Monday, June 22, 2020

Why I Won't Vote Third Party

Estimated Reading Time: 6 minutes

As the 2020 election is rapidly approaching, I have seen Christians who don’t want to vote for 45 express their disapproval of the two-party system. It usually goes something like, “I can’t vote for a Democrat because of abortion. I’ll probably vote third party since I can’t support the Republican or Democratic nominee. The major parties will get the message if enough votes are cast for other candidates.”

If this is you, I understand your point. I really do. I simply want to provide a different perspective, not to negate your perspective but just to add another dimension. Voting third party is where I was in 2016. I vowed to vote for Evan McMullin in 2016 and urged others to do so. Ultimately, I aided in the election of 45 as one of the many white Christian women who chose our whiteness by voting for him. I am sorry. I have long been a part of the problem and am committed now to participating in the solution by submitting to the marginalized to dismantle systems of oppression.

Though I understand where the third-party apologists are coming from, this is not 2016. We've had three and a half years of a fascist regime under 45, and Tina Strawn recently said, "It's 2020 and lynching is on trend." If we need more information to believe this, we are willfully remaining unaware and are thus contributing to the deaths of Black people with our complicity in upholding the system of white supremacy.

Black womxn have the least amount of wiggle room with the vote. This "Between the Scenes" video with Trevor Noah is where I first heard this explained. Black womxn anti-racism educators and activists I support and follow are voting Democratic because even though they see issues with Biden, Biden isn't 45 and won't threaten to unleash the military on protestors/Black people and non-Black anti-racists who stand with them. The Black womxn I am listening to are saying that this is not a time for games or a time to show that the two-party system falls short. Now is the time to communicate to 45 and white supremacists that Black lives matter.

I shared in the Headlines and History post yesterday a Twitter thread by Jared Yates Sexton. On May 1st, he explained in tweets 4-7 and 32-38, “What you saw in Michigan yesterday wasn't a bunch of ‘posers’ or ‘gun nuts.’ These are paramilitary separatists who are using the pandemic for their own benefit and carrying out dry runs for what they see as a fascist takeover of the US. As has been proven, the Reopen America ‘movement’ was a completely fabricated, fake event paid for by billionaires like the DeVos's. But these white terrorists are using it for their own purposes, as cover for their own fascistic plans for a revolution. To understand this, you have to understand that white terrorists see Trump as an opening to carry out their plans. They were everywhere at his rallies and consider him a useful president for growing their movement. You couldn't go to those rallies without seeing them. I was reporting from Trump's rallies in 2016 and constantly hearing these people talking openly about race wars and revolution and killing liberals. They saw Trumpism as a perfect avenue, but it didn't start there. It had been brewing for decades...What we're watching now, is a new movement in the white terrorist plan. They are carrying out open paramilitary maneuvers, interrupting legislative bodies, coming out into the open because they feel like they're strong enough and America is ready for their revolution. Make no mistake, what they want is to overthrow the United States government and institute fascist, white rule. This is what they have talked about, planned for, and what they're trying to institute right now, at this very second. In my research and other's research, we keep seeing them mentioning the pandemic and financial crisis as an opening to carry out their fascist overthrow. It's not a coincidence they're rearing their heads right now in shows of intimidation and force. They see an opening. White terrorists have already tried to bomb hospitals during the pandemic, discussed ways to weaponize the coronavirus, plotted murders. They are mobilizing because they see America in trouble and they have planned and trained and accrued arsenals for this moment we're in. DO NOT for a second dismiss these as rednecks or cosplayers or just weak, laughable men playing soldier. These groups are highly trained, massively armed, and many have experience in the military and law enforcement. It is a massive, dangerous terrorist cell. Unfortunately, until we face facts and understand our history and our poisonous white supremacy, these people will be able to hide and radicalize with impunity. We have to understand what we're facing, because this threat is only growing by the day. Chances are, the Michigan ‘protest’ with armed, armored men intimidating legislatures isn't going to end and will only grow in scope and frequency. These people are ready for widespread violence and mayhem and are only waiting for the spark. See it. Recognize it.”

