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Legacy racial tyranny
Legacy racial tyranny







legacy racial tyranny

Justice Sonia Sotomayor saw plenty of injuries in a blistering dissent, saying the court majority overlooked “over a century” of people of color being shut out of Michigan’s universities, ended by a relatively brief period of affirmative action in the late 20th century. While hemming and hawing that the case had nothing to do with the merits of affirmative action itself, Justice Anthony Kennedy said he could find in Michigan’s ban “no infliction of a specific injury” that should force a court to “restrict the right of Michigan voters.” And it is precisely when things are most broken that we must remember our ability to repair them.The Supreme Court, by a 6-2 vote, ignored those burdens. Things need not remain the way they currently are. On the contrary, we can change the world. It is for times like these that Jewish tradition reminds us that we are not powerless. Still, 2020 has enabled us to see clearly the enduring fragility of our republic and the inequity of our society.

legacy racial tyranny

And the Black Lives Matter movement’s successes this year offer hope that we might reckon with the enduring legacy of our nation’s founding sins. Yet, because of millions of votes and countless small and large acts of resistance, the United States remains a viable, if imperfect, democracy.

#LEGACY RACIAL TYRANNY FREE#

We have a president who has sought to undermine democratic norms, in particular advancing lies about the 2020 election and seeking to overturn the results of a free and fair election.

legacy racial tyranny

Justice can prevail, but only when people recognize that every action, no matter how small, can make a difference.Īs I reflect on what I learned in Central America, I think about this turbulent time in our own country. Given this, why do victims even bother? Why do these lawyers take on cases? How do they persist for years with small chance of success?īecause, they said, oppression can be fought and even stopped by people who refuse to retreat even one step from demanding truth. Very few perpetrators are prosecuted for their crimes, and victims rarely win. The lawyers told us securing justice is difficult because many war criminals continue to dominate Guatemala’s ruling classes. One day there, we met with a human rights law firm that represents survivors of this genocide. There, we met with activists who are trying to right some of the wrongs of what’s sometimes called a “civil war,” but was in reality genocide that killed and forcibly displaced indigenous people. I traveled to Guatemala with a delegation of rabbis in a fellowship with American Jewish World Service, a leading global human rights group. I keep thinking back to a trip I made before the pandemic changed all our lives. And tyranny can be opposed by relentlessly and courageously bringing truth to light – surely a lesson for 2020. But this significant, if symbolic, accomplishment reminds us that oppression can thrive only when people assume they are powerless to resist. We have so much more that must be done to achieve justice for all. Tearing down racist idols does not undo the effects of centuries of racial injustice. Lee monument, still stands, it too is scheduled to be removed. And while the most prominent of these icons, the Robert E. Then, this summer, the unthinkable happened: Amid the uprising for Black lives that sought, above all, to reveal systemic racism in America and the falsehoods and violence which perpetuate it, most of Richmond’s monuments were toppled. One example: COVID-19 has impacted communities of color in Richmond at far greater rates than it has the city’s white residents. Richmond’s map of segregation correlates to inequities in everything from income to wealth to educational outcomes to access to healthcare to air and water quality to life expectancy. One can draw a line from the Lost Cause disinformation campaign to the Jim Crow regime to the indisputable fact that today Richmond is still racially segregated. The Lost Cause movement deliberately distorted history to disenfranchise, segregate, discriminate against and terrorize Black citizens. Most of these were erected in the decades following the Civil War, as part of the so-called “Lost Cause” movement, a propaganda campaign to reassert white supremacy across the South. Until recently, Confederate monuments were among my city’s most recognizable landmarks. A lie can even kill if repeated loudly and frequently enough. Living in Richmond, Virginia, the former capital of the Confederacy, I’ve seen how a lie can normalize oppression. If it’s been good for anything at all, 2020 has been a year for seeing things more clearly.

legacy racial tyranny

Justice can prevail only when people recognize that every action, no matter how small, can make a difference (This piece was published in the Times of Israel on.









Legacy racial tyranny