixed parentage has unhinged some conservative white Americans.

 



Langston and Rick

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By The Editors
Last week there appeared on the website of Rick Santorum, the former conservative Republican Senator from Pennsylvania and potential candidate for the Republican Party presidential nomination, a montage of photos of Santorum above the slogan, “Fighting to Make America America Again,” similar to the title of the famous poem by Langston Hughes, “Let America Be America Again.”



Influence and Context: The Power and Risks of the Electronic Grapevine

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By Stacey Patton and TaRessa Stovall
The old saying, “I heard it through the grapevine” has new meaning in the age of social media and blogging.



Can We See Your Dead? – Lessons from Japan

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By Stacey Patton
The American media treats all human misery like pornography.



Ghosts of Mississippi

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By Vern E. Smith
Wharlest Jackson Jr. is a big man, well over six feet tall and 200 pounds. But to listen to him speak of his namesake, Wharlest Jackson Sr., is to witness the strapping adult reduced to the weeping eight-year-old boy who rode his bicycle to the scene of a powerful car bomb in the spring of 1967 in Natchez, Miss. and discovered that the victim was his own father.

 



Civil Rights Version of ‘America’s Most Wanted’ To Air This Friday

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By Stacey Patton
Tonight the groundbreaking investigative documentary series “The Injustice Files” airs on the Investigative Discovery Channel at 9 pm. The first show, “Secrets of Natchez,” investigates the murder of Wharlest Jackson, a civil rights activist and devoted father of five who became a target of one of the most virulent Ku Klux Klan chapters in the South because he took a job that white racists deemed fit only for white men.