Wrestling with the Beast

 

By Tom Motko

The Contest

I wake up each morning to wrestle with the Beast. The Beast lives inside me and refuses to die. I’ve managed to weaken and sedate the Beast over the almost 65 years of my life, but the Beast never dies. Whenever I think the Beast dead, a claw pierces my heart and I know the Beast still lives. Continue reading “Wrestling with the Beast”

Lego: Building Sexist Stereotypes One Brick at a Time

 

By Chelsea Whitlow Shay

In the 1980s, the second wave of feminisms was winding down and, while many gains for women had been made, young girls still had to adhere to a strict gender stereotype. Most young girls were given Cabbage Patch Kids, Strawberry Short Cake and Rainbow Bright to play with; all replicating the care-taking role for girls. Continue reading “Lego: Building Sexist Stereotypes One Brick at a Time”

The Continuing Relevance of Martin Luther King, Jr.: Student Voices

 

By Joseph Orosco

In Winter of 2014, I taught a seminar on the political philosophy of Martin Luther King, Jr.  The class takes a historical view of King’s work, tracing his thinking from the period of the Montgomery Bus Boycott until his final works dealing with the Vietnam War and the Poor People’s March.  I asked students, at the end of the class, to reflect on what they had learned about King as a result of the class and how it compared to what they knew of him from their pre-college education. Continue reading “The Continuing Relevance of Martin Luther King, Jr.: Student Voices”

How the Ghost of Booker T. Washington Haunts Today’s Testing Advocates

 

By Mark Naison

When I read the statement from 19 Civil Rights organizations supporting universal testing in the nation’s public schools, I couldn’t help but recall a time in American History when an African American educator named Booker T Washington stepped forward with a plan to have character training and instruction in skilled trades supplant liberal arts education in schools serving African Americans, Continue reading “How the Ghost of Booker T. Washington Haunts Today’s Testing Advocates”

Words Add to the Burden of Oppression

 

By Phoenix Calida

Becoming increasingly uncomfortable with the framing of these “free speech” arguments. Free speech doesn’t include hate speech, and it doesn’t mean no consequences for words we choose to use.  Continue reading “Words Add to the Burden of Oppression”

Revolution is the Struggle of Memory Against Forgetting: MLK and Collective Liberation

 

By Chris Crass

Martin Luther King, Jr. day is a celebration, honoring of, and re-commitment to Black Freedom struggle. Continue reading “Revolution is the Struggle of Memory Against Forgetting: MLK and Collective Liberation”

Is it Time to Revive the Police Athletic League?

By Mark Naison

Call me sentimental, but I long for the days when police officers would serve as volunteer coaches and community workers in poor and working class neighborhoods and get to know the young people there in a different capacity than as would be law breakers and “perps.” Continue reading “Is it Time to Revive the Police Athletic League?”

Australian Politics–Campaigning Against Senator Iggy

 

By William J. Jackson

I haven’t had a lot to say about Iggy Azalea because I’m not skilled in communicating on the topic of cultural appropriation.

I do, however, see plenty of folks who are getting that message out and shared around quite well.  Continue reading “Australian Politics–Campaigning Against Senator Iggy”

Broken Windows and Black Liberation

 

By Chris Crass

Now that the NYPD slow down is further exposing how broken windows theory is both about generating city revenue from the poorest communities and isn’t necessary, the next step is massive lay offs of police to begin balancing out from the years of massive expansion of policing in NYC. Continue reading “Broken Windows and Black Liberation”