I'm not going to say what I want because, but I guess this speaks for itself. Bezos on space trip: “I also want to thank every Amazon employee and every Amazon customer because you guys paid for all of this." nytimes.com/2021/07/20/sci…
In 2007, Jeff Bezos, then a multibillionaire and now the world’s richest man, did not pay a penny in federal income taxes. He achieved the feat again in 2011. propublica.org/article/the-se…
I want to say more about this even if perhaps I shouldn’t. Black Americans are amongst the most astute political and social observers of American power because our survival has and still depends on it.
I have studied power my entire life from within institutions where I wielded none. I have written about it. I have reported on it. I have read about it. I have observed it. And, over the years, I have worked myself to accrue it, which is really what angers so many people.
And so when the BoT and a rich donor decided to wield their inherited and unearned power against me, I knew that while I did not have $25 million of inherited wealth, that I have learned a great deal about how to get it.
I’ll say this: of course rising gun violence is a concern. But why is gun violence only seen as a liberal/Democrat problem when mass shootings are up and Republicans continue to block any and all gun control legislation? That is called framing and is not about the reality.
Our job as journalists is not to stoke hysteria or parrot political talking points, but to provide facts, context and nuance.
I live in a city of more than 8 million and tv news in the largest city in the nation dedicates two-minute segments top of the hour on someone who got beaten up outside of a bodega.
Worth the read. “Concocted right-wing panic about ‘critical race theory’ —which is actually a (mostly college-level) field concerned with systemic and institutional racism—has been weaponized by conservative activists as an amorphous, won’t-someone-think-of-the-children?”
“As with all right-wing panics, this one has come to assume the form of a media feedback loop: right-wing outlets have blown up outrageous-sounding anecdotes, driving attention as conservatives kick up a fuss at school-board meetings.”
“All the while, state-level Republican politicians are pushing restrictive education laws—just as they used Trump’s lies about the election as cover to push restrictive voting laws. As Hannah-Jones noted on MSNBC last week, the two types of legislation go “hand in hand.”
I’ve spoken about this repeatedly. We’ve never had an objective press. And Black people could not pretend to objectivity in a nation that was actively legislating against their rights.
My only quibble here is that this wasn’t just happening in the white Southern press. White Northern newspapers advocated Northern Black Codes, segregation, keeping Black children out of public schools, and the expulsion of Black citizens. They also were complicit w Southern media
All the writers who keep repeating as fact that the line in my #1619Project essay about slavery and the American Revolution is an error, are going to be really, really surprised when they see all the evidence and citations backing it up in the book when it published Nov. 16.
I've repeatedly listed the evidence, and the historians and historical texts backing up this assertion. The NYT issued a response of its own. I've posted essays and Twitter threads by other historians backing this assertion. Folks remain impervious to this, and that says a lot.
"1000s of educators & others gathered at historic locations in more than 20 cities to make clear that they would resist efforts in at least 15 Republican-led states to restrict what teachers can say in class about racism, sexism and oppression in America." washingtonpost.com/education/2021…
"In Iowa, where Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds this week signed legislation banning the teaching of “specific defined concepts,” including critical race theory, teachers say the law is already a chilling effect."
“I will say it’s already playing out,” sixth-grade teacher Monique Cottman said in an interview with Jesse Hagopian, a Seattle high school teacher and co-founder of Black Lives Matter at School."