Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 5 days 12 hours 51 minutes
‘We need the police’ is an old adage used to redirect any alternative conception of safety. As the murder of George Floyd has sparked unrest across America, black activist organizers have forced the nation to question what the role of the...
We spoke with the author and Indiana University professor Micol Seigal. She is the author of Violence Work: State Power and the Limits of Police. In this episode, we expand our conversation about the meaning of police in society And across the world.
As Kanye disrespects Harriet Tubman, the prevailing notion of this myth continues to expose itself. 'We are not our ancestors' was always a black brunch charade of militancy attempting to hide the fact that they don't read. It perpetuates the myth...
In part two of 'We Are Not Our Ancestors' we explore The significance of Malcolm X's "Message to the Grassroots" speech. We discuss how the vision that Malcolm X articulates impacts the following generation in a way that completely defies the...
This month we celebrate Black August in memory of George Jackson and Black resistance. In this episode, we spoke with the executive editor of the Glen Ford. We held a robust conversation with Mr. Ford about Bill Clinton, Obama, Malcolm X, criticizing...
Black-on-Black crime is one of the most commonly held myths In relation to Black people. It pathologizes the harms that Black people commit and endure between each other into a racist myth about criminality. In this episode, we not only challenge the...
In part one we discussed how crime is an idea defined by the state, not by morality, how harm is a product of oppression, and most harm committed between black people is not racially motivated therefore the term black on black misleads us in...
We are still joined by Dr. Charisse Burden and Dr. Jared Ball. In part two of our conversation on 'The Revolution Will Not Be Televised,' we explore how the themes discussed in the first episode (Anti-communism, Black buying power, The Black...