@Reuters Among the “few”? There’s millions of Americans who are still alive from the 1960s and before that who lived through segregation. Why are you talking about them like they’re dinosaurs? As journalists, we need to choose our words carefully before we publish them to ensure accuracy.
“Black Insurrectionist,” the anonymous social media persona behind some of the most widely circulated conspiracy theories about the 2024 election, can be traced to a man from upstate New York.
He’s white.
https://t.co/vHdrBj9pFQ
Trump says his January 6th crowd was bigger than Martin Luther King’s ‘I Have A Dream’ speech:
“Nobody has spoken to crowds bigger than me. If you look at Martin Luther King when he did his great speech, and you look at ours […] same number of people, if not we had more.”
Y’all better listen to this icon’s stories. Some of you want to engage in a nostalgia that erases the horrors and degradation of American apartheid in order to tell a feel-good story of progress. Reggie Jackson refused to allow it. We cannot move on as so many want until we tell the truth and until we make repair.
Two years ago, we witnessed one of the most painful days in our state.
A racist terror attack at the Tops grocery store in Buffalo stole the lives of 10 innocent people.
We will never forget those beautiful lives that were taken from us and the community that was devastated.
Two high school seniors solved a mathematical puzzle that was thought to be impossible for 2,000 years. @BillWhitakerCBS reports, Sunday. https://t.co/mEN4CWeXMW
@DhruvKhullar .@annawiener reports on how video-game engines are increasingly being used to build other types of imaginary worlds, forming a kind of invisible infrastructure for movies, architecture, military trainings, and the metaverse. https://t.co/fPaR36wrF5
On this day in 1939, a young Black man named Lloyd Gaines disappeared just months after winning a desegregation case allowing him into an all-white law school. He was never seen again. https://t.co/cYth5eNi6W