White supremacy

More than 60 per cent of incarcerated women are mothers — Listen

Retrieved on: 
星期四, 五月 11, 2023

For others, it can mean mourning the loss of a loved one or dealing with a haunted past.

Key Points: 
  • For others, it can mean mourning the loss of a loved one or dealing with a haunted past.
  • And still — for others — like the 66 per cent of incarcerated women in prison who are mothers, it can mean something else entirely.
  • And the percentage of South Asian women and African Canadian women in custody is also disproportionately high.
  • Listen and Follow
    You can listen to or follow Don’t Call Me Resilient on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts.

White power movements in US history have often relied on veterans -- and not on lone wolves

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星期二, 四月 25, 2023

For decades, the white power movement has gained steady momentum in the U.S. Kathleen Belew is an expert on the history of the white power movement and its current impact on American society and politics.

Key Points: 
  • For decades, the white power movement has gained steady momentum in the U.S. Kathleen Belew is an expert on the history of the white power movement and its current impact on American society and politics.
  • Her book “Bring the War Home: The White Power Movement and Paramilitary America” examines how the aftermath of the Vietnam War led to the birth of the white power movement.

What is the white power movement?

    • The white power movement is an array of activists that is, in all ways but race, remarkably diverse.
    • Since the late 1970s, it has convened people of a wide variety of belief systems, including Klansmen, neo-Nazis, white separatists, proponents of white supremacist religious theologies, and, starting in the late 1980s, racist skinheads and militia movement members.

How has the legacy of US warfare fueled white power groups?

    • In each example, these groups also adopt elements of military activity, like uniforms, weapons and the latest military tactics.
    • Groups like the Ku Klux Klan have been able to use this postwar opportunity for their own purposes: recruitment and radicalization.

When and why did the white power movement emerge in the US?

    • The white power movement came together in the late 1970s around a shared narrative of the Vietnam War.
    • This disaffection allowed for the white power movement to recruit in two different ways: narrative force – the story that was used to hold these activists together; and contextual force – the social grievances many of them had in common.

What role do women play in the white supremacist movement?

    • But this is a movement that has relied in extraordinarily heavy ways on women.
    • Women have been tasked with normalizing and legitimating violence, orchestrating recruitment and maintaining the relationships that allow this movement to operate as a social network.
    • Take, for instance, the Aryan Nations World Congress, a 1983 meeting in which the white power movement declared war on the United States.

Where do US veterans fit in?

    • Veterans have tactical training, munitions expertise and weapons training that the white power movement wants because it is trying to wage war on the American government – in fact, this movement has directed recruitment specifically aimed at veterans and active-duty troops.
    • While very few veterans returning from war join white power groups, the groups still feature an enormous percentage of people who are veterans or active duty – or falsely claim to be.

How can the US address its lack of care toward veterans?

    • Before the fall of Kabul in Afghanistan, my undergraduate students at Northwestern and the University of Chicago had been at war for their entire living memory.
    • And yet that war has not featured prominently even in the list of the top five or 10 crises facing our nation.
    • We don’t reckon with the massive impact the people who serve in our armed forces shoulder for the nation.

What are you working on now that people might not be aware of?

    • There were mass shootings at schools and elsewhere before Columbine.
    • But Columbine really marks the moment when mass shootings became normalized.

ARE TODAY'S "CLASSROOM KARENS" JUST THE CURRENT VERSION OF JANE CROWS -- WHITE WOMEN WHO SUPPORTED SCHOOL SEGREGATION?

Retrieved on: 
星期四, 十一月 17, 2022

NEW YORK, Nov. 17, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- White women are organizing around concerns about what their children are being taught and exercising their political and social power to influence elections and education politics. But this is not new. 

Key Points: 
  • In " Jane Crow: Then and Now ," journalists and advocates explore how white women as mothers and teachers have historically used their position to preserve systems of oppression, and how that history remains alive and active today.
  • In a country where two-thirds of women voters are white and 61% of public school teachers are white women, those human failings and biases have real consequences for Black and Brown youth.
  • We must move beyond our deeply-rooted cultural portrayal of white women as good, kind, pure and in need of protection.
  • They say just as the Jim Crow-era created racial discrimination, today's Jane Crow efforts continue to cause damage.

Ploughshares Fund Announces Over $1 million in New Grants Reflecting the Urgent Need for New Voices and Bold Thinking in the Nuclear Field

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星期二, 七月 26, 2022

"Ploughshares Fund's vision is a world where nuclear weapons can never be used again," said Dr. Emma Belcher, President of Ploughshares Fund.

