
Engaging Black Freedom Struggles
Ethical Lessons from American History
Notes from the Black BottomThis is better than an Italian soap opera, which is Italy’s politics The porn star, the checks and the president: Trump’s tawdry path to peril
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/03/21/trump-stormy-payments/
The porn star, the checks and the president: Trump’s tawdry path to peril
The first indictment of a former president may result from an episode with a long, rippling tail of criminal consequence.
The Washington PostBeing woke has been politically trivialized by rhetoric, but here’s a factual history of being woke
https://randalmauricejelks.substack.com/p/stay-woke
Stay Woke
and be conscious of the world around you
Notes from the Black Bottom
Who Belongs? Democracy and it Quandaries
Black Struggle and Sexual Citizenship
Notes from the Black Bottom
De La Soul’s Music Is Finally Back. It’s a Bittersweet Victory.
The influential rap trio’s catalog has long been absent from streaming services. Now its first six albums will be available, just weeks after the death of one of its members.
The New York Times
KPR Presents: Letter to Martin
We celebrate Black History Month on this week's KPR Presents as Dr. Randall Jelks joins us to talk about his book, Letters to Martin: Meditations on Democracy in Black America.
Kansas Public RadioGratitude @kprnews
#kprpresents and
#kayemcintyre for a dynamic
#interview #letterstomartinmeditiationsondemocracyinblackamerica! I’m grateful for the time Kaye took with the 📕 The episode airs tonight, Sunday at 6PM CST. listen in!
#podcast lnkd.in/gEBUqriT

Black Teachers & AP African American Studies Examination
It has been over fifty years since I entered AP English at South Shore High School in Chicago. My teacher, Gladys Woods, a tall stately Black woman, incorporated into our AP prep, which was strictly an Anglo-Eurocentric curriculum, the likes of Chinua Achebe, James Baldwin, Gwendolyn Brooks, Margaret Walker, and Richard Wright. She challenged us to understand how Dostoevsky’s
Notes from the Black Bottom
We’ve erased Black immigrants from our story, obscuring a racist system
We see our history of racism against Black Americans as distinct from our immigration policy, but the two are actually deeply intertwined.
The Washington Post