The Movement That Never Was
Is a movement defined by what it responds to, or how it responds?
Where all sides (will) meet
National Public Radio
Is a movement defined by what it responds to, or how it responds?
It’s a weird time to be a police officer.
Black Lives Matter, Blue Lives Matter, and All Lives Matter — three true statements nobody should need to say. But they’ve all been said, and for Black Lives in Blue, it’s All complicated.
As the New Year rang in hour by hour across the country, states from east to west welcomed new laws for medicinal and recreational drug use, following the will of voters in November (a majority of them at least).
Louisville and America wait for a fresh, young Attorney General to deliver justice for Breonna Taylor.
It’s now been nearly three weeks since Election Day, and more than two weeks since the Presidential race was called for Joe Biden.
Prior to our last Presidential election, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers were already cracking down on undocumented immigrants with deportation orders. In 2016, churches across the country, the most honored of American sanctuaries, re-employed the disobediently civil practice of hiding undocumented immigrants.
With talk of COVID-19, absentee, and mail-in ballots dominating so much of the 2020 Election narrative, it’s probably escaped the attention of most that some people deal with impediments to voting every single time they cast a ballot. And worse, some may not vote at all. A Forbes article shines light on voters with disabilities, who often have to push just for access to the most important of American rights: their vote.
Much of the time, American politics, regardless of party, are framed around the future of America’s children, who don’t get a vote until they turn eighteen (even though some of them will start paying taxes earlier). So why does it seem that the voices of young people, even young adults, aren’t taken seriously?
The increasing magnitude of California wildfires has become more than an annual story. This year the story spread notably to Oregon, Washington, and Colorado, in unprecedented fashion, making it impossible to ignore that our environment is dramatically changing, whether or not we agree on cause.