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  3. The "civil rights era" never ended.

The "civil rights era" never ended.

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  • mekka okereke :verified:M This user is from outside of this forum
    mekka okereke :verified:M This user is from outside of this forum
    mekka okereke :verified:
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    The "civil rights era" never ended. You are still in it.

    Black people are still asking for exactly the same things that they asked for in the 1960s: police reform, voting rights, and fair access to employment.

    And the exact same proportion of white US voters oppose it with both votes and violence.

    Dave AlvaradoD 1 Reply Last reply
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    • mekka okereke :verified:M mekka okereke :verified:

      The "civil rights era" never ended. You are still in it.

      Black people are still asking for exactly the same things that they asked for in the 1960s: police reform, voting rights, and fair access to employment.

      And the exact same proportion of white US voters oppose it with both votes and violence.

      Dave AlvaradoD This user is from outside of this forum
      Dave AlvaradoD This user is from outside of this forum
      Dave Alvarado
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      @mekkaokereke "but Mekka, they taught me at school in the 1990s that civil rights were solved!"

      - all of us who grew up in that time

      Laura LangdonL 1 Reply Last reply
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      • Jürgen HubertJ Jürgen Hubert shared this topic on
        Tim_EagonT Tim_Eagon shared this topic on
      • Dave AlvaradoD Dave Alvarado

        @mekkaokereke "but Mekka, they taught me at school in the 1990s that civil rights were solved!"

        - all of us who grew up in that time

        Laura LangdonL This user is from outside of this forum
        Laura LangdonL This user is from outside of this forum
        Laura Langdon
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        @dave @recursive @mekkaokereke For real. If I only had school to go by I would have thought racism was done and dusted, but as a kid I accidentally stumbled upon a show called Any Day Now on the Lifetime network of all places, and I learned SO much from it. Looking back on it I’m kind of stunned they were allowed to go as deep and raw as they did, and its theme was *exactly* that racism hides better today but is nowhere near resolved. Each episode takes place in both the 90s and 60s, explicitly drawing parallels across the decades.

        Link Preview Image
        How Lifetime's Forgotten TV Series 'Any Day Now' Confronted Racism

        With help from the series co-creator Nancy Miller, we look back at Lifetime's revolutionary 1998 drama.

        favicon

        VICE (www.vice.com)

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