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Donna Maurillo's avatar

I'm impressed by the amount of research and passion you put into this. I'm still a "free" member because I'm 80 and living on a fixed income. But I do support your work enthusiastically! When I grew up in the Fifties, it was common to assume that Black people (casually referred to with the N word) actually wanted to live in their own neighborhoods. When a Black couple moved in up the block from us, my grandparents begrudgingly accepted the fact because..."They're quiet, they're clean, and they mind their own business." I don't think anyone made friends with them.

Oddly, my grandparents were immigrants who had seen their own brand of discrimination. But they knew that their kids would assimilate easily once they learned English and had mainstream jobs. But not so for Black people. They could be polished and smart and refined, but they would always be Black. I'm glad that things have changed. But then... we still have a long way to go. As they said in the Sixties, "Keep your eyes on the prize." That's what keeps me going with my own political activities.

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Adam's avatar

"Researchers documented 15,723 distinct “impact points” – including 14,072 instances of data distortion (from skewed research to falsified history curricula) and 1,362 acts of erasure like removing Black heroes from public websites and banning nearly 600 Black-authored books ."

For all of those claiming slavery days were a long time ago who utter those fateful words, "we elected a Black PRESIDENT fer Chrissakes! How can you SAY that America is still a nation based upon and steeped in racism, oppression, financial abuse and exclusion?"

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