Key Points: 
  • "Ploughshares Fund's vision is a world where nuclear weapons can never be used again," said Dr. Emma Belcher, President of Ploughshares Fund.
  • "Unfortunately, decades of progress on nuclear threat reduction are under threat and solutions from the past are no longer adequate.
  • We are at an inflection point and what we do today will have implications well into the future.
  • We believe Equity Rises will be a fundamental driver of change in the nuclear policy field in the coming years."

New Video Series Reveals Antidote to America's Culture Wars: Radical Heroes

Retrieved on: 
星期四, 六月 16, 2022

NEW YORK, June 16, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Starts With Us, a growing non-partisan movement to overcome cultural extremism in America by fostering curiosity, compassion, and courage — the 3 Cs — as daily habits, today launched a video series titled "Radical Heroes." The videos spotlight extraordinary leaders, from a former white supremacist to a black man mistakenly shot by police to a religious leader with a unique ability to unite communities, who are driving change through the challenging work of showing radical compassion, curiosity and courage across lines of difference. 

Key Points: 
  • The videos, which were produced in partnership with Freethink , feature:
    Tony McAleer, a former white supremacist, who now helps others leave hate groups.
  • In his video , which launched today, Tony discusses the transformative power of compassion.
  • The series aims to re-frame how Americans think about the word "radical."
  • This series showcases people who are connecting across lines of difference in ways that seem unimaginable in the 'us vs. them' atmosphere pervading today's culture.

Amplifying Black Voices in Film: TLG Motion Pictures Selects Los Angeles Filmmaker as Winner of the Big Pitch

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星期五, 四月 16, 2021

"As a Black man, I realize racial inequity and violence on Black and brown bodies is nothing new.

Key Points: 
  • "As a Black man, I realize racial inequity and violence on Black and brown bodies is nothing new.
  • As a Black filmmaker, shining a light on marginalized stories and encouraging difficult conversations around racism through my work is my way of dismantling white supremacy.
  • "As a Black filmmaker, I have always dreamed of amplifying BIPOC voices and shedding a light on underrepresented narratives.
  • "\nFor more information on The Big Pitch and to see the full list of finalists and their projects, please visit https://www.tlgmotionpictures.com/thebigpitch .\n'

Canada’s unions welcome new terrorist listings for far-right white supremacist groups

Retrieved on: 
星期三, 二月 3, 2021

OTTAWA, Feb. 03, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Canadas unions welcome todays announcement by the federal government that it has added four violent, far-right extremist groups to its list of terrorist organizations.

Key Points: 
  • OTTAWA, Feb. 03, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Canadas unions welcome todays announcement by the federal government that it has added four violent, far-right extremist groups to its list of terrorist organizations.
  • Last year and for the first time ever, the federal government added two white-supremacist groups to the list of terrorist organizations.
  • The reality is that white supremacist groups have not faced the same scrutiny as other racialized groups and that has allowed them to mobilize with relative freedom and impunity, added Yussuff.
  • According to counter-terrorism experts in Canada, there were 100 alt-right or white supremacist groups operating in Canada in 2015.

New Novel Explores Generational Curses Passed Down by Slave Ancestor and Their Effect on a Family’s Perception of Manhood

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星期一, 二月 1, 2021

Readers are introduced to Big Tom, a young man born into slavery in America in the early 1800s.

Key Points: 
  • Readers are introduced to Big Tom, a young man born into slavery in America in the early 1800s.
  • He is eventually used as a breeder by his master on a southern plantation and fathers many children.
  • After his death, his legacy as a virile man lives on through his descendants which comes to define their idea of the passage of manhood.
  • The impact this has on his great great grandchild, Cedric Newsome, is the focus of this exciting novel.

Spark Documentary Explores Systemic Racism's Roots and Remedies

Retrieved on: 
星期三, 十二月 2, 2020

SAN DIEGO, Dec. 2, 2020 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ --Amateur Films today announced the release of "Spark: A Systemic Racism Story" , a documentary by white allies that explores racism's roots and remedies.

Key Points: 
  • SAN DIEGO, Dec. 2, 2020 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ --Amateur Films today announced the release of "Spark: A Systemic Racism Story" , a documentary by white allies that explores racism's roots and remedies.
  • The tragic death of George Floyd ignited a nationwide discussion and a more profound look at deep-seated, systemic racism in America.
  • Coast to coast protests took place to raise awareness and show support in reversing systemic racism.
  • Spark also proposes practical solutions and remedies in public safety, policing, criminal justice, and society.

Women's Fund of Rhode Island to host a panel discussion on Unpacking Privilege

Retrieved on: 
星期四, 十月 8, 2020

Unpacking Privilege.

Key Points: 
  • Unpacking Privilege.
  • Let's unpack some different areas of privilege: White privilege, able-bodied privilege, civic privilege, and cisgender privilege.
  • This event was made possible with additional support from the Rhode Island Council on the Humanities.
  • For more information on Women's Fund of Rhode Island visit http://www.wfri.org .