Sentences with phrase «like white supremacy»

Lulu is passionate about dismantling patriarchal structures like white supremacy, sexism, and homophobia and she believes mindfulness is a practice that facilitates leaning into these complex and emotional conversations.
Both artists say the series expands on earlier work that cast a critical look at ideologies like white supremacy and Christian fundamentalism.
This group's thirst for nonconformist epistemologies is suffused with an appetite for irony quite capable of accepting the adoption of questionable tendencies, like white supremacy, as instances of banal posturing or jaded affectation.

Not exact matches

«Waco» was in development before topics like gun control and white supremacy saw high - profile coverage leading up to the 2016 presidential election.
I think people really want to know how to think about these big issues of the day, whether it's racism and white supremacy — as you see things like Charlottesville unfold — people want to know how to think about this from a Christian perspective.
The point is to march through counties like this, reminding white voters and consumers the country is in turmoil, white supremacy is real, and the events in Charlottesville weren't a one - off.
The concept of a passive, «we just want to help ourselves,» white nationalism is forever tainted by its associations with white supremacy, much like the passive ends of the Black Lives Matter movement and their more violent ends, or progressive protestors and Anti-Fa.
Researcher Seth Stephens - Davidowitz analyzed tens of thousands of profiles of members of Stormfront.org, the online white supremacy site, which gets 200,000 - 400,000 visits a month from Americans, and found — based on members» self - reportings — that site users tend to be young, mostly male, and from predominantly white states like Montana, Alaska and Idaho.
That's what white supremacy looks like
When a phrase like «white supremacy» is bandied about so lightly, the most straightforward response for many on the Right (and even some in the middle), is to conclude that anyone who wants to shrink the federal government, supports school vouchers, or is skeptical of affirmative action risks being stamped a «white supremacist.»
And yet DeVos walked off the stage at Harvard to slanderous chants of «What does white supremacy look like?
Americans may like to imagine that we left White Supremacy behind with the 1960s, but it is clear that the hatred still seethes within many of our countrymen, and it is very clear that it boiled over in Dylann Roof spurring him to annihilate members of the Charleston black community as they studied the Bible in one of the cornerstone institutions of that community.
Following the example of counter-protesters who took action in the face of hate (including a great many educators), we are steadfast in our belief that we must be even more committed to owning our personal responsibility to dismantle white supremacy in our institutions - be they nonprofits like Leading Educators or the school districts from which our students and families rightfully expect excellent, bias - free education.
At the intersection of racism and politics, we've seen terms like «racism» (6,000 % increase), «Nazi» (3,200 % increase), and «white supremacy» (11,000 %) explode in usage.
Trans - activist and actress Laverne Cox discusses the intersection of misogyny and white supremacy, the media's objectification of trans bodies, and her new documentary, which sounds like a must - see.
You can detect similarities not only with the portraiture of Mr. Katz, but also with that of Barkley L. Hendricks, Sylvia Sleigh and particularly Alice Neel in one respect: Like Ms. Neel, Ms. Marcus painted a range of ethnicities, reminding us that the art world, in its best moments, was not ruled by the same sexist white supremacy that has often plagued art history.
Obsessed with its own failure and escaping the aestheticization of it, the space ends up failing to fail, instead treating its admission of this failure to be radical or institutional as semantic currency in the «project space» conversation and its relationship to issues in Portland and across the nation's cities like the housing crisis, gentrification, and white supremacy.
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