One year anniversary of ARCC!
Thank you so much to all of our members, followers, volunteers and supporters. We are excited to see what next year brings!!🤩👏
#joinarcc#anniversary#change#antiracism
Rest in peace, Kaylin. Rest in your peaceful recovery, Ralph. Rest as we work to transform this nation. To tackle the actual dangers. To create true peace for us all. 10/10
Ralph Paul Yarl was picking up his two siblings. He went to the wrong house in Kansas City, Missouri. The White man who opened the door did not see a lost 16-year-old boy. He saw a threat. Shot Ralph, twice. Once in the head to kill him. Somehow Ralph survived. 1/
🔸 K. Braeden joins Donzel to share his amazing and inspiring story, discuss his new book BLACK RESILIENCE: The Blueprint for Black Triumph in the Face of Racism, and talk about what it will take to overcome racism and create true equality in America.
🔸 In this episode, Donzel welcomes attorney, philanthropist and author, K. Braeden Anderson, who made headlines in 2015 as the first DI Men’s College Basketball player to compete while also being an active full-time law student.
They discuss the importance of this day, the issues women are currently facing, the intersectionality of race and gender, and their call to action to everyone of us for what we can do to drive positive change and spread anti-misogyny, anti-racism and anti-hate in our communities.
In this episode, Donzel welcomes ARCC Board Members Adrienne Lynne Cassamayor, Jennifer Koenen and Erika Thiem, to the show for some REAL TALK to help commemorate International Women’s Day.
One week to go until #InternationalWomensDay!
Join us on 8 March to make gender equality a reality for women and girls everywhere, both on- and offline.
Are you with us?
#IWD2023#PowerOn
#OnThisDay in 1955, Montgomery, Alabama teen Claudette Colvin refused to give up her seat to a white woman on a city bus. Decades after her refusal to relinquish her seat she said of her protest, “History had me glued to the seat.” #WomensHistoryMonth#SmithsonianWHM
🔸Because although black people played, arguably, the most central role in founding, preserving and building the USA into the richest and most powerful country in the world, they have benefited and been acknowledged the least. (2/2)
🔸In this episode, Donzel explains why Black history is American history and shouldn’t just be acknowledged in February, but, instead, integrated into the everyday consciousness of the country. (1/2)
Our nation has existed longer with slavery than without — and it'll never move forward if it can’t reckon with this history.
We honor the courage of the abolitionist movement by fighting to end mass incarceration, over policing, and all racist systems that persist today.
This #BlackHistoryMonth, we celebrate #KatherineJohnson, a trailblazing mathematician & aerospace pioneer. Johnson's calculations helped send astronauts to the moon. Her achievements broke down barriers for black women in #STEM & inspired a generation of young scientists #BHM2023