On April 5-7, @BUSPH and @AntiracismCtr will host “Antiracism as Health Policy,” and I’m thrilled to join Dean @sandrogalea in conversation on Mon, introduce Congresswoman @AyannaPressley on Tues, and converse with Senator @ewarren on Wed.
Last year, Congresswoman @AyannaPressley and Senator @ewarren were among the first members of Congress to call for racial demographic data of COVID-19 patients in a letter to HHS Secretary Alex Azar. 2/5 wbur.org/commonhealth/2…
Dean @sandrogalea leads @BUSPH and the school has supported the @AntiracismCtr's COVID Racial Data Tracker. Dean Galea is also coming out with a new book, THE CONTAGION NEXT TIME, that offers a clear warning and clear way forward. 4/5 global.oup.com/academic/produ…
I look forward to engaging with these thoughtful and courageous leaders, and learning from all the experts we're convening for this three-part event next week.
Today, the @AntiracismCtr and @GlobeOpinion are announcing a partnership: the resurrection of the first antislavery newspaper founded in 1820. Thrilled and excited to announce with @binajv the coming of @The_Emancipator. 1/5
.@The_Emancipator will strive to hasten the end of racism in the 21st century in the way antislavery newspapers from Boston and beyond strove to hasten the end of slavery in the 19th century. We emancipated ourselves before, and we will emancipate ourselves again. 2/5
Introducing the #BlackRenaissance. I partnered with @TIME on this special project to celebrate the beauty and power of the Black creativity, of Black art, in this time. 1/5 time.com/collection/ren…
@MichelleObama has a resplendent interview w/ the phenomenal @TheAmandaGorman who's featured on the cover. Gorman tells the former First Lady: “We’re living in an important moment in Black art because we’re living in an important moment in Black life.” 2/5 time.com/collection/ren…
From my introductory essay to the project @TIME: “The Black Renaissance is stirring Black people to be themselves. Totally. Unapologetically. Freely.” 3/5
In 2018, as the symbolic 400th birthday of Black America approached in 2019, I reflected on a way to commemorate this historic occasion. I had finished treatment for metastatic cancer. Though my emotional and physical wounds hadn’t healed, I had a new lease on life. 1/10
An idea for a new type of history dawned on me, and I’ll never forget sharing the idea with @agent_ayesha --and later with @OneWorldLit editor, @cjaxone, in his office after discussing the final edits on #HowToBeAnAntiracist. 2/10
Why not a community write a history of a community? 3/10
The White supremacists who attacked the Capitol on 1/6 claimed they were defending America from the coming destruction of an antiracist politics. This fearmongering piece argues antiracist demands at schools “would destroy the institutions themselves.” 1/9 theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
White supremacist violence is tacitly being fomented by pieces like this one. McWhorter urged people to “resist destructive demands” and press “for the very survival of the institution,” and praised a professor who said the demands would lead to a “’civil war on campus.’” 2/9
And, as usual when writing on antiracism, McWhorter is arguing against himself. He misrepresented the position of campus activists and argued against his own misrepresentations. 3/9
I finished reading the 1776 Commission Report. It claims America is “the most just and glorious country in all of human history”--the nation's great founding truth. But anti-Americans are disregarding this great patriotic truth, the report argues. 1/11 nytimes.com/2021/01/18/us/…
But it does not take long to read this report as the last great lie from a Trump administration of great lies. 2/11
This report makes it seems as if slaveholding founding fathers were abolitionists; that Americans were the early beacon of the global abolitionist movement; that the demise of slavery in the United States was inevitable;
In a week of double standards, adding another. Republicans opposing Trump’s impeachment because it'll “further enrage Mr. Trump supporters,” to quote @WSJ, hardly ever oppose letting violent cops off the hook because it'll further enrage Black people. 1/5 wsj.com/articles/donal…
Every time a police officer murders a Black person, it further enrages Black people and divides the American people. Every time a violent police officer is not convicted for murdering a Black person, it further enrages Black people and divides the American people. 2/5
Opposing Trump’s impeachment, a @WSJ editorial states: “It would further enrage Mr. Trump’s supporters in a way that won’t help Mr. Biden govern, much less heal partisan divisions. It would pour political fuel on Wednesday’s dying embers.” 3/5 wsj.com/articles/donal…