I am not relaying this information to instill fear in people, and I hope that the plans of white terrorists are thwarted. However, understanding that white terrorists see 45 as useful for growing their movement is enough for me to vote Democratic to stand against 45 and white supremacists to declare at the ballot box that Black lives matter. Voting third party doesn't get that point across, and it does not communicate to Black people that we care about them enough to align ourselves and our vote with them. The vote is power, and the more powerful message to get across right now is a complete divestment from 45 and his racist policies. The likelihood of organizing enough people between now and November to vote for the same third party candidate to have enough votes to overthrow the two-party system in this particular election is small. There was a lot of talk about this and action as people voted third party in 2016, and we ended up with 45. A third party vote in this election is a vote for 45. The goal is to keep 45 from being re-elected, and the Black womxn I am submitting to are instructing people to vote for Biden, even reluctantly, because it’s the best chance we have for not having another 4 years of 45. I talk about believing Black womxn, trusting Black womxn, and submitting to Black womxn, which is a way of giving honor to the parts of the Body that don't receive the greater honor and embodying the belief that the last will be first. The Democratic party at least positions itself to alleviate poverty, which Lisa Sharon Harper explains is the way to reduce abortion in the Almost Heretical episode “Good News & Bad News.” I want to not only say I am with Black womxn but also align my vote with Black womxn because it is a privilege to have “wiggle room.”


#vote #votedemocratic #showup #resistance #revolution #politics #endracism #endracismnow #dismantlewhitesupremacy #endwhitesupremacy #faith #evolvingfaith #loveyourneighbor #justice #socialjustice #seekjustice #listentoblackwomen #listentoblackwomxn #believeblackwomen #believeblackwomxn #trustblackwomen #trustblackwomxn #supportblackwomen #supportblackwomxn #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Headlines and History - June 21, 2020


Content Warning


This post is about acts of terror carried out by white people historically and presently.




In the May 6, 2020 NBC article “Michigan Gov. Whitmer Wants to Ban Guns from Capitol After Armed Anti-Lockdown Protests,” Allan Smith reported on the pressure Gov. Whitmer felt to reopen the state. Smith wrote, “‘There are legislators who are wearing bulletproof vests to go to work,’ Whitmer, a Democrat who is in her first term, said Wednesday. ‘No one should be intimidated by someone who's bringing in an assault rifle into their workplace...You shouldn't be intimidated going to be the voice of the people who elected you.’"

In a Twitter thread from May 1, 2020 written by Jared Yates Sexton, he traced the origins of this particular brand of white supremacy to The Turner Diaries by William Pierce. “The author of the Turner Diaries was William Pierce, one of the leading Neo-Nazis in America who wrote the book as a blueprint for a race war and included veiled instructions on how to make weapons and carry out terrorist attacks” (Tweet 28). In tweet 25, he calls this book “the bible of white terrorists.” And in tweet 34, he explained, “In my research and other's research, we keep seeing them mentioning the pandemic and financial crisis as an opening to carry out their fascist overthrow. It's not a coincidence they're rearing their heads right now in shows of intimidation and force. They see an opening.”

I see numerous white Christians grasping for every conspiracy theory related to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic. Meanwhile, we are not dedicating any time to researching or responding to what white supremacists are doing during this pandemic. The current actions of white supremacists are connected to our nation’s history. Our present is intertwined with and informed by our past. We must understand the history that shapes our headlines to make progress for the future.



