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What do you think about CRT?
Tell us of your personal experiences with racism. Documenting the personal experiences of People of Color will help this country grow and heal.
CRITICAL RACE THEORY. WHAT IS IT?
CRT is the study of how institutionalized racism here in America has created a cast system that keeps people of color on the bottom tier. We will study each aspect in a series of recordings. In each of the presentations will include actual events throughout the history of America, proving each of the Principles of CRT.
CRT grew from Critical Legal Studies (CLS) which argued that law was not objective or apolitical, neutral or principled and dissociated from social or political considerations. CLS and CRT recognizes how race and racial inequality were reproduced through the law.
It is ironic that some in our country seek to restrict teaching CRT to America’s children when the originators of CRT find that it is our educational system most institutionalized by racism.
Principles of CRT.
Race is not biologically real but socially constructed and socially significant
Racism is a normal feature of society and is embedded within systems and institutions
CRT recognizes that racism is codified in law, embedded in structures and woven into public policy
CRT demands recognition of the relevance of embracing the lived experiences of people of color
It is the goal of Civil Rights Attorney’s and others in showing how laws may be complicit in maintaining and unjust social order but also can be used to correct that.
In each of our presentations we point out have race and Black skin was used as the justification for making many of the laws used to oppress and intimate African Americans throughout our history.
We feel it is important to the health, security and welfare of this country that we are able to learn about and remedy our painful past.
This information obtained at www.americanbar.org. Please visit their website for more detailed information.
Malcolm X
Malcolm X Speaks - Every Sunday at 1PM PST - Live Programming
Malcolm X was very controversial but Malcolm spoke an honest truth we are facing the realities we live today. He was a threat to the American way of life for White people and African Americans lost so much when we lost him. Hear his words and learn from them today.
Upcoming Discussions
Black Women In Prison
Black United Front
Crime By Blacks
Race War In America
American Civil War
American Courts
Police Brutality & Mob Violence
Government & Integration
Crime in Harlem
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Running this!!! https://t.co/SC1IgMSIrM
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Where is the Black version of the #Federalist Society.. WHY DON'T WE have one????? White nationalism is VERY strong… https://t.co/2d1QX4UoIV
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This is ALL the shit is about GREED.. NOT YOU... NOT ME!!! https://t.co/ULN69Mo6by
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The #GOPTraitorsToDemocracy KEEPING BRAINS OUT OF POLITICS.. since THIS HOT MESS!!! https://t.co/I5SMdHZPeS
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The #GOP ....KEEPING BRAINS.. OUT of politics... https://t.co/heC4DCI8LU
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Tell the B.. to PAY FOR AN AA.. at least with the money.. her GED.. KEEPS her fucked up... https://t.co/QNRR72ARHP
A Black realtor was showing a home to a Black father and son. They were handcuffed by Michigan police.
Does THIS happen to White People?
August 8, 2021 - Twitter
Coming Soon
Cocaine, Corruption & Conspiracy
“In the early 1980s, the crack epidemic tore through America’s inner cities like a tsunami, raving all in its wake” .
Crack: Cocaine, Corruption and Conspiracy showcases the brutality of the ‘crack epidemic’ throughout the 1980s and as it begins to escalate in the 1990s as well. It is a smoothly made documentary with more accurate information on the subject than I’ve personally encountered before — when I was a student, I thought that I’d be taught about the devastation that the drug brought down on the black community especially, and how the American government failed to respond to this, but unfortunately I was not. The film provides the information I thought I’d be actively taught in a way that strikes the heart, and strikes it hard.
Coming Soon
Race & The Prison System
An in-depth look at the prison system in the United States and how it reveals the nation's history of racial inequality.
Ava DuVernay’s scathing documentary explores the injustices at the heart of America’s painful racial history by examining the systemic failures of the penal system.