Sentences with phrase «white racial supremacy»

Not exact matches

Justice Antonin Scalia declares in Stenberg v. Carhart that he is «optimistic enough to believe» that the decision constitutionally protecting partial «birth abortion will «one day... be assigned its rightful place in the history of this Court's jurisprudence beside Korematsu [validating internment of Japanese «Americans during World War II] and Dred Scott [holding white supremacy and racial slavery as fundamental tenets of American constitutionalism].»
Eventually, some white supremacists tried to distinguish it further by using it to refer to a form of white supremacy that emphasizes defining a country or region by white racial identity and which seeks to promote the interests of whites exclusively, typically at the expense of people of other backgrounds.
The goal is to find a notable representation of someone that celebrates being white and the continuation of white people, without a mandate for dominance, racial supremacy, or subjugation of non-whites.
But believers of white supremacy are intolerant to any kind of racial integration which their puritanical ideology prohibits.
This longstanding problem has roots in America's racial history of white supremacy, and this country will never be whole until it acts justly by reckoning with its own past.
In the 19th and 20th centuries, white supremacy spawned fever dreams of «scientific racism,» yielding the junk science of eugenics to justify discriminatory agendas rooted in claims of racial superiority.
Neptune addresses the ideologies around white supremacy by focusing on an artistic invention called «The Colorline,» a metal stand and green velvet curtain, «designed to block out the reality of systematic racism, cultural and racial difference, white supremacy, and aggravated stress caused by interactions with non-white persons.»
Reading this calls to mind the poet Claudia Rankine's Racial Imaginary Institute, founded in 2016 to investigate the ways in which the structure of white supremacy in American society influences our culture.
Drawing on Negro Spirituals that call for the end times, what Lamar calls Doom Spirituals, this installation at ONE Archives exhumes legacies of racial violence while longing for the forthcoming destruction of white supremacy
Co-sponsored by: First Church in JP Unitarian Universalist, Social Justice Action Committee Racial Justice Task Force of Theodore Parker Church Jamaica Plain Forum As persons of faith living in 21st century America, we feel called to question how we might work, take action, do our part, to dismantle white supremacy.
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