#covid19 #michigan #governorwhitmer #politics #endracism #endracismnow #dismantlewhitesupremacy #endwhitesupremacy #evolvingfaith #loveyourneighbor #justice #socialjustice #seekjustice #lament #repent #repair #reparations #facethepast #healthefuture #headlines #history #headlinesandhistory #historyandheadlines #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

Saturday, June 20, 2020

Book Rec. - June 20, 2020

Book Rec- Such a Fun Age by Kiley Reid

Emira Tucker is a 25-year-old Black woman who is employed as a babysitter for Briar Chamberlain, who is white. Right from the beginning of the novel, Emira is racially profiled when out at a grocery store late one night with Briar. Emira is accused of kidnapping Briar, and a bystander named Kelley Copeland films the racist interaction on his phone. When Emira’s employer Alix Chamberlain discovers what has happened, she expends her energy for the remainder of the novel trying to befriend Emira. She does so without seeking to truly understand the dynamics of systemic racism and classism at play in her relationship with Emira. The point of view alternates from Emira to Alix, which provides depth while breaking up the inevitable tensions that arise.

I heard about Such a Fun Age when Kiley Reid was a guest on The Daily Show with Trevor Noah. As Kiley Reid explained the inspirations behind her debut novel, she referenced the history of Black women caring for white children. In addition, the struggle for Emira to obtain health insurance is highlighted as an obstacle from the past to the present for domestic labor workers. Kiley Reid also talked about her love for awkward moments, which she peppered generously throughout. I cringed during each of these interchanges, but I couldn’t put this book down. 


#suchafunage #kileyreid #bookrecommendation #bookrec #book #bookstagram #booksofinstagram #bookpic #blackwomanauthor #readblackwomenauthors #read #reading #learning #reflection #action #equality #racism #classism #dismantleallsystemsofoppression #seekjustice #socialjustice #love #loveyourneighbor #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Additional Rec. - June 18, 2020


“This love for me as a person, however is not the same as love, appreciation, or care for me as a woman. In fact I've often felt through my lifetime in the church that I'm loved in spite of my gender.”

“I recently heard both Lisa Sharon Harper and Rob Bell reference the concept that the Bible was written by and for marginalized communities. This means the context of all our biblical literature is set on the stage of deep trauma.”

“I’m listening to women - a whole lot of different women. I’m listening to their stories and experiences in faith and spirituality. I’m listening to their interpretations of scripture. I’m reading their books and buying their art. I’m following them on social media. I’m seeking out groups of people who also believe that women are a priority to God, and soaking it in. I’m building community with the goal of it being a healing and encouraging space for women.”

“The fruit of suppressing women in faith is rotten. The fruit of women co-leading is healing.”

"It's not just women who miss out. Let's remember, Deborah didn't just prophecy to women. See, I don't just think that Christians should care about (or even celebrate?) women because it benefits me and other women like me.  IT ALSO BENEFITS MEN.”

“Maybe we can chart a course towards full inclusion and whole welcome. Maybe someday we'll be able to say folks know we are Christians because of our love and celebration of women.”


Megan Wooding’s words resonated with me because of my experiences with white evangelicalism. I thought of the Almost Heretical podcast “Getting Free” episode with Dr. Christena Cleveland. In it, Dr. Cleveland described white patriarchal god as the god of the gaslight. This is what came to my mind when I read this sentence Megan wrote: “Patriarchal Christianity magnanimously offers women a seat on the sidelines of our own religion and teaches us to blame ourselves when it doesn’t feel like enough.” I highly recommend reading this blog post in its entirety.




#additionalrecommendation #recommendation #godcaresaboutwomen #christiansshouldtoo #meganwooding #church #churchtoo #sisterhood #exvangelical #eshetchayil #dismantlepatriarchy #smashthepatriarchy #inallinstitutions #deconstruction #evolvingfaith #faithreconstruction #humanity #empathy #equality #reflection #action #lovegod #loveyourneighbor #love #learning #antisexism #antisexist #whitefeminismisnotfeminism #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Account to Follow/Support - June 17, 2020

By visiting the NBO website, you can read, “The National Bail Out collective is a Black-led and Black-centered collective of abolitionist organizers, lawyers and activists building a community-based movement to support our folks and end systems of pretrial detention and ultimately mass incarceration. We are people who have been impacted by cages — either by being in them ourselves or witnessing our families and loved ones be encaged. We are queer, trans, young, elder, and immigrant.”

