OHF WEEKLY, Vol. 5 No. 39 including—
💛 Editor’s Letter by @sherrykappel
💛 “Gun Violence Comes from Mob Rule” by R Wayne Branch, PhD
💛 “Losing a White Friend Due to His Racism” by @williamfspivey
💛 “All Bigotry Is Ignorance, But Not All Ignorance Is Bigotry” by Walter Rhein
💛 and a quote by Dorothy Height.
Once you see the humanity in someone, you can never unsee it. —[email protected]
PLUS: “Barbie, Star Wars, and Why Revolutions Happen” and “Cadavers of the Poor and Black Dissected without Consent” by @TheConversationUS, and a quote by Quincy Jones.
Once you see the humanity in someone, you can never unsee it. —@clayrivers
PLUS: “Barbie, Star Wars, and Why Revolutions Happen” and “Cadavers of the Poor and Black Dissected without Consent” by @TheConversationUS , and a quote by Quincy Jones.
Once you see the humanity in someone, you can never unsee it. —[email protected]
PLUS: “Barbie, Star Wars, and Why Revolutions Happen” and “Cadavers of the Poor and Black Dissected without Consent” by @TheConversationUS, and a quote by Quincy Jones.
Once you see the humanity in someone, you can never unsee it. —[email protected]
PLUS: “Barbie, Star Wars, and Why Revolutions Happen” and “Cadavers of the Poor and Black Dissected without Consent” by @TheConversationUS, and a quote by Quincy Jones.
Once you see the humanity in someone, you can never unsee it. —[email protected]
PLUS: “Barbie, Star Wars, and Why Revolutions Happen” and “Cadavers of the Poor and Black Dissected without Consent” by @TheConversationUS, and a quote by Quincy Jones.
Once you see the humanity in someone, you can never unsee it. —[email protected]
PLUS: “Barbie, Star Wars, and Why Revolutions Happen” and “Cadavers of the Poor and Black Dissected without Consent” by @TheConversationUS, and a quote by Quincy Jones.
Once you see the humanity in someone, you can never unsee it. –@clayrivers
PLUS: “Barbie, Star Wars, and Why Revolutions Happen” and “Cadavers of the Poor and Black Dissected without Consent” by @TheConversationUS, and a quote by Quincy Jones.
💛 “The Problem with Words”
OHF WEEKLY, Vol. 5 No. 37: Editor’s Letter, “My Indigenous Peoples’ Day Wish List,” and a quote by Dr. Joycelyn Elders.
Editor’s Letter: If you think not using labels when referring to “other” people is all it takes to make you post-racial, pull up a chair. It’s time we had a little chat.
—@clayrivers
I’m not a fan of the term “ally” as it has a performative ring. It implies doing as opposed to being. But I’ve come to accept the word as a metonym for a larger concept: good people. Better people.
—@clayrivers
💛 “With Allyship, It’s Best if You Do You–All of You”
One question people ask when they decide to advocate for racial equity and inclusion is: Where do I start? People assume they must conceal their mild-mannered Clark Kent or Diana Prince persona and become the Superman or Wonder Woman of allyship.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
—@clayrivers
💛 “With Allyship, It’s Best if You Do You–All of You”
One question people ask when they decide to advocate for racial equity and inclusion is: Where do I start? People assume they must conceal their mild-mannered Clark Kent or Diana Prince persona and become the Superman or Wonder Woman of allyship.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
—@clayrivers
One question people ask when they decide to advocate for racial equity and inclusion is: Where do I start? People assume they must conceal their mild-mannered Clark Kent or Diana Prince persona and become the Superman or Wonder Woman of allyship.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
—@clayrivers
In case you haven’t noticed, the fight for racial equity in America is a five-alarm fire and the house is engulfed in flames, so the more hands, the better.
—@clayrivers
Too many Americans are convinced that the only way to experience the high of national pride is to disregard all the evidence of racial inequity.
—Walter Rhein
Too many Americans are convinced that the only way to experience the high of national pride is to disregard all the evidence of racial inequity.
—Walter Rhein