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America marks Black History Month each February largely by focusing on events from decades ago. But we are living through an important time in Black history right now, too.
The Black Lives Matter movement is about 10 years old, and its influence is unmistakable. Memphis probably wouldn’t have fired and charged the police officers who killed Tyre Nichols so quickly absent the BLM movement; the protests after the 2020 police murder of George Floyd helped push the College Board to create the Advanced Placement Black Studies course that conservatives are now assailing — in part because the curriculum includes the BLM movement.
But we can’t tell yet if it will be viewed as successful decades from now. What we do know is that today’s movement for greater Black freedom and equality is very different from the one built in the 1950s and ’60s, and in ways that are important to understand. Some of these differences were obvious in 2013, but many took time to become clear.
Picketers march past a Woolworth's store in Chicago's Loop on May 17, 1960, with signs protesting the lunch counter policies of the company's Southern stores in not serving African Americans.
Overt, intentional racial discrimination still exists in America, but we don’t have schools and restaurants segregated by law. At its core, today’s movement is fighting systemic racism. Black people get lower pay on average compared with other Americans; they are more likely to be killed by police officers.
I don’t think that today’s challenges are necessarily harder than defeating Jim Crow. They are more complicated. For example, in the 1960s, Black people were terrorized by police departments that were in most cases White-led (think Bull Connor). But in Memphis, Nichols was killed by Black officers who reported to a Black police chief.
“We used to have the water hoses. We used to have Jim Crow and segregation laws. [Florida Republican Gov.] Ron DeSantis is now using the word ‘woke’ as his ‘Southern Strategy.’ And that is hard to combat,” said Nailah Summers, the co-executive director of the Florida-based activist group Dream Defenders.
영어 기사인데 해석과 문법 등 풀이 부탁 드립니다...!! 내공 100 걸어요...!!
America marks Black History Month each February largely by focusing on events from decades ago. But we are living through an important time in Black history right now, too.
The Black Lives Matter movement is about 10 years old, and its influence is unmistakable. Memphis probably wouldn’t have fired and charged the police officers who killed Tyre Nichols so quickly absent the BLM movement; the protests after the 2020 police murder of George Floyd helped push the College Board to create the Advanced Placement Black Studies course that conservatives are now assailing — in part because the curriculum includes the BLM movement.
But we can’t tell yet if it will be viewed as successful decades from now. What we do know is that today’s movement for greater Black freedom and equality is very different from the one built in the 1950s and ’60s, and in ways that are important to understand. Some of these differences were obvious in 2013, but many took time to become clear.
Picketers march past a Woolworth's store in Chicago's Loop on May 17, 1960, with signs protesting the lunch counter policies of the company's Southern stores in not serving African Americans.
Overt, intentional racial discrimination still exists in America, but we don’t have schools and restaurants segregated by law. At its core, today’s movement is fighting systemic racism. Black people get lower pay on average compared with other Americans; they are more likely to be killed by police officers.
I don’t think that today’s challenges are necessarily harder than defeating Jim Crow. They are more complicated. For example, in the 1960s, Black people were terrorized by police departments that were in most cases White-led (think Bull Connor). But in Memphis, Nichols was killed by Black officers who reported to a Black police chief.
“We used to have the water hoses. We used to have Jim Crow and segregation laws. [Florida Republican Gov.] Ron DeSantis is now using the word ‘woke’ as his ‘Southern Strategy.’ And that is hard to combat,” said Nailah Summers, the co-executive director of the Florida-based activist group Dream Defenders.
영어 기사인데 해석과 문법 등 풀이 부탁 드립니다...!! 내공 100 걸어요...!!
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