In the What We Do section, you can read, “The National Bail Out Collective coordinates the Mama’s Day Bail Outs, where we bail out as many Black Mamas and caregivers as we can so they can spend Mother’s Day with their families where they belong!” Visit the NBO site to learn more about what they do, why they do it, and what they are up to this year.




#nationalbailout #accounttofollow #support #freeblackmamas #blackmamasbailout #blacklivesmatter #blm #endmoneybail #abolitionist #abolition #prisonabolition #endmassincarceration #covid19 #donate #give #carenotcages #protectblacktranswomen #love #empathy #equality #reflection #action #loveyourneighbor #seekjustice #socialjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Podcast Rec - June 16, 2020

[Content Warning: The podcast episode and quotes below contain references to deaths of Black trans women.]

Podcast Rec - Almost Heretical with Christena Cleveland “Getting Free” (Released June 12, 2019)

"At some point, we have to ask ourselves, ‘Do I really want to be free?’ What does freedom look like? At some point, it is getting healed from caring if we are crossing the lines other people are creating for us." -Dr. Cleveland

"Whatever is good news to Black trans women is good news...I'm about as close to being a white man as you could possibly be and still be a Black woman...There are a lot of people lower than me on the ladder, with Black trans women being the lowest. And it all makes sense because the average life expectancy of a Black trans woman is 33 years old. And that's actually lower than was the life expectancy of an enslaved Black woman in 1830...What do Black trans women see as liberating, as humanizing, as affirming, as beautiful? That's the gospel. Any way that I can speak into that, act into that, create spaces that affirm that, call people out who challenge that, that's who Jesus is to me, that's what Jesus is about. Despite everything, despite all the deconstruction I've done, I'm still just so in love with Jesus and who Jesus was and is to the people who are on the margins." -Dr. Cleveland

Dr. Cleveland explained that good news stimulates love. How will we stimulate love today? How will we dismantle systems of oppression?


#christenacleveland #natehanson #timritter #almostheretical #podcast #podcastrecommendation #podcastrec #gettingfree #deconstruction #faithreconstruction #evolvingfaith #faithtransition #dukedivinity #lgbtqia #lgbtq #protecttranslives #faithfullylgbt #dismantlewhitesupremacy #endracism #endalldiscrimination #love #loveyourneighbor #learning #seekjustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #restorativejustice #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

Sunday, June 14, 2020

Systemic Racism Series: Surveillance

Estimated Reading Time: 10 minutes


“Did you know that the government watches some of us a lot more than others, depending on where we come from? That as recently as 2011 the NYPD was exposed for targeting their surveillance specifically at what they called ‘ancestries of interest’? That they’ve been using our tax dollars to spy on these peoples’ everyday lives just going to the barber shop and the bookstore and singling them out for constant invasion of privacy for no other reason than where their ancestors were born?” (Race Forward, 2015). In the video “What Is Systemic Racism? - Government Surveillance,” the ancestries listed included Indian, Bangledeshi, Pakistani, Guyanese, Egyptian, and Lebanese. 

I am continuing in the systemic racism series here on the Broadening the Narrative blog. To learn more about this series, you can read the first seven posts on the BtN blog. Today’s post addresses systemic racism in surveillance. I will include the data and history behind the current disparities in surveillance, provide action steps, and link recommended resources for further exploration and education.


Data
Let’s look at surveillance data.

According to linked research in the Ben & Jerry’s article “7 Ways We Know Systemic Racism is Real,” “More than half of all young black Americans know someone, including themselves, who has been harassed by the police. Statistics also show that black drivers are about 30% more likely than whites to be pulled over by the police. (So African Americans can expect to be monitored wherever they go—but did you know that they can’t even expect to safely cross the street? Blacks are twice as likely to die in pedestrian accidents than whites, perhaps because, according to one study, motorists are less likely to stop for blacks in the crosswalk.) And of course it’s well-known that Muslims are under increasing and often illegal surveillance.”


