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Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.splcenter.org
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Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.splcenter.org
Sourced through Scoop.it from: socialaction2014.wordpress.com
Since its founding in 1994, StirFry Seminars & Consulting has revolutionized the field of diversity through its internationally acclaimed documentary films and seminars. Millions of viewers worldwide have seen The Color of Fear, as well as many of the other groundbreaking films produced and directed by Lee Mun Wah, StirFry’s founder, CEO and Master Trainer. In 1995, Oprah Winfrey produced a one-hour special on Lee Mun Wah’s life and the impact of The Color of Fear.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.youtube.com
Lee Mun Wah describes how dialogs are better than panel discussions and how to acknowledge the person in front of you and stop playing devil’s advocate.
Get your popcorn and drink. The video is about an hour.
RT @tweetvazquez: We haven't ended segregation, we just redesigned it. -Michelle Alexander #ACLULeads pic.twitter.com/XjrfekC1Ic
— NJJNetwork (@NJJNetwork) June 14, 2015
1 out of every 100 American adults are currently behind bars,basically are slaves – RT @bassem_masri ….. http://t.co/UrZBNc4uhc…
— DcSlumdog (@DcSlumdog) June 14, 2015
THOUSANDS of wrongfully incarcerated people have been released, but not ONE person has been held responsible for it. Ever.
— Shaun King (@ShaunKing) June 11, 2015
People In Prison Pay Millions To Call Loved Ones Every Year. Now This Company Wants Even More.
http://t.co/B5DORpmWR5
#PrisonDivest
— Advancement Project (@adv_project) June 13, 2015
Right now, as we speak, over 400 people have been in Riker's Island for OVER TWO YEARS, without ever being convicted
http://t.co/WeRErIlKsc
— Shaun King (@ShaunKing) June 10, 2015
This is the New Jim Crow. https://t.co/MzNMYecd5h
— Shaun King (@ShaunKing) June 9, 2015
English translation:
I write this letter so you know how it feels to be in this damn place for 8 months you don’t understand that people’s lives has no price a you don’t have a heart for anybody you just lie and humiliate all of us who have come to this country for the second time if I do this is because only God knows what I have suffered in my country I come here so this country can help me but here you’ve been killing me little by little with punishment and lies in prison when I haven’t committed any crime
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Sourced through Scoop.it from: endfamilydetention.com
#LatinosAreHuman
Absolutely tragic. R.I.P. #KaliefBrowder https://t.co/4mspcu1ENY
— Dillon Nettles (@Dylawn4) June 8, 2015
6. The @NewYorker has bravely covered the story of #KaliefBrowder & found this video of guards/inmates beating him https://t.co/B4mJVLQ17F
— Shaun King (@ShaunKing) June 8, 2015
My dedication to Kalief Browder. No more pain young brother. You are free. We will not forget. http://t.co/GVLeeuXY5B pic.twitter.com/tN3MVhnBWf
— Shaun King (@ShaunKing) June 8, 2015
Dallas-based filmmaker Ciara Boniface posted this video today of Monday’s community mobilization in the small Texas town.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.colorlines.com
By Kaitlyn D’Onofrio
According to a March 2014 report released by the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights, more Black students are severely punished at school than white students – despite the fact that more white students are enrolled in schools.
The study reveals that this begins as early as preschool: “Black children represent 18% of preschool enrollment, but 48% of children receiving more than one out-of-school suspension; in comparison, white students represent 43% of preschool enrollment but 26% of preschool children receiving more than one out of school suspension.”
Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.diversityinc.com
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By Michael Nam
While the federal government and law enforcement agencies do not have or provide standardized figures on fatal shootings by police officers nationwide, the growing awareness of police-related violence has spurred more and more independent investigations.
The Guardian reports that in 2015 alone, 102 of the 464 individuals killed by police were unarmed, and that 32 percent were Black. Adding Latino and other people of color, almost two-thirds of unarmed individuals killed by police were from underrepresented people:
Percent of Unarmed People Killed by Police
Whites15%Hispanic/Latino25.4%Blacks31.9%
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Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.diversityinc.com