History
What’s the explanation for the disparities in the data? The dehumanizing answer would be something along the lines of, “Well, those people need to be watched so I can be safe.” This betrays a bias that the speaker believes those people deserve less freedom and privacy because they are less trustworthy and more dangerous than white people.

A more comprehensive and balanced answer would reach back into the past to determine how our present has been impacted. In the April 2016 article “When Surveillance Perpetuates Institutional Racism,” Angelique Carson wrote, “Last week, I finally saw surveillance not as something mildly offensive to my own sense of civil liberties, but as a tool of institutional racism. It suddenly became clear to me, and I’m so embarrassed it didn’t prior, that the people most stripped of their privacy rights in this surveillance age are the people who are the most vulnerable...But the powerful surveilling the powerless is nothing new. It existed even in the earliest days of slavery. Surveillance and power have long been closely linked to institutional racism, from slave owners branding their slaves so they couldn't move freely and privately around to planation [sic] owners building homes tall enough to surveill [sic] the entire plantation. Slavery may have been abolished, but now we see racism and oppression in a new power structure in which the powerful hold the data on the less powerful, and in that way control a whole lot of things, including access to services, freedom of movement and...dignity.”

Dr. Gary Potter wrote a six-part series titled “The History of Policing in the United States.” I referenced this series in last month’s post about the justice system. The series can be read on the Eastern Kentucky University Police Studies Online page. 

- “Defining social control as crime control was accomplished by raising the specter of the ‘dangerous classes’... This underclass was easily identifiable because it consisted primarily of the poor, foreign immigrants and free blacks (Lundman 1980: 29). This isolation of the ‘dangerous classes’ as the embodiment of the crime problem created a focus in crime control that persists to today, the idea that policing should be directed toward ‘bad’ individuals, rather than social and economic conditions that are criminogenic in their social outcomes...Centralized and bureaucratic police departments, focusing on the alleged crime-producing qualities of the "dangerous classes" began to emphasize preventative crime control. The presence of police, authorized to use force, could stop crime before it started by subjecting everyone to surveillance and observation. The concept of the police patrol as a preventative control mechanism routinized the insertion of police into the normal daily events of everyone's life, a previously unknown and highly feared concept in both England and the United States (Parks 1976). Early American police departments shared two primary characteristics: they were notoriously corrupt and flagrantly brutal. This should come as no surprise in that police were under the control of local politicians...Walker goes so far as to call municipal police ‘delegated vigilantes,’ entrusted with the power to use overwhelming force against the ‘dangerous classes’ as a means of deterring criminality.” (Part 2)

- “Early police officers began carrying firearms even when this was not department policy despite widespread public fear that this gave the police and the state too much power. Police departments formally armed their officers only after officers had informally armed themselves. The use of force to effect an arrest was as controversial in the 1830s and 1840s as it is today. Because the police were primarily engaged in enforcing public order laws against gambling and drunkenness, surveilling immigrants and freed slaves, and harassing labor organizers, public opinion favored restrictions on the use of force. But the value of armed, paramilitary presence, authorized to use, indeed deadly force, served the interests of local economic elites who had wanted organized police departments in the first place... In addition to strike-breaking they frequently engaged in anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic violence, such as attacking community social events on horseback, under the pretense of enforcing public order laws. Similarly, the Texas Rangers were originally created as a quasi-official group of vigilantes and guerillas used to suppress Mexican communities and to drive the Commanche off their lands.” (Part 3)

- “From the beginning American policing has been intimately tied not to the problem of crime, but to exigencies and demands of the American political-economy...As we look to the 21st century, it now appears likely that a new emphasis on science and technology, particularly related to citizen surveillance; a new wave of militarization reflected in the spread of SWAT teams and other paramilitary squads; and a new emphasis on community pacification through community policing, are all destined to replay the failures of history as the policies of the future.” (Part 6)

In the article “AP Series About NYPD Surveillance Wins Pulitzer” by David Crary, Crary reported, “The catalyst was a source's cryptic hint: Ask about Ray Kelly's rakers and mosque crawlers. Their curiosity piqued, two Associated Press investigative reporters began digging. As a result, the AP won a Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting Monday for stories revealing that the New York Police Department — headed by Commissioner Raymond Kelly — had built an aggressive domestic intelligence program after the Sept. 11 attacks that put Muslim businesses, mosques and student groups under scrutiny...investigative reporters Matt Apuzzo and Adam Goldman, along with colleagues Eileen Sullivan and Chris Hawley, documented that police had systematically spied on Muslim neighborhoods, listened in on sermons, infiltrated colleges and photographed law-abiding residents as part of a broad effort to watch communities where a terror cell might operate. Individuals and groups were monitored even when there was no evidence they were linked to terrorism or crime. The investigation revealed that Kelly had brought in a CIA official to help develop an intelligence division unlike that of any other U.S. police department. It assigned ‘rakers’ to ethnic neighborhoods, infiltrating enterprises ranging from booksellers to cafes, and ‘mosque crawlers’ to Muslim houses of worship. Mayor Michael Bloomberg defended the department's actions; he was committed to preventing another terror attack, he said, even if it meant keeping a close eye on law-abiding Muslims...The tactics disclosed by the series stirred debate over whether the NYPD was infringing on the civil rights of Muslims and illegally engaging in religious and ethnic profiling...Apuzzo, Goldman and their colleagues conducted dozens of interviews and combed through hundreds of secret documents to uncover the vast surveillance operation...Even as Bloomberg dined with local imam Reda Shata, and as The New York Times chronicled Shata's efforts to reconcile Muslim traditions with American life, the NYPD had him under surveillance...A Moroccan Initiative catalogued the lives of Moroccans in the city, monitoring them at restaurants, grocery stores and barbershops. Sometimes, they were interviewed by police officers who said they were conducting criminal investigations or looking for a lost child...New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie accused the NYPD of acting like ‘masters of the universe’ by sending agents into his state. Mayor Cory Booker of Newark — New Jersey's largest city — also complained, and the FBI chief in New Jersey said the surveillance undermined the bureau's own efforts by sowing distrust of authorities among Muslims.”

This brings us to more recent developments, as described about 22 minutes into the August 25, 2017 Latino USA podcast episode “Whose Country ‘Tis of Thee?” Alvaro Bedoya, Founding Director of the Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown University, explained the evolution of the technology developed under President Bush and expanded by President Obama’s administration. According to Bedoya, “Donald Trump is taking the surveillance tools that we developed for the war on terror and using those tools to find and deport immigrants.”

Throughout our nation’s history, white men have been guilty of domestic terrorism. It is rarely labeled as such. From the KKK and vigilante groups to white men bombing and shooting and armed white men “protesting” during COVID-19, white supremacists carry out acts of violence and domestic terrorism. However, these men continually escape surveillance at the same level experienced by law abiding people of color.  


Action Steps
Complete additional research on the topic of systemic racism in surveillance. Read The New York Times feature "How ICE Picks Its Targets in the Surveillance Age" by McKenzie Funk to learn more about how ICE uses surveillance to find undocumented immigrants, which has led to deportation and the separating of families. I will also link additional resources at the end of the post.

Have action that follows your research and reflection. 
-  Support policies at every level of government that will bring reform to government surveillance. Write, email, call, and tag representatives and others in local, state, and federal political positions. S.1551 - Intelligence Oversight and Surveillance Reform Act was introduced in the Senate on September 25, 2013. It was read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. You can read more about S.1551 - Intelligence Oversight and Surveillance Reform Act here. You can also read the CNN article “House Passes Surveillance Bill After Rare Bipartisan Deal” by Jeremy Herb, Manu Raju, and Haley Byrd.

Stand with Muslims against Islamophobia.

Stand with immigrants of color against xenophobia.

Vote, show up, and engage in meaningful ways to dismantle systems of oppression. Do all of this under the leadership of people of color.


What to Expect in Future Posts
At this time, I plan to address systemic racism as seen in foster care, healthcare, the environment, media, military, politics, and the Christian church in future posts. I will give action steps for myself and readers and provide additional resources.

As I look at the Equal Justice Initiative calendar and read it to my kids, I see that every single day conveys at least one injustice, usually based on race. These are past and present injustices, spanning hundreds of years, demonstrating that racism in this country is not simply an individual problem. Rather, racism is a systemic problem, infecting institutions and structures. Further, this problem centers around justice, therefore it's a problem Godde is concerned about, which means I must be concerned. In my opinion, systemic racism is not solely a political issue but also a spiritual issue. I am called to love my neighbor, and one way I can do this is by joining the fight to dismantle systems of oppression so that all people can flourish.



(Resources are linked below.)




Videos to View
The Next Question Video Web Series (Hosted and produced by Austin Channing Brown, Jenny Booth Potter, and Chi Chi Okwu)


Podcasts (for your listening pleasure and discomfort)
Justice In America “Crimmigration”


Music (that may make you uncomfortable)
“Long Live the Champion” by KB feat. Yariel and GabrielRodriguezEMC
“Fan Mail” by Micah Bournes feat. Propaganda
“A Time Like This” by Micah Bournes
“Too Much?” by Micah Bournes
“Land of the Free” by Joey Bada$$
“Facts” by Lecrae
“Cynical” by Propaganda feat. Aaron Marsh and Sho Baraka


Recommended Reading
Articles
White Fragility: Why It’s So Hard For White People To Talk About Racism by Robin DiAngelo 



#systemicracism #racismissystemic #racism #prejudicepluspower #dismantlewhitesupremacy #endracism #antiracism #antiracist #becomingantiracist #beingantiracist #surveillance #politics #policies #justice #loveyourneighbor #seekjustice #restorativejustice #transformativejustice #abolishice #familiesbelongtogether #defundthepolice #facethepast #healthefuture #equality #vote #showup #blog #blogger #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

Saturday, June 13, 2020

Book Rec. - June 13, 2020

Book Rec - Bible Belt Queers edited by Darci McFarland

[Content Warning: The work in this book could be triggering as it contains discussions of violence, loss, homophobia, transphobia, and other traumatic experiences]” (McFarland, 2019, p.7).

“I’m realizing that life is a lot more than just a coloring book page with four crayons.” - Kyle Medlin in “on Things that should have Freed me.” (p.14)

The description for this book on Etsy is, “Bible Belt Queers was created to empower LGBTQIA folx from the South to share their experiences surrounding growing up queer in the Bible Belt. It's 230 pages long, full color, and contains poetry, essays, and various types of visual art from over 70 LGBTQIA artists and activists.” Thank you @biblebeltqueers for this collection. Thank you @itskmeds, and every other contributor, for sharing your heart and a part of your story. 



#biblebeltqueers #bookrecommendation #bookrec #collection #darcimcfarland #supportLGBTQIAartists #supportLGBTQIAactivists #empowerLGBTQIAfolx #reading #learning #empathy #equality #reflection #action #seekjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #love #loveyourneighbor #bookstagram #deconstruction #faithreconstruction #evolvingfaith #lgbtqia #lgbtq #transchristians #faithfullylgbt #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Additional Rec. - June 11, 2020

Additional Rec. - "Race: The House We Live In"

This video is packed with information. Sociologist Melvin Oliver expounded on why the Federal Housing Administration was created, the public policy decisions that supported redlining, and the connection of this history to present racial disparities. As the user EFH commented under the video on YouTube, the “wealth gap [is] explained in 6 min.”  



#additionalrecommendation #recommendation #melvinoliver #race #thehousewelivein #thehouseyoulivein #history #GIBill #redlining #suburbanization #wealth #wealthaccumulation #wealthgap #equity #antiracist #antiracism #justice #reparations #equality #reflection #action #loveyourneighbor #love #learning #seekjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

"Self-Publishing Tips with Nicki Pappas" Episode of BtN

A *bonus episode* of the Broadening the Narrative podcast is out now. You can listen to the episode "Self-Publishing Tips with Nicki Pa...